January 8th 1697 Edinburgh student Thomas Aikenhead was executed in Edinburgh

January 8th 1697 Edinburgh student Thomas Aikenhead was executed in Edinburgh.
This is a cracking, if sad tale, and shows you how religious beliefs can be a blight on our history. So who was oor Thomas, a villain?, a murderer?, a smuggler?, or some enemy of the state? No Thomas’s crime was blasphemy who took the lord’s name in vain…….this would be comic if it wasn’t for the tragic fact that he was executed, unlike the man in Life of Brian, who uttered the words Jehova, Thomas complained that he wished he was warming himself in hell rather than that chilly night walking past the recently built Tron Kirk on Edinburgh’s Royal Mile. On a chilly evening in Edinburg, Scotland in 1696, twenty-year-old Thomas Aikenhead was walking with three other medical students when he remarked that at that moment he would prefer to be in Hell, where at least he would be warm. A few months later he would be on trial, with his life at stake.... Read story At that time blasphemy was a crime in Great Britain. Under the provisions of a 1695 “Act Against Blasphemy,” any person who “shall in their writing or discourse, deny, impugn or quarrel, argue or reason, against the being of God, or any of the persons of the blessed trinity, or the authority of the Holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments, or the providence of God in the government of the world” was subject to imprisonment for the first two offences and death for the third. Aikenhead was charged with blasphemy in violation of the Act and was brought to trial in Edinburgh in December 1696. Five of his supposed friends testified against him, reporting not only his quip about Hell, but also that Aikenhead had claimed that the Bible was composed of fables and that theology was nonsense, that he scoffed at the doctrines of the trinity and the incarnation, and that he had said he preferred Muhammad to Christ. Upon hearing the evidence, the court found Aikenhead guilty of blasphemy and sentenced him to death. Aikenhead, who was representing himself, filed an appeal to the Scottish Privy Council, apologizing for his impiety, professing his repentance, noting that he was a man of “tender years,” and pointing out that it was only his first offense. Unpersuaded that his repentance was sincere, the Privy Council announced that it would change the sentence only on the request of the Scottish Kirk (Church). Rather than request clemency, the Church of Scotland demanded that the execution proceed, in order to “curb the abounding of impiety and profanity in this land.” The sentence was affirmed. After being forced to walk the two miles from his cell to the gallows, Thomas Aikenhead was hanged on January 8, 1697, three hundred twenty-six years ago today. He became the last person to be executed for blasphemy in Great Britain.
All What's You Should Know Dig into history, fact, science, true crime, and beyond with All What's you should know — where you'll discover the most interesting things that you Should know Click Here For more trending stories

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

SO Sad! Transgender Woman Pleads For Life Before Mob Beat Her To Death

Zebra Swallowed By A Monster Crocodile (Pictures)

Self-styled Instagram king throws a NAKED porn star off a roof