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A man, having learned about his girlfriend’s betrayal, may become furious and want to take revenge on his partner. But you need to pull yourself together and try to objectively assess the situation. Sometimes revenge must be abandoned in order to maintain self-esteem. Some of the things an abused young person does can be harmful to him or her. At the same time, the girl will practically not suffer from such revenge.

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What were and are the punishments for infidelity?

IN modern times it would not occur to a young man to take revenge on his cheating wife or girlfriend the way they did in ancient times different countries. Now a man can hit his unfaithful partner, yell at her, come up with some petty dirty tricks, or spread bad rumors about her. All these actions, although unpleasant, cannot be compared with the punishments that offended young people came up with several centuries ago.

In fairness, it should be noted that even in the current era, a person is capable of committing a crime after learning about a woman’s infidelity, but this is an exception. In ancient times, the following punishments were common practice and were not considered abnormal.

Here are some brutal examples:

  • In medieval Thailand, a cheating wife was placed in a simulated animal where she could not move her limbs or change location. Most often they used a stuffed elephant. The real animal, mistaking him for a female, acted instinctively, causing serious injuries and injuries to the girl inside.
  • In Western Europe, adulteres were deprived of their freedom (imprisoned in a monastery), or had their body parts cut off (nose, ears, lips), or burned at the stake, believing that this way the soul of the harlot was cleansed of sin.
  • IN Ancient Rome unfaithful girls were mutilated by cutting off their noses. Such a woman became a slave, she could not have children and remarry.
  • And in China, prodigal wives were doused with animal fat and a pack of hungry dogs were set on them. Afterwards, they either spent a long time being treated for numerous physical injuries, or died in agony.

On ancient Rus' the punishments were much milder, but they depended on the character of the husband. If he was supportive and did not want a divorce, then the girl was beaten with a belt or a whip. Sometimes physical injuries were replaced by correctional labor or confinement in a monastery. The husband also had the right to harness the woman with the horses so that everyone could see what act she had done towards him. If the husband did not forgive the prodigal wife, then she was exiled to the spinning yard for life, after which she could not have another family or children. Very often, court proceedings took place according to the simple will of the husband - to kick the cheater out of the house and onto the street, leaving her without everything.

Even though all the above actions seem to be very cruel relics of the past, it still exists in modern times. For example, in Islam, cheating on a woman is a great sin and is punishable by death. In practice, a man does not kill a girl, but is quite capable of beating her. It all depends on the specific state in which the couple lives. But young people who adhere to this religion never forgive their spouses for such actions and they themselves take their behavior with other female representatives very seriously.

Husband's ingenious revenge for betrayal

What a man shouldn't do

A man who decides to take revenge on a girl needs to think about whether he wants to continue the relationship further. If yes, then you should try to forgive her. Without this, it will not be possible to renew the alliance. And if not, then you need to maintain your own dignity and not do stupid things.

What a young man definitely shouldn’t do:

  • Take revenge on your lover. It is advisable not to contact him at all. If he was an acquaintance and deliberately destroyed the couple’s relationship, then you need to ask about his motives. Maybe that guy has been in love with a girl for a long time, and it’s mutual. In addition, it is likely that the lover did not know about the relationship or marriage of his sexual partner.
  • Change in response. This is fraught with other consequences. You should not use a third person to sort out your relationship with a girl. The new partner may fall in love, and after breaking up with the man who actually used her, she will feel depressed.
  • Cause physical injury to the traitor or damage property. Such an act implies criminal punishment. And the woman, offended by the behavior of her ex, will go and remove the beating and prove her involvement in the damage to an expensive item. Then the man will suffer even more, and not only from his partner’s infidelity, but also from his own stupidity and excessive emotionality.

Also, you should not do any minor dirty tricks to the cheating lady. This is stupid and pointless, there is no need to lower yourself in the eyes of a woman and everyone around her. You should refrain and prove yourself to be a reasonable person.

Is it possible to forgive betrayal

How to come up with a punishment for an unfaithful woman?

The punishment that the man comes up with should be such that the girl cannot make any claims against him. This does not mean that she simply will not have evidence of her ex’s guilt. A woman must understand that her partner has every right to do this.

To make it clearer, here are some examples of how you can punish a traitor:

  • Deprived of living space. The girl lives in her man’s apartment and has no other housing. A young man can calmly ask her to leave his territory, explaining this as a low act on her part. No matter how much the lady screams, begs, or insists on her own, you should not leave her in your house.
  • Leave without financial support. In the relationship, the man helped her financially: he provided her with a place to live, bought things, paid for her needs. After betrayal, the young man has every right to deprive the lady of her security and take away everything that was in her use, no matter what she says.
  • Disappear from life ex-lover. If a couple divides income and real estate in half, then after the news of betrayal, the young man needs to move as quickly as possible. In such a situation, you don’t have to explain anything to the woman, just leave.

Some may think that this is not enough for revenge. Some men mean by punishment damage to expensive property, reputation, and the girl’s relationships with her loved ones. But you shouldn't do this. Even if the separation does not cause any visible reaction in a woman, in her heart she will worry that she ex-man I said goodbye to her so easily and emotionlessly.

