Introduction
In parts of southern and western Asia, as elsewhere, the cannon once served as perhaps the most dramatic tool in the inventories of state executioners. The condemned was tied to the front of a cannon—typically with each of his arms bound to the wheels or another part of the gun carriage, and often with his feet bound to a stake or other fixture anchored to the ground, or to the barrel of the gun itself (see Figure 1)—that had previously been loaded with a blank charge (i.e. gunpowder without any projectile). Upon firing, the prisoner would be, quite literally, blown apart by the blast wave that propagated out from the barrel of the gun.Footnote 1
The practice, referred to in English as ‘blowing from a gun’,Footnote 2 was most infamously employed in British India and the Princely States. Contemporary English-language sources (especially newspapers) tended to understand the practice almost entirely through the lens of British use in India. Execution by cannon was well documented during the 1857 Sepoy (or Indian) Mutiny in particular, with some newspapers that supported British imperial policy being forced to actively defend the practice.Footnote 3 Even today, the British use of the tactic has cast a long shadow over understandings of the British response to the rebellion, sometimes being seen as emblematic of brutality. The British use of cannon execution was even depicted in Russian artist Vasily Vereshchagin's painting, ‘Suppression of the Indian Revolt by the English’, which was received with great controversy when Vereshchagin brought it to the UK.Footnote 4 Modern academic literature from the English-speaking world—whether originating in the West or the Indian subcontinent—focuses almost exclusively on the British use of execution by cannon. This is, in part, because almost no work has been done to look closely at the history of the practice itself. K. A. Wagner provides what is likely the most exhaustive overview of execution by cannon within contemporary academic scholarship, but only in the context of explaining British understandings of the efficacy of execution methods on local populations.Footnote 5 Most academic references to the practice are rife with inaccuracies, perpetuating misconceptions and maintaining a singular focus on the British. Many works suggest or leave open the possible interpretation that the practice was introduced to the region by the British themselves;Footnote 6 others fail to place the British use of cannon execution into its regional context;Footnote 7 still others make reference to it as a Mughal practiceFootnote 8 later adopted by the British, but fail to delve into its earlier use.Footnote 9 Thus, what is absent from the English-language scholarship to date is a historical overview of the method of execution—and indeed, one rooted primarily in English-language source material—that is necessary for situating the British use of it in reference to local powers.
Despite this almost singular focus on the British use of execution by cannon in English-language literature—with the occasional brief reference to its supposed Mughal origin—the practice was not pioneered or used most commonly by the British, nor even their Indian predecessors. In fact, as is shown below, the first reference to the use of the practice comes from Portuguese colonists, and it was popular with native rulers in countries beyond India. Moreover, the tactic was considered especially useful in Persia and Afghanistan, where weak governance, rebellion, and rampant banditry all threatened the legitimacy of the nascent state in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. As the geographic nexus and eventually the centre of the macabre punishment, Afghanistan enthusiastically wielded execution by cannon as the ultimate deterrent. Indeed, Afghanistan was reluctant to abandon the practice, continuing to execute prisoners in this fashion well into the twentieth century. Importantly, this local use of blowing from a gun differed from colonial uses of the practice. The British Indian administrations typically reserved execution by cannon for mutineers, rebels, and traitors—that is, they used it almost exclusively as a form of military punishment—whereas Persian and Afghan leaders made widespread use of the punishment in the civilian context, often seeking to disincentivise banditry and to punish other more commonplace crimes. This provides important nuance to discussions of the practice that have almost exclusively focused on British military use during the Sepoy Mutiny. Regardless of the crime that was seen to merit its use, execution by cannon was intended to strike terror into the hearts of those who watched, instilling obedience and deterring crime.
This article presents a history of the practice of execution by cannon in southern and western Asia, with the particular focus of situating the British Indian use of the tactic in its regional and historical context. It argues that, even when looking primarily at English-language sources, British-ordered execution by cannon should not be regarded as somehow unique, but rather as part of a long history of ‘blowing from a gun’ in southern and western Asia—even where it differs in meaningful ways from earlier and later uses by local powers. This argument is intended to correct English-language scholarship on the issue and, as such, is shaped by an analysis of mostly English and European writings of the time to show that—even if one relies on what contemporary Europeans wrote about the practice—the British use of cannon executions must be reframed in the context of its use by other past, present, and future regional powers.
To this end, the article also seeks to position the wider southern and western Asian use of the practice within the existing literature on public executions in the context of military and civilian justice. An assessment of the practice through the lens of military discipline, in particular, provides an important perspective from which to consider its use in the region.Footnote 10 Military law—‘that branch of criminal law which is especially prescribed for the government of the persons in the military establishment … [for] what are known as “military offenses”’Footnote 11—has existed generally to promote self-sufficiency and the unique goals of the military vis-à-vis the law, such as maintaining complete discipline and fighting organisation, which are not usually concerns for civilian governments.Footnote 12 Execution has served an important and well-documented function within this context since at least the Roman period, acting especially as a deterrent for would-be traitors and deserters.Footnote 13 This function continued into the twentieth century, remaining common even in Western liberal democracies.Footnote 14
Whilst executions by cannon were not always practised in the context of military justice, it is this use that receives by far the lion's share of attention in modern English-language academic literature. The use of the practice by the British, particularly during the Sepoy Mutiny, was almost always an act of military punishment. In almost all cases, blowing from the gun was employed primarily for its perceived deterrent effect, making its better-documented use in the context of military justice a useful heuristic by which to understand the practice more generally, and particularly to compare how execution by cannon was used in British India versus Persia and Afghanistan—the latter states employing the practice primarily in a civilian justice context, and often as a tool of state-building. Specifically, this article argues that the British (and Mughals) tended to use cannon executions as a form of military punishment, whereas nascent local powers used them to punish civilian crimes as well. The use of cannon in executing those condemned under civilian judicial systems in southern and western Asia has heretofore received little attention.
