Jan 18, 2021
Many famous people from history have had their lives come to an end by execution. We tell these stories with gusto, reverence, and sometimes even humor, but the person responsible for being the executioner goes largely unnoticed beyond the recognition that someone, albeit we rarely know who, had to actually be the executioner.
The word “executioner” comes up
in Shakespeare’s plays 17 times, twice referred to as a “common”
executioner, twice mentioned in context of characters expressing
their distaste for the profession, and a few times mentioned in the
stage directions as a character appearing on stage. But what was an
executioner supposed to look like on stage in the 16th century? If
it was a common profession, how did someone become an executioner?
Who were England’s executioners, how were they hired for this
repulsive job, and with something so repugnant as a career that
several characters in Shakespeare’s plays verbalize how much they
hate the idea of being an executioner, what must it have been like
to live in early modern England as an executioner--were there
personal ramifications against them for the performance of their
duties?
Here
to help us answer these questions and explore the profession of
official executioner in early modern England is our guest, DJ
Guba.