How to take revenge on your ex

If it is emotionally very difficult for a man to cope with the act of his companion, then it is recommended to consult with a specialist. A psychologist will give advice and help you understand yourself.

There is no need to come up with a punishment for treason and take revenge on a woman if she herself admitted everything and asked for forgiveness.

This will not be the best thing on the part of the guy if the girl sincerely apologized. young man there was an opportunity to find his soulmate who could experience real feelings for him.

And a little about secrets...

The story of one of our readers, Irina Volodina:

I was especially distressed by my eyes, which were surrounded by large wrinkles, plus dark circles and puffiness. How to completely remove wrinkles and bags under the eyes? How to deal with swelling and redness?But nothing ages or rejuvenates a person more than his eyes.

But how to rejuvenate them? Plastic surgery? I found out - no less than 5 thousand dollars. Hardware procedures - photorejuvenation, gas-liquid peeling, radiolifting, laser facelifting? A little more affordable - the course costs 1.5-2 thousand dollars. And when will you find time for all this? And it's still expensive. Especially now. That's why I chose a different method for myself...

Nowadays, adultery is no longer considered something out of the ordinary. In many countries there are no penalties for this, but not in all. Some states still punish their citizens for treason. Next, we suggest finding out what punishment unfaithful spouses may suffer in a particular country.

Mali

Lives in Mali great amount tribes whose laws differ significantly from each other. The Dogon tribe does not see anything wrong with treason. Women are prohibited from having sex only with their husband's relatives. For such an offense, exposed lovers can be forever expelled from the tribe.

Switzerland

In Switzerland, an unfaithful spouse is deprived of the right to register new marriage within 3 years.

Türkiye

In this country, since 1996, not only women, but also men have been punished for treason. This offense is punishable by imprisonment for up to 5 years.

Iran

Since 1990, Iran has had a law according to which a woman caught in adultery or a male relative (not just her husband) has the right to kill without trial. Men get off with simple public censure for treason.

Indonesia

In this country, adultery is punishable imprisonment up to 15 years.

Papua New Guinea

This republic has the most terrible sanctions against unfaithful spouses. Deceived husbands are not only allowed, but also ordered to behead their wives' lovers. The wives are not killed, but before execution the condemned man must eat the finger of his mistress.

China

In China, both women and men are punished for adultery. Two years in prison with confiscation of half of the property.

Vietnam

In 2013, the government of this country passed a law according to which every unfaithful spouse must pay a fine. And it ranges from 1 million to 3 million Vietnamese dong (about $45–145).

Afghanistan

In Afghanistan, there is a religious moral police that carefully monitors the moral character of citizens. Unfaithful spouses face different punishments depending on the severity of the crime - the duration of adultery, whether the fact of adultery has been recorded for the first time or whether it is a relapse. The punishment is quite harsh - from public flogging to 10 years in prison. Now the country's authorities are trying in every possible way to soften the former cruel laws. Until recently, a woman could easily be stoned for treason, and a man would get off with rods or even just public censure.

There is no need to hide the fact that most countries have moved away from harsh punishments for treason. Just look how they used to deal with infidels
In medieval Russia, the code of law of 1550 expanded the scope of crimes punishable by death. These included adultery.

“Woman was created for man, and not man for woman” - this was the postulate propagated by the Russian Orthodox Church. This gave rise to distrust of both sexes towards each other, so marriages were concluded not out of love, but according to the will of the parents. In such families, spouses treated each other with hostility and did not value each other - therefore, betrayal often accompanied such relationships, despite the censure of society.

Ancient Rus'

The earliest document that mentions adultery is the Charter of Prince Yaroslav the Wise. It says that a man was considered an adulterer if he had not only a mistress, but also children from her. For cheating on his wife, a man had to pay a fine to the church, and the amount of the fine was determined by the prince. There is a record in the chronicle that Mstislav Vladimirovich (son of Vladimir Monomakh) “visited his wives not sparingly, and she (the princess), knowing that, was not at all offended... Now,” he continued (according to the chronicle), “the princess is like the man is young, wants to have fun, and can do something obscene, it’s already inconvenient for me to guard against it, but it’s enough when no one knows or talks about it.”

Any relationship between a woman and a stranger was considered adultery. Her husband needed to punish his wife's frivolity. If he forgave the traitor and continued to live with her, then he was entitled to punishment. To avoid punishment, a man had to divorce his unfaithful wife, and not delay this moment: “If a wife left her husband with someone else, the husband is to blame for letting her in...”

17th and 18th centuries

In the 17th and 18th centuries, adultery was a reason for divorce. In pre-Petrine times, a husband could get away with a year of penance and a fine; a woman always suffered a more severe punishment than a man. If a woman was convicted of adultery, then after a divorce she had to join the spinning yard, and she was forbidden to remarry. To prove his wife's infidelity, the husband had to bring witnesses. This is reflected in the saying of Vladimir Dahl: “not caught - not a thief, not raised - no b----.”