The purpose and procedure of execution by cannon
Many detailed first-hand English-language accounts of how and why individuals were executed by cannon are available, which are reviewed herein to provide a comprehensive account of the common procedure.Footnote 15 The process appears to have been conducted in essentially the same manner throughout its geographic and chronological distribution, although some sources identify interesting deviations. Little technical information is available as to the particular weapons used in executions—the pieces are generally referred to simply as ‘guns’, ‘cannon’, or ‘horse artillery guns’.Footnote 16 One primary source claims that the cannon used by British forces to execute prisoners were ‘usually six or nine-pounders’, although another account describes a British execution that used an 18-pounder piece.Footnote 17 Mortars also appear to have been used, including in Persia, Afghanistan, and by Portuguese colonists in East Africa.Footnote 18 In any event, the cannon used were almost invariably those that performed other regular functions. For example, under Afghan Emir ʿAbd al-Raḥmān Khān (Abdur Rahman Khan; r. 1880–1901) and his son Ḥabībullāh, so-called ‘noon guns’ were employed to execute prisoners: ‘When a person is ordered to be blown from a gun, he is taken to the one which is fired daily to announce the hour of midday, and is fixed on a small hill close to Sherpur Cantonment.’Footnote 19
Whatever the weapon used for execution, it was generally ‘loaded only with blank cartridge’—no projectile was necessary to produce a dramatically lethal effect.Footnote 20 The condemned were placed against a cannon so that their back pressed against the mouth of the weapon.Footnote 21 To hold them in place, the victims were tied down with ropes that were lashed either to the wheels of the gun carriage or, as in several accounts, to ‘stakes driven into the ground’.Footnote 22 The executioners would then ignite the powder charge and the resultant explosion would violently dismember the condemned. One spectator recounted:
When the gun is fired, his head is seen to go straight up into the air some forty or fifty feet; the arms fly off right and left, high up in the air, and fall at, perhaps, a hundred yards distance; the legs drop to the ground beneath the muzzle of the gun; and the body is literally blown away altogether, not a vestige being seen.Footnote 23
Several accounts describe animals quickly consuming the remains of the victims. One British officer recalled that birds of prey ‘caught in their talons many pieces of the quivering flesh before they could reach the ground’.Footnote 24 Another witness to a different execution, this time in Afghanistan, described how a victim's entrails were ‘in an instant devoured by the dogs that were loitering about the spot’.Footnote 25 Indeed, it seems that consumption by animals was, in many cases, an intended component of the execution. Rahman Khan wrote that he sentenced a group of men to be executed by cannon ‘on market day, so that their flesh should be eaten by the dogs of the camp, and their bones remain lying about till the festival was over’.Footnote 26 Compounding the brutality of the practice, execution by cannon was sometimes botched. A British captain wrote of a cannon execution that was commuted to a pardon after the weapon failed to fire three times.Footnote 27 However, victims of botched executions were rarely this fortunate. During one particularly gruesome occasion:
One wretched fellow slipped from the rope by which he was tied to the guns just before the explosion, and his arm was nearly set on fire. Whilst hanging in his agony under the gun, a sergeant applied a pistol to his head, and three times the cap snapped, the man each time wincing from the expected shot. At last a rifle was fired into the bottom of his head, and the blood poured out of the nose and mouth like water from a briskly handled pump.Footnote 28
Accidents could also prove extremely dangerous to spectators, and even to the executioners themselves. Charles Ball's The History of the Indian Mutiny recounts an incident in which the gun crews remained in their ‘proper station’ near the cannon during the execution, causing some to be wounded by fragments of the executed prisoners’ corpses.Footnote 29 In another incident, executioners accidentally loaded grapeshot instead of blank cartridges. The grapeshot struck a crowd of spectators, some of whom required amputations.Footnote 30
Despite these risks, execution by cannon remained a popular form of punishment for several centuries, with most of the (albeit limited) English-language academic scholarship on the topic focusing on British India. The majority of cannon executions performed by the British were punishment for mutiny, desertion, and insurrection;Footnote 31 indeed, the British deemed the practice to be at ‘the utmost extent of military severity’.Footnote 32 In such cases, the punishment was typically reserved for those responsible for soldiers instigating serious insubordination. Contemporary texts recall that ‘ringleaders’ and ‘the most forward of those concerned with the mutiny’ were selected to be blown from guns in British India.Footnote 33 However, in Persia and Afghanistan, nascent states ruled by indigenous leaders, the threshold for applying the punishment was evidently lower and the practice was regularly employed in both the military and civilian contexts. In addition to deserters and spies, highwaymen and other thieves could expect to be blown from guns. The distinction between these two contexts, and its relevance for understanding the British use of execution by cannon, is discussed below. In either case, the primary purpose of such a graphic execution was the same: to terrify the audience and encourage adherence to the law, whether that be military (in the case of the British) or civilian (in the case of the Persians or Afghans). The British especially seem to have thought that execution by cannon would ‘quell mutanies [sic]’Footnote 34—the end goal of British military executions more generally (even of non-native troops).Footnote 35 To this end, British use of the punishment was ‘invariably carried out in the presence of other native soldiers to overawe and frighten them’.Footnote 36 Civilian executions in Persia and Afghanistan similarly took place in public areas so as to maximise the visibility of the punishment amongst the intended civilian audience.Footnote 37
