USERNAME 
PASSWORD 
Subscriber? · Lost password?
Lost username? · More help
Archive > 2007 > Jan · Feb · Mar · Apr · May · Jun · Jul · Aug · Sep · Oct · Nov · Dec
October 12, 2007 · No Comment · Previous · Next  

Herzen on the Persistence of Torture

[Image]
Aleksandr Herzen, portrait by Nikolai Gay (1867)

Peter the Third abolished the torture-chamber, and the Russian star chamber. Catherine the Second abolished torture. Alexander the First abolished it over again. Evidence given under torture is legally inadmissible. and any magistrate applying torture is himself liable to prosecution and severe punishment. That is so: and all over Russia, from Bering Straits to the Crimea, men suffer torture. When flogging is unsafe, other means are used—intolerable heat, thirst, salt food; in Moscow the police made a prisoner stand barefooted on an iron floor, at a time of intense frost; the man died in a hospital.

Aleksandr Ivanovich Herzen, My Past and Thoughts (1852) (Russell & Russell ed.), pp. 231-232.

Previous · Next · More No Comment · Respond via email
As little as $16.97 for 12 months of Harper's—
plus access to our 158-year archive.
Archive > 2009 > Jan · Feb · Mar · Apr · May · Jun · Jul · Aug · Sep · Oct · Nov · Dec

November 2009

FINAL EDITION
Twilight of the American Newspaper
By Richard Rodriguez

THE INTELLIGENCE FACTORY
How America Makes Its Enemies Disappear
By Petra Bartosiewicz

PROSPEROUS FRIENDS
A story by Christine Schutt

Also: Frederick Seidel and Mark Kingwell

Subscribe to the Weekly Review:


We will not sell your email address.