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Birching
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Birching - Encyclopedia

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Birching is corporal punishment with a birch rod, typically a spanking given on the delinquent's buttocks, alternatively on the back and/or over the shoulders. Birching - The Implement. A birch rod, often shorted as birch, is a bundle of leafless twigs bound together, much like a bunch of flowers, to form an implement for flagellation. A single branch, used as a disciplinary rod, is rather known as switch, if equally flexible, or else as cane, cudgel or stick. Contrary to what the name ...
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Birching, Birching - History, Birching - Other Uses, Birching - Position, Birching - Sources and References, Birching - The Implement
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Birching is corporal punishment with a birch rod, typically a spanking given on the delinquent's buttocks, alternatively on the back and/or over the shoulders.

A birch rod, often shorted as birch, is a bundle of leafless twigs bound together, much like a bunch of flowers, to form an implement for flagellation.

A single branch, used as a disciplinary rod, is rather known as switch, if equally flexible, or else as cane, cudgel or stick.

Contrary to what the name suggests, it is not necessarily made from a birch tree, as was the case with the Roman fasces, but also from various other strong but flexible trees or shrubs, such as willow (hence the term willowing for a 'birching' with such a rod). A hazel rod is very tough, and therefore particularly painful; it was used on the Isle of Man until 1975, the last place in Europe to use the birch.

Another parameter for its severity is size - length, weight and number of branches. In a same institution several versions can be used, and even named (rather like canes), e.g. in Dartmoor prison the senior birch, for male offenders above the age of 16, was 16 ounce and 48 inch long.

There are several versions about the sense of soaking the birch in liquid before use, but as it takes in water the weight is certainly increased without compensatory air resistance, so the impact must be greater if the caner can use sufficient force.

In the 1860s, the Royal Navy abandoned aboard the use of the cat o' nine tails, which got a nasty reputation because of its frequent use in prisons, by the birch the wealthy classes had their offspring's bare bottoms chastised with in public schools (ironically the justice system soon followed its example), and in an attempt to standardize the birches (but the effective wielding is impossible to capture in written rules) the Admiralty had specimens according to all prevailing prescriptions, called patterned birch (and dito cane), kept in every major dockyard, for birches had to be procured on land in quantities, suggesting quite some were worn out on the sore bottoms of miscreant boys.

The term judicial birch obviously refers to the sever type in use for court-ordered birchings, especially the Manx hazel birch. A 1951 memorandum (possibly confirming earlier practice) ordered all UK male prisons to use only birches (and cats o' nine tails) from a national stock at south London's Wandsworth prison, where they were to be 'thorourgly' tested before being supplied in triplicate to a prison whenever a procedure was pending for use as prison discipline.

By contrast, terms as Eton birch (after the most prestigious, and reputedly birch-happy, public school in England) is used for a birch made from birch tree twigs.

Birching - Position

The victim can go over the spanker’s lap or knee (usually only young children, as with an adult the arm is not free for full impact, and bigger spankees can be quite heavy) but will often be bent over an object (as in the expression ‘over a barrel’) to raise the buttocks, and even tied down if likely otherwise to leave this position under the agonizing pain.

In some prisons a wooden apparatus known as birching donkey or birching pony, referring to the silhouette of an equine, was specially constructed for birchings. As there were no detailed rules, prisons and police stations over the empire devised, adapted and used a myriad of contraptions under even more numerous names that juvenile and adult offenders were bent over to have their bare buttocks professionally lashed; some models also allowed a standing or leaning position for other implements.

A simple alternative position known from school discipline is horsing (again an equine etymology), where the person to be spanked is hung by the arms from the neck and over the back of another person (e.g. a classmate), or on the shoulders of two or more colleagues.

Birching - History

It was the most common school, home and judicial punishment in Europe up to the 19th century when caning gained increasing popularity. A good, well-wielded birch is a very effective torment, more than presently often thought - in fact, there are accounts that even the legendary sting of the cat o' nine tails was less feared in certain prisons, although British judges usually prescribed the latter most for armed robbery, the birch for various lesser, 'unmanly' crimes such as indecent exposure- accordingly, the birch was generally applied to the bare buttocks (also on the continent), a humiliation usually befalling boys (like the boy's pussy, equally on the naked posterior), the 'adult' cat on the back or shoulders of adults.

In the United States, the paddle (especially for children) and whip-type implements including the prison strap were more prominent.

Today birching is rarely used for judicial punishment, and has also almost completely died out as a corporal punishment for children. In Britain birching as a judicial punishment for young offenders was abolished in 1947, but the Isle of Man (a small island between Britain and Ireland with its own legal system as a crown dependency outside the UK) caused a good deal of controversy by continuing to birch young offenders into the 1970s. However, like the cat o' nine tails, it had been reintroduced in Caribean Commonwealth Republic Trinidad and Tobago (often concurrent with a prison term, e.g. cases in 1999 on CorPun)

Birching - Other Uses
  • It remains as a nostalgic sadomasochistic practice, mainly in Northern and Eastern Europe.
  • In Scandinavia, Finland and Russia there is also a tradition to strike one's body with soaked birch twigs in the sauna to increase blood circulation. As these birch rods do not have their leaves removed, there is little pain involved.

Birching - Sources and References
  • references on CorPun website (on all corporal punishments) - search also for birch
  • Sam Hogans BDSM site, illustrated



Wikipedia

Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Birching", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page

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