In addition to the physical brutality of this method of execution, the prospect of having one's body parts scattered—and frequently eaten by wild animals or buried in graves shared with other prisoners—held religious and cultural significance that made the prospect of being blown from a gun yet more terrifying. This spiritual condemnation was particularly chilling for Muslims and Hindus. Wagner (2016) describes execution by cannon as a form of ‘spiritual warfare’, specifically intended to turn native peoples’ cultures against them.Footnote 38 A contemporary British newspaper echoed this sentiment:
You must know that this is nearly the only form in which death has any terrors for a native. If he is hung, or shot by musketry, he knows that his friends or relatives will be allowed to claim his body, and will give him the funeral rites required by his religious; if a Hindoo, that his body will be burned with all due ceremonies and if a Mussulman, that his remains will be decently interred, as directed in the Koran. But if sentenced to death in this form, he knows that his body will be blown into a thousand pieces, and that it will be altogether impossible for his relatives, however devoted to him, to be sure of picking up all the fragments of his own particular body; and the thought that perhaps a limb of some one of a different religion to himself might possibly be burned or buried with the remainder of his own body, is agony to him.Footnote 39
It was not universally agreed that blowing from a gun was the most feared form of execution amongst the native populations of India, however, and even some modern sources have claimed that such a death was ‘honourable’.Footnote 40 In June 1857, British forces under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel George Malcolm captured the fort of Nargund, taking prisoner Raja Bhaskararao Bhave II (Bhāskararāv bhāve; r. 1842–1858).Footnote 41 Bhave was sentenced to hang but he apparently expressed great horror at the propositionFootnote 42 and ‘repeatedly petitioned to be blown away from a gun’.Footnote 43 Nonetheless, it seems likely that the spiritual and psychological aspects of execution by cannon made the method more attractive to many leaders, colonial and native alike. Execution by cannon was a brutal display of state power. It sent a clear message to those who witnessed it and punished the condemned ‘beyond death’ in a way that other execution methods could not.Footnote 44 For the British, whose ethos of military punishment was shaped by the desire to deter proscribed actions amongst what they considered to be an unruly and unreliable soldiery,Footnote 45 execution by cannon provided numerous perceived benefits that may be considered in reference to the longer history of the practice in the region.
Early execution by cannon in western and southern Asia
Contemporary English-language accounts indicate that, by the time the British had begun their colonisation of India, neither execution by cannon nor its use by the British in India was particularly unique. Throughout western and southern Asia, public execution has long been a common form of punishment for the most heinous crimes, regardless of who ruled at any given time.Footnote 46 Famously, Jesus of Nazareth is generally understood to have been crucified publicly under Roman rule, executed alongside convicted thieves. As the Umayyad Caliphate displaced both the Roman/Byzantine and Persian presence in the region, similar practices were used under Islam. There are many examples of public execution in the Umayyad period, often involving the crucifixion of rebels.Footnote 47 Later, the Seljuk empire, which spanned much of the modern-day Middle East as well as Iran, would also make widespread use of public execution to punish those they deemed heretics and those whom Seljuk rulers saw as the greatest threat to their empire's authority.Footnote 48 Lange writes that the ‘chronicles from early Islam up to Ottoman times provide many cases in which the authorities made an example of offenders against the public order by publicly shaming, torturing and executing them’.Footnote 49 Whilst ‘historians of crime and punishment in medieval Islam often opt to more or less ignore legal doctrines, considering them largely irrelevant to historical practice’,Footnote 50 Muslim rulers could nonetheless (often selectively) draw on Islamic law that allowed—or, in some cases, outright demanded—for offenders to be put to death for crimes such as banditry, terrorism, and rebellion.Footnote 51 A range of brutal punishments were variously employed throughout the region, including mutilation, dismemberment, lapidation, scaphism, poena cullei,Footnote 52 immolation,Footnote 53 impalement—even toppling a wall upon the condemnedFootnote 54 or boiling them alive in a huge cauldron.Footnote 55 Thus, execution by cannon was simply one of the many forms that public executions took in western and southern Asia. Such graphic methods of execution were never unique to Islamic or Eastern states, of course, but, as these countries continued the arduous process of state-building in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, they became relatively more common in comparison with the West.
