Dictionary Definition
ordeal
Noun
1 a severe or trying experience
2 a primitive method of determining a person's
guilt or innocence by subjecting the accused person to dangerous or
painful tests believed to be under divine control; escape was
usually taken as a sign of innocence [syn: trial by
ordeal]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
Old English ordālNoun
Translations
a painful or trying experience
- Finnish: koettelemus
- French: calvaire
- Portuguese: Calvário
- Spanish: calvario
Extensive Definition
Trial by ordeal is a judicial practice by which
the guilt or innocence of the accused is determined by subjecting
them to a painful task. If either the task is completed without
injury, or the injuries sustained are healed quickly, the accused
is considered innocent. In medieval Europe, like trial by
combat, it was considered a judicium Dei: a procedure based on
the premise that God would help the
innocent by performing a miracle on their behalf. The practice has
much earlier roots however, being attested in polytheistic cultures as
far back as the Code of
Hammurabi and the Code of
Ur-Nammu, and in animist tribal societies, such
as the trial by ingestion of "red water" (calabar
bean) in Sierra
Leone, where the intended effect is magical rather than invocation
of a deity's justice.
In pre-modern society, the ordeal typically
ranked along with the oath
and witness accounts as
the central means by which to reach a judicial verdict. Indeed, the
term ordeal itself, Old English
ordǣl, has the meaning of "judgement, verdict" (German Urteil,
Dutch oordeel), from Proto-Germanic
*uzdailjam "that which is dealt out".
In Europe, ordeals
commonly required an accused person to test himself or herself
against fire or water, though the precise nature of the proof
varied considerably at different times and places. In England, ordeals
were common under both the Anglo-Saxons
and the Normans. Fire was
the element typically used to test noble defendants, while water
was more commonly used by lesser folk.
Priestly cooperation in trials by fire and water
was forbidden by Pope
Innocent III at the Fourth
Lateran Council of 1215, and replaced by compurgation. Trials by
ordeal became more rare over the Late
Middle Ages, often replaced by confessions extracted under
torture, but the
practice was discontinued only in the 16th century. Johannes
Hartlieb in 1456 reports a popular superstition on how to
identify a thief by an ordeal by ingestion practiced
privately without judicial sanction.
Ordeal of fire
This test typically required that the accused walk a certain distance, usually nine feet, over red-hot ploughshares or holding a red-hot iron. Innocence was sometimes established by a complete lack of injury, but it was more common for the wound to be bandaged and reexamined three days later by a priest, who would pronounce that God had intervened to heal it, or that it was merely festering - in which case the suspect would be exiled or executed. One famous instance of the ordeal of ploughshares concerned Emma of Normandy, accused of adultery with the Bishop of Winchester in the mid-eleventh century. If church chroniclers are to be believed, she was so manifestly innocent that she had already walked over the blades when she asked if her trial would soon begin.Another form of the ordeal required that an
accused remove a stone from a pot of boiling water, oil, or lead.
The assessment of the injury, and the consequences of a miracle or
lack thereof, followed a similar procedure to that described in the
preceding paragraph. An early (non-judicial) example of the test
was described by Gregory of
Tours in the seventh century AD. He tells how a Catholic saint
(Saint
Hyacinth) bested an Arian rival by
plucking a stone from a boiling cauldron. Gregory accepted that
it took Hyacinth about an hour to complete the task (because the
waters were bubbling so ferociously), but he was pleased to record
that when the heretic tried, he had the skin boiled off up to his
elbow.
- Giovanni da Pian del Carpine narrates that when he visited the Mongol Batu Khan, he was made pass between two fires to remove possible witchcraft or poisons.
Ordeal of water
English Common Law
In the Assize
of Clarendon, enacted in 1166 and the first great legislative
act in the reign of the English Angevin King
Henry
II, the law of the land required that: "anyone, who shall be
found, on the oath of the aforesaid [a jury], to be accused or
notoriously suspect of having been a robber or murderer or thief,
or a receiver of them ... be taken and put to the ordeal of
water."
Ordeal of hot water
First mentioned in the 6th century Lex Salica, the ordeal of hot water requires the accused to dip his hand in a kettle of boiling water. In 12th Century Catholic churches the priest would demand a suspect to place his hand in the boiling water. If, after three days, God had not healed his wounds, the suspect was guilty of said crimes.Ordeal of cold water
This ordeal has a precedent in the code of Hammurabi, where a man accused of sorcery is to be submerged in a stream and acquitted if he survives. The practice occurred in Frankish law and was abolished by Louis the Pious in 829. The practice did re-appear in the Late Middle Ages, however. In the Dreieicher Wildbann of 1338, a man accused of poaching is to be submerged in a barrel three times, and to be considered guilty if he sinks to the bottom.This ordeal became also associated with the
witch-hunts of
the 16th and 17th centuries, and demonologists would
develop inventive new theories about how it worked. Some argued
that witches floated because they had renounced baptism when entering the
Devil's
service. Jacob Rickius claimed that they were supernaturally light,
and recommended weighing them as an alternative to dunking them.
King
James I (and VI of Scotland) claimed in his Daemonologie
that water was so pure an element that it repelled the guilty. A
late witch process to include this ordeal took place in Szegedin, Hungary in
1728.
