decapitate$19164$ - definizione. Che cos'è decapitate$19164$
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Cosa (chi) è decapitate$19164$ - definizione

COMPLETE SEPARATION OF THE HEAD FROM THE BODY
Beheading; Decapitate; Behead; Beheadings; Namakubi; Personal beheading; Decapitating; Decapitates; Decollation; Decapition; Decapitated; Beheadment; Sugitani Zenjubō; Head removal; Celtic decapitation; Head on a pike; Head on a pole; Spiked head; Head on a stake; Death by the axe; Sugitani Zenjubo; 杉谷善住坊; Beheaded
  • King of [[Dahomey]] cuts off 127 heads to complete the ornament of his wall (1793).
  • A fresco by [[Ambrogio Lorenzetti]]
  • Assyrian military campaign in southern Mesopotamia, beheaded enemies, 7th century BC, from Nineveh, Iraq. The British Museum.
  • French anarchist [[Auguste Vaillant]] just before being guillotined in 1894
  • Panel showing ballplayer being beheaded, [[Classic Veracruz culture]], Mexico
  • Cosmographia]]'' of [[Sebastian Münster]] (1488–1552), [[Basel]], [[Switzerland]], 1552
  • Sgt. [[Leonard Siffleet]], an Australian [[POW]] captured in New Guinea, about to be beheaded by a Japanese soldier with a [[shin guntō]] sword, 1943
  • Caishikou]], [[Beijing]], China, 1905
  • The beheading of the 15th Century Castilian Royal favorite, Don [[Álvaro de Luna]]. Painting by José María Rodríguez de Losada (1826–1896).
  • ''The Beheading of [[Cosmas and Damian]]'', by [[Fra Angelico]]
  • Thomas Felton]]
  • St. Barbara]]" by [[Giulio Quaglio the Younger]] (1721–1723)
  • Aristocratic heads on pikes – a cartoon from the [[French Revolution]]
  • pirates]] (namely [[Klein Henszlein]] and his crew) in [[Hamburg]], Germany, 10 September 1573
  • to stone]]
  • Sino-Japanese War]] of 1894–95
  • [[Odin]] finding [[Mímir]]'s beheaded body – an episode of [[Norse mythology]]
  • The [[Corleck Head]], Irish, 1st or 2nd century AD
  • access-date=2 March 2019}}</ref>
  • Depiction of a public execution in Brueghel's ''[[The Triumph of Death]]'', 1562–1563
  • Depiction of an [[Ethiopia]]n Emperor executing people, 18th century

behead         
(beheads, beheading, beheaded)
If someone is beheaded, their head is cut off, usually because they have been found guilty of a crime.
Charles I was beheaded by the Cromwellians.
= decapitate
VERB: usu passive, be V-ed
decapitate         
(decapitates, decapitating, decapitated)
If someone is decapitated, their head is cut off. (FORMAL)
A worker was decapitated when a lift plummeted down the shaft on top of him...
VERB: be V-ed
decapitation (decapitations)
...executions by decapitation.
N-VAR
Decollation         
·noun A painting representing the beheading of a saint or martyr, ·esp. of St. John the Baptist.
II. Decollation ·noun The act of beheading or state of one beheaded;
- especially used of the execution of St. John the Baptist.

Wikipedia

Decapitation

Decapitation or beheading is the total separation of the head from the body. Such an injury is invariably fatal to humans and most other animals, since it deprives the brain of oxygenated blood, while all other organs are deprived of the involuntary functions that are needed for the body to function.

The term beheading refers to the act of deliberately decapitating a person, either as a means of murder or as an execution; it may be performed with an axe, sword, knife, machete or by mechanical means such as a guillotine or chainsaw. An executioner who carries out executions by beheading is sometimes called a headsman. Accidental decapitation can be the result of an explosion, a car or industrial accident, improperly administered execution by hanging or other violent injury. Suicide by decapitation is rare but not unknown. The national laws of Saudi Arabia, Yemen, and Qatar permit beheading; however, in practice, Saudi Arabia is the only country that continues to behead its offenders regularly as a punishment for capital crimes.

Less commonly, decapitation can also refer to the removal of the head from a body that is already dead. This might be done to take the head as a trophy, for public display, to make the deceased more difficult to identify, for cryonics, or for other, more esoteric reasons.