Executions by cannon first took place in Asia in no later than 1509, when Portuguese explorer and soldier Francisco de Almeida ordered for ‘many’ prisoners to be blown from the mouths of cannon in Cananore (Kannur), India.Footnote 56 The Portuguese continued to use this method of execution in their colonial holdings in Mozambique and Brazil—possibly up until the nineteenth century.Footnote 57 As noted, several British sources of the period, as well as contemporary historians, attribute the origins of the practice to the Mughal empire, often referring to ‘the old Mughal punishment for mutiny’.Footnote 58 This appears to be inaccurate—the Mughal empire did not exist before 1526. In all likelihood, execution by cannon has existed for as long as cannon have. Nonetheless, there remains significant scope for further research into the early history of this most graphic method of capital punishment. What is clear is that the practice was common in parts of western and southern Asia, including the Indian subcontinent, before the eighteenth century, with well-documented use of cannon executions by the Portuguese, Mughals, British, Afghans, and Persians.
Although the Mughals did not devise the practice, they executed a great many prisoners with cannon and influenced later British adoption of the practice. Babur, the founder of the Mughal empire, was an early proponent of the use of gunpowder weapons in executions, having used firing squads to put Afghan prisoners to death as early as 1526.Footnote 59 Emperor Aurangzeb (r. 1658–1707) is said to have executed a rebellious regional leader by cannon after besieging his fortress for months.Footnote 60 In The History of Afghanistan (the Sirāj al-tawārīkh), court historian Fayż Muḥammad Kātib Hazārah recounts that, under the Mughal Emperor Farrukh Siyar (r. 1713–1719), the son of a Sikh rebel was ‘blown to bits by a cannon’.Footnote 61 Captain Markham Kittoe of the 6th Bengal Native Infantry, writing in the Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal in 1847, recounts that an unnamed Mughal emperor had Purbeel Singh—the last of the chiefs of the town of Oomga (Umga), near Gaya in Bihar—put to death by cannon in the nearby town of Aurungabad.Footnote 62 Mutiny and other political crimes appear to account for the majority of recorded Mughal executions by cannon—a trend that would be followed by the British—but the method was also employed to punish other crimes. William Irvine writes, for example, that, during a military expedition, Mughal leaders used cannon to execute thieves who had stolen from the army.Footnote 63
Other native states of India also employed the practice. Political enemies were favoured targets. In 1766, Hyder Ali Khan (Haidarālī, Sultan of the Kingdom of Mysore 1761–1782) conquered the Kingdom of Calicut (Kozhikode), on India's Malabar Coast, and had the Zamorin'sFootnote 64 finance minister tortured.Footnote 65 Fearing that he would be ‘hanged, or blown from a gun’, the Zamorin set fire to his own palace, killing himself.Footnote 66 In 1800, the brother of Brahmin Sardar Baloba Tatya Pagnis was blown from a cannon. Nurayun Rao Bukhshee, of the same caste, was reportedly ‘killed by rockets’.Footnote 67 This related method of execution, apparently practised in both the Kingdom of Mysore and the Maratha empire, saw numerous artillery rockets affixed to the condemned and then lit, launching the unfortunate individual into the air or carrying him along, ‘mangling his body dreadfully’.Footnote 68 J. G. Duff describes this method as ‘the invention and sport of the execrable Ghatgay [Sarjerao Ghatge]’,Footnote 69 although it appears to predate the Marathi usage. Mysorean Sultan Hyder Ali is also recorded as having employed the method, which must have been sometime in the latter half of the eighteenth century.Footnote 70 Several native states also used execution by cannon to deter banditry. In August 1802, for example, the forces of Anand Rao Gaekwad (Ānandarāva Gāyakavāḍa), Maharajah of Baroda, succeeded in a skirmish against the Pindaris (Pēṇḍhārī) near Surat. The Maharajah's men captured 15 prisoners, two of whom were ‘immediately blown from a gun’.Footnote 71
Blowing from a gun in British India
Despite early Mughal adoption of the practice and its continued and widespread use by other native rulers—a fact that was well documented at the time, but has received less attention in recent decades—it was colonial British forces that were responsible for those executions by cannon in India that are best known today.Footnote 72 While the use of the practice during the Sepoy Mutiny of 1857 is well known, the British appear to have adopted the tactic as a capital punishment meted out by courts martial in 1760, considering the technique ‘more deterrent, more public and more humane’ than the method of capital punishment that preceded it: flogging to death.Footnote 73 Execution was not an altogether uncommon punishment for British soldiers convicted of desertion, treason, or even lesser crimes.Footnote 74 However, in the context of colonial India, British perceptions of the local cultures appear to have directly influenced the choice of method.Footnote 75 Hanging was seen as an insufficient deterrent for native troops as it ‘did not result in the severing of the head from the body’Footnote 76 and, as such, execution by cannon was favoured by the British Indian Army for particularly egregious crimes committed by native Indian soldiers, or ‘sepoys’.Footnote 77
