Claudine de Culam: Difference between revisions

From Zoophilia Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
meta>Farzaneh
mNo edit summary
m (71 revisions imported)
 
(57 intermediate revisions by 44 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{New unreviewed article}}
[[File:Claudine de culam.jpg|thumb|Claudine de Culam]]
'''Claudine de Culam''' ({{circa}} 1584/1585 – 1601) was a sixteen-year-old girl who was tried and hanged for the act of [[bestiality]] with a dog in [[Rognon, Doubs|Rognon]], [[France]].<ref>Hastings Donnan, Fiona Magowan, ''Transgressive sex: subversion and control in erotic encounters'', 2009, pp. 95 and 96.</ref>


'''Claudine de Culam''' was  a sixteen-year-old girl who was tried and hanged for the act of [[bestiality]] in [[Rognon]], [[France]] in [[1601]].<ref>Hastings Donnan, Fiona Magowan, ''Transgressive sex: subversion and control in erotic encounters'', 2009, pp. 95 and 96.</ref>
The judge appointed female assistants in order to put the dog and the girl to the test. As the women undressed Claudine, the dog attempted to mount her. On the basis of this evidence both the dog and the young woman were strangled to death, their bodies burned and their ashes scattered 'that as little trace as possible might remain to remind mankind of their monstrous deeds.'<ref>Robert E. L. Masters, ''The hidden world of erotica: forbidden sexual behaviour and morality'', 1973, pp. 16 and 38.</ref>


The judge investigated the allegations by having Claudine undressed and the dog observed by his female assistants as it leapt upon Claudine.
==See also==
Claudine and the dog were strangled, their bodies burnt and scattered to the four winds, "that as little traces as possible might remain to remind mankind of their monstrous deeds."<ref>Robert E. L. Masters, ''The hidden world of erotica: forbidden sexual behaviour and morality'', 1973, pp. 16 and 38.</ref>
* [[Thomas Granger]]


== References ==
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}


== External links ==
==External links==
* [http://www.scientificamerican.com/blog/post.cfm?id=animal-lovers-zoophiles-make-scient-2010-03-24 Zoophiles Make Scientists Rethink Human Sexuality]
* {{cite journal |journal= Scientific American |url= http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/bering-in-mind/animal-lovers-zoophiles-make-scientists-rethink-human-sexuality/ |date= Mar 24, 2010 |title= Zoophiles Make Scientists Rethink Human Sexuality |first= Jesse |last= Bering |series= Bering in Mind }}


{{law-stub}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Culam, Claudine}}
{{sexuality-stub}}
[[Category:Year of birth unknown]]
[[Category:1601 deaths]]
[[Category:People from Seine-et-Marne]]
[[Category:Zoophilia]]
[[Category:French sex offenders]]
[[Category:17th-century executions by France]]
[[Category:Executed French people]]
[[Category:People executed by France by hanging]]
[[Category:People executed for sodomy]]
[[Category:17th-century French criminals]]
[[Category:Year of birth uncertain]]


<!--- Categories --->
[[Category:Articles created via the Article Wizard]]


 
{{Europe-law-stub}}
[[ca:Claudine de Culam]]
{{sexuality-stub}}
[[es:Claudine_de_Culam]]
[[fr:Claudine de Culam]]

Latest revision as of 20:27, 31 August 2020

Claudine de Culam

Claudine de Culam (c. 1584/1585 – 1601) was a sixteen-year-old girl who was tried and hanged for the act of bestiality with a dog in Rognon, France.[1]

The judge appointed female assistants in order to put the dog and the girl to the test. As the women undressed Claudine, the dog attempted to mount her. On the basis of this evidence both the dog and the young woman were strangled to death, their bodies burned and their ashes scattered 'that as little trace as possible might remain to remind mankind of their monstrous deeds.'[2]

See also

References

  1. Hastings Donnan, Fiona Magowan, Transgressive sex: subversion and control in erotic encounters, 2009, pp. 95 and 96.
  2. Robert E. L. Masters, The hidden world of erotica: forbidden sexual behaviour and morality, 1973, pp. 16 and 38.

External links

  • Bering, Jesse (Mar 24, 2010). "Zoophiles Make Scientists Rethink Human Sexuality". Scientific American. Bering in Mind.