Parricide

Parricide

Parricide (Latin "parricida", killer of a close relative) stemming from (Latin "parri", alike or equal, and "-cida", -cide, or killer) is defined as:
#the act of murdering one's father (patricide), mother (matricide), or other close relative
#the act of murdering a person (such as the ruler of one's country) who stands in a relationship resembling that of a father
#a person who commits such an act

Various definitions exist for the term "parricide", with the biggest discrepancy being whether or not the killing has to be defined as a murder (usually killing with malice aforethought) to qualify as a parricide.

Parricide is most often committed by a son against his mother, and is associated with delusional thinking. [Bourget, Dominique, Gagné, Pierre, and Labelle , Mary-Eve (2007). " [http://www.jaapl.org/cgi/content/full/35/3/306 Parricide: A Comparative Study of Matricide Versus Patricide] ," "The American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law", 35:3:306-312.]

In pre-revolutionary France, cases of notoriously accidental killings were still treated as parricidesClarifyme|date=March 2008, with the offenders facing the extra harsh penalties destined for authors of such heinous crimes.

Ancient Rome had a unique punishment for parricide, which is described at length in Steven Saylor's novel "Roman Blood", based on one of Cicero's actual murder trials. The felon was severely scourged then sewn into a stout leather bag with a dog, a snake, a rooster, and a monkey, and the bag was thrown into the river Tiber. Tacitus called it the "parricide's doom". [cite book
last = Tacitus
coauthors = Hadas, Moses
title = The Annals & The Histories
publisher = Modern Library Classics
date = 2003
location = New York
pages = 137, 590
] Plutarch records that the old laws of Romulus had no penalty for parricide because it was considered a crime too evil ever to be committed. Lucius Hostius reportedly was the first parricide in Rome, sometime after the Second Punic War.

In Japan, parricide once brought heavy punishment. Because of the Chiyo Aizawa case, however, the law was abolished.

Parricide in literature

* Père Goriot by Balzac: "...so much for providing black veils for parricides, so much for sawdust, so much for pulleys and cord for the knife."

* The Brothers Karamazov by Dostoevsky: "But it's not an ordinary case of murder, it's a case of parricide. That impresses men's minds, and to such a degree that the very triviality and incompleteness of the evidence becomes less trivial and less incomplete even to an unprejudiced mind."

* The Prince by Niccolo Machiavelli: " [Oliverotto] was captured there, a year after his parricide, and together with his former mentor in prowess and villainy, strangled."

* The Stranger by Albert Camus: "He went so far as to hope that human justice would mete out punishment unflinchingly. But he wasn't afraid to say it: my callousness inspired in him a horror nearly greater than which he felt at the crime of parricide."

* Blood Meridian by Cormac McCarthy: "He moves north through small settlements and farms, working for day wages and found. He sees a parricide hanged in a crossroads hamlet and the man's friends run forward and pull his legs and he hangs dead from his rope while urine darkens his trousers."

* Le Dernier Jour d'un Condamné by Victor Hugo: "Jean Martin was the one who shot his father with a pistol as the old man was opening a window...it seemed to me as though the dungeon was full of men, strange men who carried their heads in their left hands, and held them by the mouth, because there was no hair upon them. Each raised his fist at me, the parricide excepted."

* written by Rick Berman and Michael Piller: "You've brought the Federation into the middle of a blood feud, Admiral. The children have returned to expel their elders, just as they were once expelled. Except Ru'afo's need for revenge has now escalated to parricide."

References

External links

* [http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=Parricide Dictionary.com entry for "parricide"]


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  • parricide — 1. (pa ri si d ) s. m. et f. 1°   Celui, celle qui tue son père ou sa mère, son aïeul ou son aïeule, ou quelque autre de ses ascendants. •   Ô partage inégal de ce courroux céleste ! Je suis le parricide...., CORN. Oedipe, IV, 5. 2°   Par… …   Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré

  • parricide — Parricide. s. m. Celuy qui tuë son pere. Il se dit aussi par extension de celuy qui tuë sa mere, son frere, sa soeur, ses enfants &c. On ne peut trop punir les parricides. Il signifie aussi Le crime que commet celuy qui tuë son pere. Parricide… …   Dictionnaire de l'Académie française

  • parricide — par·ri·cide / par ə ˌsīd/ n [Latin parricida killer of a close relative] 1: a person who murders his or her mother or father or sometimes a close relative 2: the act of a parricide Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996 …   Law dictionary

  • parricide — (n.) 1. person who kills a parent or near relative (1550s), also 2. act of killing parent or near relative (1560s), both from M.Fr. parricide, from 1. L. parricida, 2. L. parricidium, probably from parus relative (of unknown origin) + 1. cida… …   Etymology dictionary

  • parricide — parricide, patricide Both words come from the Latin word pater meaning ‘father’, but in current use parricide is the killing of a parent or other near relative whereas patricide is more specifically the killing of one s father. They are used to… …   Modern English usage

  • parricide — ► NOUN 1) the killing of a parent or other near relative. 2) a person who commits parricide. DERIVATIVES parricidal adjective. ORIGIN Latin parricidium, with unknown first element associated with Latin pater father and parens parent …   English terms dictionary

  • Parricide — Par ri*cide, n. [F., fr. L. parricida; pater father + caedere to kill. See {Father}, {Homicide}, and cf. {Patricide}.] [1913 Webster] 1. Properly, one who murders one s own father; in a wider sense, one who murders one s father or mother or any… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • parricide — Parricide, Parricidium …   Thresor de la langue françoyse

  • parricide — [par′ə sīd΄] n. [Fr < L parricida, earlier paricida < IE base * pāsos, a relative (> Gr pēos, one related by marriage) + L cida, CIDE] 1. the act of murdering one s parent, someone having a similar relationship, or a close relative 2. [L …   English World dictionary

  • parricide — 1. parricide [ parisid ] n. • 1190; lat. par(r)icida ♦ Personne qui a commis un parricide (2.). Condamnation d une parricide. ♢ Adj. Fils parricide. Attentat, complot parricide. parricide 2. parricide [ parisid ] n. m. • 1372; lat. parricidium 1… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

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