Whilst execution by cannon was to become infamous for its use in punishing mutineers, the first prisoner to be executed by the British administration—condemned by a court martial that comprised native Indian officers—was the leader of a gang of thieves, a carpenter named Nayn.Footnote 78 However, this was a highly atypical case; the British administration's military courts saw sepoys blown from guns for over a century, usually in response to military crimes with a political dimension, such as desertion or mutiny.Footnote 79 In 1764, British forces in Oudh executed 24 sepoys by cannon after an entire battalion deserted.Footnote 80 In 1780, a ‘Maratha spy’ was blown from a gun to ‘deter others’ by using such an ‘exemplary’ and ‘spectacular’ punishment.Footnote 81 On 30 April 1784, native cavalry and light infantry mutinied at the fort in Arni, in the Madras presidency.Footnote 82 After military personnel under Lieutenant-General Ross Lang surrounded the fort and forced their surrender, a dozen ringleaders (‘some of whom happened to be black officers’) were executed by cannon.Footnote 83 Six of the 19Footnote 84 sepoy ringleaders condemned to die for their roles in the Vellore Mutiny (1806)Footnote 85 were blown from guns on the western glacis of Vellore Fort on 23 September. The commanding officer Colonel George Harcourt described the executions as a ‘painful duty’, performed ‘without a single failure or accident’.Footnote 86
Most infamously in both contemporary English-language accounts and modern academic scholarship, the British were notorious for their use of cannon executions during the Sepoy Mutiny of 1857, relying upon the physical, psychological, and spiritual terror of this practice to both punish and suppress rebellious impulses. Indeed, one report of four mutineers executed by cannon in 1857 suggests that British forces felt ‘this is nearly the only form in which death has any terrors for a native’.Footnote 87 Desertion had long been a problem within British Indian Army units that comprised native troops—and, as shown, in egregious cases had been met with execution by cannon—but the 1857 mutiny saw the dramatic escalation of the practice, ‘as “no quarter” became the general cry’ of the British.Footnote 88 Summaries of the condemned abound in British newspapers and magazines of the time, with those blown from guns being punished for crimes such as communicating orders to rebellious troops, leading mutinies, or assassinating British officers.Footnote 89 In late 1857, the British used cannon to execute an Indian who had ‘instigat[ed] an attack upon the Europeans and their property’ and, due to suspected involvement, ‘his son suffer[ed] with him’.Footnote 90 Following British forces’ success in capturing rebels in Ajnala, Sir Robert Montgomery, head of the Justice Department in Punjab, directed F. H. Cooper to send captured mutineers to Lahore for public execution, writing ‘we want some for the troops here and also for evidence’. Forty-one former sepoys were thus blown from guns in the provincial capital.Footnote 91 In cases of mutiny and rebellion, it was common for the British to execute only a relatively small proportion of the conspirators, particularly their leaders.Footnote 92 Often an even smaller proportion of those to be executed were blown from guns—serving primarily as an example to others. This was not always the case, however. In perhaps the largest single officially sanctioned execution of this type, the British executed 68 Kuka Sikhs by cannon in 1872.Footnote 93 It has been suggested that the British, fearing a repeat of the 1857 mutiny, responded with disproportionate brutality, despite the absence of a coherent political motivation for the Kuka crimes.Footnote 94
Whilst not seeking to downplay these atrocities, it is worth noting that, at least on the scale of the 1857 Sepoy Mutiny itself, execution by cannon was not commonplace. This is demonstrated even in Indian writings about the mutiny that seek to cover perceived British atrocities in depth. Estimates of the number of Indian deaths resulting from the mutiny range widely, from 100,000 to 10 million (depending on how the count is made and who is counted).Footnote 95 Even taking the most conservative estimate, execution by cannon during the entire period of British rule account for only some 150 individuals killed in total—reflecting a very small percentage of deaths attributed to British actions during the mutiny. Of those officially sanctioned executions carried out by British forces,Footnote 96 the practice is dwarfed by other modes of execution such as hanging or shooting.Footnote 97 According to one account, after Delhi was recaptured from the rebels, five or six people would be hanged daily at one gallows set up in the city.Footnote 98 Despite its rarity, the British use of the practice has received significant attention in the English-language literature. There are several possible reasons for this: the focus of these works on British India specifically; English-speaking sources are often skewed towards British practices; and the profound psychological impact of the practice is remembered even today. However, the British use of execution by cannon should more accurately be seen as a punishment reserved for spies and mutiny ringleaders, only rarely being extended to lesser crimes.Footnote 99
It is likewise important to note that Indian rebel forces also executed captives by cannon during the mutiny. Several British officers were blown from guns by rebels in a ‘massacre’ that one British newspaper ascribed to the mutineers’ ‘thirst for blood’.Footnote 100 In several recorded instances, it is clear that the practice was not applied through the lens of military justice used by the British. One contemporary British source recounts in detail how two British women were blown from a gun by mutineers—one woman falling victim to a gruesome misfire.Footnote 101 In another case, a woman was supposedly going to be blown from a gun but managed to escape before her execution.Footnote 102 By contrast, British forces are not known to have executed any female prisoners by cannon during the mutiny.