Gregory of
Tours (died 594) recorded the common expectation that with a
millstone round his or
her neck, the guilty would sink: "The cruel pagans cast him
[Quirinus, bishop of the church of Sissek] into a river with a
millstone tied to his neck, and when he had fallen into the waters
he was long supported on the surface by a divine miracle, and the waters did not
suck him down since the weight of crime did not press upon
him."
The ordeal of water is also contemplated by the
Vishnu
Smrti, which is one of the texts of the Dharmaśāstra.
this process of ordeal happened once or twice a week.
Ordeal of the cross
The ordeal of the cross was apparently introduced in the Early Middle Ages by the church in an attempt to discourage judicial duels among the Germanic peoples. As in the case of such duels, and unlike the case of most other ordeals, the accuser has to undergo the ordeal together with the accused. They stand on either side of a cross and stretch out their hands horizontally. The one to first lower his arms loses. This ordeal was proscribed by Charlemagne in 779 and again in 806. On the other hand, a decree of Lothar I, recorded in 876, rules its abolition so as to avoid mockery of Christ.Ordeal of ingestion
- Franconian law prescribed that an accused was to be given dry bread and cheese blessed by a priest. If he choked on the food, he was considered guilty. This was transformed into the ordeal of the eucharist (trial by sacrament), mentioned by Regino of Prüm ca. 900: the accused was to take the eucharist after a solemn oath professing his innocence. It was believed that if the oath had been false, the criminal would die within the same year.
- Numbers 5:12–27 prescribes that a woman suspected of adultery should be made to swallow "the bitter water that causeth the curse" by the priest in order to determine her guilt. The accused would be condemned only if 'her belly shall swell and her thigh shall rot'. It can be found in the Torah (where it is known as the Sotah) and the Old Testament (Numbers 5:12-31). One writer has recently argued that the procedure has a rational basis, envisioning punishment only upon clear proof of pregnancy (a swelling belly) or venereal disease (a rotting thigh), but a more likely origin is the connection of ascites with oath-breakers in the Ancient Orient (see Hittite military oath).
- Some cultures administer the poisonous calabar bean to attempt to detect guilt. If the defendant vomits and their stomach rejects the bean, he or she is proclaimed innocent. If the defendant dies or becomes ill, he is considered guilty.
Other ordeal methods
- An Icelandic ordeal tradition involves the accused walking under a piece of turf. If the turf falls on the accused's head, the accused person is pronounced guilty.
Parodies of trials by ordeal
A humorous parody, illustrating the absurdity of trials by ordeal, is included in the Monty Python film, Monty Python and the Holy Grail. A crowd of medieval villagers bring a woman to Sir Bedevere, accusing her of witchcraft. The villagers admit that they gave her a fake nose and had dressed her up to appear more like a witch. Sir Bedevere, not fully convinced, proposes a non sequitur test to determine whether or not she is a witch: witches burn, and so does wood, so witches are made of wood; wood floats on water, and so do ducks, therefore, if she weighs as much as a duck, she is a witch. (She does, and is carried off by the villagers to be burned, adding, "It's fair cop"—that is, that she was rightly accused and properly tried.)References
Inline
General
- H. Glitsch, Mittelalterliche Gottesurteile, Leipzig (1913).
- Kaegi, Alter und Herkunft des germanischen Gottesurteils (1887).
- Henry C. Lea Superstition and Force (Greenwood, 1968; reprint of 1870 edition.)
- Sadakat Kadri The Trial: A History from Socrates to O.J. Simpson (Random House, 2006).
- Ian C. Pilarczyk, "Between a Rock and a Hot Place: Issues of Subjectivity and Rationality in the Medieval Ordeal by Hot Iron", 25 Anglo-American Law Rev. 87-112 (1996).
- Robert Bartlett, Trial by Fire and Water: The Medieval Judicial Ordeal, New York: Clarendon Press, 1986.
- William Ian Miller, “Ordeal in Iceland,” Scandinavian Studies 60 (1988): 189-218.
External links
ordeal in Czech: Ordál
ordeal in German: Gottesurteil
ordeal in Modern Greek (1453-): Αγνείας
πείρα
ordeal in Spanish: Ordalía
ordeal in French: Ordalie
ordeal in Galician: Ordalía
ordeal in Korean: 시죄법
ordeal in Italian: Ordalia
ordeal in Hebrew: משפט האל
ordeal in Luxembourgish: Gottesuerteel
ordeal in Lithuanian: Ordalija
ordeal in Dutch: Godsoordeel
ordeal in Japanese: 神明裁判
ordeal in Polish: Ordalia
ordeal in Portuguese: Ordália
ordeal in Russian: Ордалии
ordeal in Slovak: Ordálie
ordeal in Serbian: Божји суд
ordeal in Ukrainian: Ордалія
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Sabbat,
acid test, adversity,
affliction, anguish, assay, blank determination,
brouillon, calvary, criterion, cross, crucial test, crucible, determination, disaster, distress, docimasy, essay, feeling out, fiery ordeal,
first draft, ghost dance, grief, hardship, kiteflying, magic circle,
misery, misfortune, nightmare, ordeal by battle,
probation, proof, rough draft, rough sketch,
sounding out, standard,
suffering, test, test case, touchstone, tragedy, trial, trials and tribulations,
tribulation,
tribulations,
troubles, try, verification, visitation