Execution by cannon as a tool of state-building in Persia and Afghanistan
Following the Sepoy Mutiny, the practice of blowing from a gun seems to have largely died out in British India. By 1868, the British had formally abandoned the spectacle of public execution in the UK following the passage of the Capital Punishment Amendment Act 1868,Footnote 103 although legally the act did not apply to British India.Footnote 104 Nonetheless, social pressures from the motherland and relative political and military stability in British India in the decades following the mutiny mean that public executions of all types sharply declined. However, execution by cannon did not cease with the British abandonment of the practice. Indeed, European observers in southern and western Asia during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries noted the continued practice of blowing from a gun as employed by indigenous powers in the region. Used by the British primarily as a military punishment, the practice was now an enduring tool of statecraft for native powers in parts of Asia, in part due to the political instability in many countries at the time. Blowing from the gun was referred to in one 1857 British account as ‘a common punishment in all Moslem countries’.Footnote 105 The practice was seen as an effective tool in controlling crime in several states, and was broadly applied in the contexts of both military and civilian justice. English physician C. J. Wills, who travelled, lived, and worked in Persia during the mid- to late nineteenth century observed that the severe punishments meted out in that country served to effectively deter violent crime—in contrast to the near-exclusive military use of the practice by the British.Footnote 106
In Persia, when a condemned prisoner was executed by cannon, the executioner was said to be ‘making him the breath of a cannon’.Footnote 107 Interestingly, several accounts of Persian cannon executions describe how the condemned was forced to stand atop a pile of bricks, such that the centre of their back was in line with the muzzle of the gun.Footnote 108 In punishing political crimes, Persia was not so different from other states in the region in the nineteenth century. Following the Kurdish uprising under Sheikh Ubeydullah (Kurdish: Şêx Ubeydelayê Nehrî) in 1880–1881, several executions took place. Jalil KhanFootnote 109—a commander of Persian troops at Miandoab, who had betrayed the city to Kurdish forces and took part in the subsequent massacre and pillaging—was taken to Tabriz and ‘shot from a cannon's mouth’.Footnote 110 One such execution (perhaps of Jalil Khan) was depicted in the Parisian weekly Journal des Voyages (see Figure 2).Footnote 111 Another contemporary account recalls that a rebellious Khan was blown from a gun in Isfahan, having exhausted his finances in delaying his execution.Footnote 112
One contemporary correspondent in Persia referred to blowing from a gun or mortar as an ‘exceptional punishment’, on a par with crucifixion, walling-up, burning, and burying alive.Footnote 113 Such punishments—which also included being impaled or being hung by the heels and cut to pieces—were administered, according to one European observer, ‘lorsqu'il y a dans le crime quelque circonstance aggravante’ (‘when there is some aggravating circumstance in the crime’).Footnote 114 Despite its use as a tool of political control, a great many nineteenth- and early twentieth-century accounts record executions by cannon being meted out in response to non-political crimes. These were mostly economic crimes, and the practice of blowing from the gun appears to have served as a deterrent against an increase in criminality during periods when the state's capacity to respond to a crime wave was low, such as during political crises. Such executions could be justified—though not necessarily motivated—by Qur'anic law, which demanded execution for those convicted of banditry, highway robbery, and similar crimes (such as extortion).Footnote 115 In 1848, for example, Persian Prince Feeroz Mirza, governor of Fars, ordered that a thief who had taken advantage of the recent death of the Shah to loot shops and extort civilians be blown from a gun.Footnote 116 In 1887, a persistent bandit leader who had been fined many times previously was captured and blow from a gun at Tabriz. His ‘scattered fragments could be seen in the court-yard of the governor's palace’.Footnote 117 According to Weston, the governor of Isfahan threatened to have the 14-year-old son of a leading brigand fired from the mouth of a cannon.Footnote 118 These uses make the Persian practice distinct from the Mughal and especially British use of executions by cannon, and closer to that of Afghanistan, where the practice was employed as a form of capital punishment in the broader civilian context. Persia was late to abandon the practice, too, with a 1921 issue of National Geographic containing an image of a ‘Persian robber’ moments before being blown from a gun.Footnote 119 Afghanistan was perhaps the one country to persist in employing execution by cannon for longer than Persia. In fact, by the mid-nineteenth century, Afghanistan had already become the geographic nexus of the practice.
The government of Afghanistan was enthusiastic in their use of cannon in executions. Afghanistan in the nineteenth century was perhaps uniquely positioned to embrace the practice; not only had the country once formed part of the Mughal empire, but it was also situated between Persia and British India. It existed in a tumultuous political landscape—the Afghan government in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries held little power outside of the country's major cities, and rival political factions and bandits repeatedly threatened the legitimacy of the ruling Durrānī and Bārakzay Dynasties. In this atmosphere of political precarity, political rivals and rebels were frequently blown from guns in order to deter unrest. In 1802, for example, a Ghilzai rebel and his two sons were blown from guns.Footnote 120 As one of the first acts of Shah Shuja's first reign (1803–1809), he blew a man named Ashik ‘to bits by a mortar’ as retribution for crimes committed against a previous Shāh.Footnote 121 In 1839, two Afghans were executed by cannon for wounding or killing sarwans Footnote 122 and for stealing camels.Footnote 123 In November 1841, an Anglo–Durrānī expedition under the command of General William Knott captured Akram Khān of Dihrāwat.Footnote 124 Upon his return to Kandahar, Akram Khān was blown from a gun on the orders of Shah Shuja's son, Muḥammad Tīmūr.Footnote 125 That same year, an Afghan man was blown from a gun for murdering, apparently without cause, a European writer who had accompanied a British officer to Herat.Footnote 126 In 1845, a French observer noted that Yar Mohammed, the Vizier of Herat, had executed a Taymoni chief by cannon for disloyalty and then thrice escaping the city while imprisoned.Footnote 127 It should be noted that use of the practice oscillated over time in Afghanistan, likely due to the preferences of individual leaders. For example, during his first reign, Dōst Moḥammad Khān deported a military official for having ‘blown [a deserter's] head off by cannon’ in 1835, seeming to indicate that he did not approve of the practice.Footnote 128 Indeed, there appear to be no records of Dōst Moḥammad Khān himself ordering execution by cannon, and all of the documented examples of the practice during his reign either took place in independent Herat or were ordered by his military officers (including by Sardar—later Emir—Abdur Rahman Khan).Footnote 129
Upon his accession to the throne in 1880, blowing from the gun became an important tool in Emir Abdur Rahman Khan's efforts to establish a stable Afghan state. This is emphasised in many contemporary English-language accounts and has even been noted in passing in some modern academic works. Lee (1996) writes, for example, that Abdur Rahman Khan's ‘Reign of Terror’ occasioned some 5,000 executions each year, with some of the condemned blown from guns.Footnote 130 During the Iron Emir's 21-year reign, he claimed to have executed some 120,000 people.Footnote 131 While Rahman reigned, everyone from petty criminals to anti-government insurgents could expect to be executed upon capture: ‘Those who were most likely to incur the Amir's wrath were, of course, those who rebelled against his authority, but even the most ordinary of criminal acts was viewed as treasonous and liable to exemplary, if not summary, justice.’Footnote 132
These death sentences were intended to terrorise spectators and instil obedience in the Afghan populace. Executions of rebels were said to have ‘struck fear and grief into [the people of] those regions’ and brought ‘terror and dread to the ears of the enemy’.Footnote 133 Likewise, the brutal treatment of criminals was used as a deterrent. In line with these tactics, blowing from guns was recognised by European observers and Afghan writers alike as a ‘common form of execution’ under Rahman.Footnote 134 A contemporary newspaper notes that Rahman ordered 300 rebels to be transported to Kabul in 1889 for execution, 100 of whom were blown from guns. Those sentenced to death by cannon were dressed in black.Footnote 135 Another account reports that, after putting down a revolt in Afghan Turkestan in 1887–1888, Rahman marched into formerly rebel-controlled territory. Immediately upon having prisoners delivered to him, he ordered the use of cannon to execute two rebels.Footnote 136 In 1887, a rebel leader named Sharbat Khān—who served as a general for the revolutionary forces of Muḥammad Isḥāq Khān, a rebellious nobleman and governor of Turkestan who led an uprising against his cousin, the emir—was blown from a gun in Herat.Footnote 137 In Afghanistan, as in Persia and the Mughal empire, this method of execution was not restricted to crimes of a political or military nature. An 1880 news article describes the execution of a Muslim man who was blown from a gun—on orders from the emir himself—for murdering a Hindu goldsmith.Footnote 138 Frank Martin, who wrote extensively about his time with Rahman and his son, wrote that the punishment was typically reserved for ‘[m]en who rob or swindle Government funds … also highway robbers and spies’.Footnote 139 An 1890 newspaper article reports that an Afghan governor was blown from a gun outside Sherpore following his conviction for the murder of another official, the latter having planned to report the governor for the misappropriation of government funds.Footnote 140
Rahman's successful military campaigns and brutal domestic crackdowns—including the widespread use of cannon in executing prisoners—helped him achieve his broader political aims. Under Rahman, ‘the structures of the state began to take a more consolidated form’ and criminality decreased.Footnote 141 Pleased with his own success, the emir wrote: ‘The same nation that was always engaged in rebellions and fighting against me in the early part of my reign … has become the most peaceful, obedient, law-abiding, and civilised nation.’Footnote 142 Today, Rahman is widely credited with establishing the modern Afghan state. In part due to his achievements, Rahman's successors continued in his brutal footsteps, prolonging the global lifespan of executions by cannon. His son, Ḥabībullāh Khān (Habibullah Khan; r. 1901–1919), took keenly to the practice. In 1905, a spy was blown from the noon-day gun at Sherpur Cantonment—a moment depicted in the Illustrated London News (see Figure 3).
Habibullah also ordered several constitutionalist agitators, including the governor of Qalʿah-i Fath, to be blown from a gun in Jalalabad in 1909, following a suspected plot on the emir's life.Footnote 143 This method was also used to execute Jahandad Khan—a pretender to the Afghan throne and leader of the Khost Rebellion—in 1912.Footnote 144 As shown in Figure 1, Habibullah had nine additional conspirators blown from guns in 1913. European observers took note of this; for example, Le Petit Journal wrote:
Récemment on découvrit à Caboul un complot contre l’émir. Neuf des chefs des conjurés furent pris, jugés et condamnés à mort. On amena neuf canons, on les chargea, après quoi on attacha un conjuré à chaque gueule de canon et les neufs coups partirent en même temps, mettant en ieces les corps des neuf condamnés.Footnote 145
Recently, a plot against the Emir was uncovered in Kabul. Nine of the leaders of the conspirators were caught, tried, and sentenced to death. Nine cannon were brought in and loaded, after which a conspirator was tied to each cannon mouth and the nine shots were fired at the same time, destroying the bodies of the nine condemned men.
Thus, in contrast to the British and Mughal use of cannon execution to punish mostly military crimes, the practice in this context was seen as essential to the consolidation of the Afghan state under its ruling Barakzai Dynasty, in the face of rival claimants and reformers. Indeed, the practice appears to have endured in Afghanistan for longer than in any other country. In 1930, a mass execution by cannon—perhaps the last time this method was used in Afghanistan—was reported by The New York Times, which wrote that 11 ‘followers of the dead usurper, Bacha Sakao, have been blown from guns at Kabul’.Footnote 146
Conclusion
Despite the focus of the majority of English-language contemporary accounts and modern academic literature on British Indian executions by cannon, it is clear that the practice should instead be understood in the wider context of the employment of the tactic in southern and western Asia over several centuries. Whilst the British (and their Mughal forerunners) in Indian tended to use blowing from a gun to punish military crimes, especially mutiny, indigenous leaders in Persia and Afghanistan instead expanded the practice to encompass the civilian judicial context, seeking to consolidate their nascent state structures. This article demonstrates that, even by examining predominantly sources that were and are available to English speakers, the practice has been insufficiently contextualised in the literature and regularly mischaracterised as uniquely or particularly associated with British rule in India. Although the role of executions by cannon has been widely discussed both popularly and academically within the context of the 1857 mutiny in particular, the broader understanding of the practice both in the military context and in its use as a tool of state-building in punishing civilian crimes has heretofore been limited. This context is important not just for understanding the British use of the punishment, which originates with Mughal practices of military justice and was comparatively limited in scope and scale of application, but also for understanding how British use fits into the broader history of executions by cannon.
Execution by cannon proved to be a useful, albeit barbaric, method for punishing disobedience and deterring rebellion. Not only did it promise a humiliating and gruesome death to those who wronged the state, but it was also thought to torment the souls of the condemned and terrorised onlookers into submission. For these reasons, the method was adopted by many regimes: in Persia, it served largely as a heavy-handed punishment to deter crime; in India, execution by cannon was a fearsome implement of both native and colonial control; and, in Afghanistan, the practice became a barbaric tool for state-building. Although almost all contemporary English-language scholarship focuses exclusively or primarily on British practice, this article has demonstrated that this limited view overlooks important historical uses in other states and by other rulers.
The symbolic display of power in executing either civilian or military prisoners via excessive force has remained appealing to regimes eager to wield terror, even in more recent years. Both North Korea and the so-called Islamic State are known to have performed executions with anti-aircraft artillery guns.Footnote 147 The brutality of cannon execution has remained in the public imagination as well, though, as with scholarship, attention has been focused almost singularly on the British application of the punishment. A 60-paise commemorative postage stamp issued by India in 1987 depicts Veer Narayan Singh, one of the leaders of the Indian rebellion in Chhattisgarh, who was executed by cannon on 10 December 1857 (see Figure 4).Footnote 148 There exist several works of art depicting British forces blowing prisoners from guns, the most famous of which is ‘Suppression of the Indian revolt by the English’ (circa 1884), by Russian war artist Vasily Vereshchagin (1842–1904).Footnote 149 As noted, a full-page colour illustration that appeared on the back page of the illustrated supplement to Le Petit Journal of 23 November 1913 shows the macabre fascination with the practice that endured in Europe (see Figure 1). There is even a modern craft beer from Nightmare Brewing Company called ‘Blowing from a Gun’, which depicts the aftermath of one such execution on its label in a very gruesome fashion.Footnote 150
This, of course, is not the whole story. Executioners outside of Asia also made use of cannon, especially in the Ottoman empire and its tributary and vassal states. In 1596, a janissary was executed in Constantinople for ‘shameful behaviour’, being ‘wrapped in rags in Tophane and put into the mouth of a cannon, which was then fired’.Footnote 151 In 1683, following the bombardment of Algiers as part of France's ongoing campaign against the Barbary Corsairs, Algerian commander Mezzo Morto Hüseyin Pasha executed a number of French prisoners, including consul Jean Le Vacher, by cannon.Footnote 152 Portuguese colonial administrators also employed the technique beyond the borders of their Indian possessions. In 1571, the forces of Portuguese explorer and soldier Francisco Barreto rounded up 50 Muslims in the Kingdom of Mutapa (Tawara: Mwene we Mutapa). These unfortunate individuals were ‘impaled, blown from mortars, torn apart on tree-trunks, axed or shot’.Footnote 153 Africans enslaved by Portuguese colonists in Mozambique were sometimes blown from guns when a ‘spectacular’ execution was required, such as when punishing those slaves who incited others to mutiny.Footnote 154 Henry Salt, who visited the Portuguese settlements on the east coast of Africa in 1809–1810 on the orders of the British government, described how the Portuguese executed the Sheikh of Quintangone (Ilha Quitangonha) by cannon in order to ‘strike the neighbouring chieftains with awe’.Footnote 155 The Portuguese also made use of the practice in their South American colonies. In 1618, for example, an indigenous rebel leader named Amaro was captured in Portuguese colonial Brazil and blown from a gun.Footnote 156 Future research might seek to establish a complete timeline of the practice and to examine its role in other regionsFootnote 157 and contexts—which, as this article highlights, have ranged from state-building to simple criminal deterrence, and have occurred within both the military and civilian judicial systems. This would go a long way towards correcting the mistaken assumptions about the practice—especially as regards British usage—in both popular and academic understandings.
Acknowledgements
This article has been produced under the auspices of the Kabul Arsenal Project. For more information, see www.kabularsenal.com. The authors are grateful to their KARP colleagues and to Darius Hoflack for their inputs.
Conflicts of interest
None.