The nobles were tolerant of betrayal. The peasants treated treason much more harshly and condemned it. However, punishments did not become an obstacle to adultery. This is reflected in the sayings: “When a girl falls in love with a matchmaker, it’s no one’s fault,” “It wasn’t the mother who ordered it, she wanted it,” and especially: “Someone else’s husband is sweet, but it’s not a shame to live with him, but it’s hateful to hang around with him.”

There were many cases when the husband “did not seek a divorce” from the cheater. Often the husband agreed to punish his wife - with lashes, whips or correctional labor. A wife who was caught cheating was forbidden to use her husband's surname. Penance for wives lasted for many years (up to 15 years), or she was sent to a monastery.

The husbands' requests to divorce him from the “unfaithful” were always satisfied. This led to the fact that if a man “no longer needed a wife,” then this was a convenient excuse to get a divorce and start a new family. However, there were many cases when they divorced at the request of their wife.

If a husband was “caught” cheating, then his punishment consisted of a shameful conversation with his “spiritual father.”

XIX - early XX centuries

In the 19th century, as in previous centuries, a wife’s infidelity was treated more strictly than a husband’s infidelity. The man was subject to moral punishment. There was a nuance: in society, a divorced man was unspokenly subject to restrictions on promotion and might not be given the desired position. This situation is described by Leo Tolstoy in Anna Karenina. The common people used “shameful punishments.” Women treated adultery strictly: “Such women sin doubly - they violate purity and corrupt the law... they are embezzlers, non-observers.”

Men used their wife’s “betrayal” as a reason to divorce her, which is why there are hundreds of petitions of this kind in the archives. In this case, the volost courts imposed a formal punishment on the female “traitor” – arrest, community service.

The husband could punish his wife on his own - drive her out of the house, taking away her dowry.

Wives could not divorce their husbands. The men did not consent to the divorce, “and they won’t give her a passport without her husband’s consent.” But a woman could take revenge on a homewrecker for the humiliation she suffered - in the Yaroslavl province, for example, wives could break windows, smear the house with soot and the gates with tar.

In the Yaroslavl province and in the Volga region, a husband could beat his adulterous wife, and in the Volga region it was considered correct to beat her “in public.” In the Russian North, in the Tver and Kostroma provinces, they preferred to “not wash dirty linen in public,” and there old men acted as judges of unfaithful wives and husbands. A common form of female punishment was “harnessing” her to a cart. The husband forced her to carry him, and he beat her with a whip.

In the 20th century, punishments for treason were transformed. Divorces have become difficult soviet government adhered to the policy of “strengthening the family.” Private life person ceased to be private, personal relationships and intimate connections became part of party and Komsomol meetings. Throughout the existence of the USSR, the tradition of discussing family crises at meetings was maintained, and the state policy of a “strong Soviet family” was actively implanted in the minds of citizens.

Prince of Denmark - drink poison Gertrude!
The ancient Danes punished adultery with death, while murder was punishable by a simple fine, which shows which of the two acts was considered more serious.

Kievan Rus. Before Christian Rus' - the maximum punishment was “go away” or “expense”.
Since there were no “divorces”, like priests, in Rus' at that time, the maximum punishment was that people separated, or rather the wife was kicked out of the house.
This is due to the fact that the legal status of women during times Kievan Rus, was different than in Europe. During this historical period, women in the Ukrainian family enjoyed some autonomy and independence, which was reflected in women's rights.
The legal status of women was determined by the large role of their labor in the family. Unlike Roman law, which was universally dominant in Western Europe, the right to Rus' gave a woman the opportunity to manage her own property. According to customary law, she had her own property, consisting of a dowry, which in some regions of Rus' even included her own land plot.
And on the holiday of Ivan Kupala, almost everything was allowed! Yes, and at the same time, the issue of childless couples was resolved in this way.



Kievan Rus. Christian Rus' - they could cut off their hair, or they could kill both the traitor and the lover!
In an effort to consolidate marriage, church statutes prohibited hidden forms of violation of marriage laws: adultery and sexual relations between relatives. According to church charter Vladimir Svyatoslavovich, the church was granted broad jurisdiction in the field of imposing punishment for these crimes.
According to the book of Deuteronomy (chapter XXII, art. 22), both were subject to the death penalty. If a person only suspected a woman of treason, without having any evidence, then, according to the book of Numbers, he handed the woman over to a clergyman for testing, which was carried out in the form of ordeals. The Church was not responsible for the consequences. According to Byzantine law, the traitor's braids were cut off, after which the marriage was canceled.
The church law of Kievan Rus punished not only the betrayal of a woman, but also attacks on her honor. This can be seen in Deuteronomy XXII, where it is said that rape entailed consequences: “If someone meets an unbetrothed maiden and seizes her and lies with her and finds them, then the one lying with her must give the father the revelation fifty shekels of silver, and let her be his wife, because he has defamed her, and for the rest of his life he cannot divorce her.”



Changed it to look like an elephant!
In the Kingdom of Tonkin, a traitor was trampled by an elephant.
Changed it - now with an elephant!
And in Siam, customs were more tolerant, although the elephant was involved here too. The culprit was placed in a special contraption, and the elephant could enjoy the unfortunate woman, thinking that it was a female elephant.
With a whip - and no sadomasochism or pleasure.
In similar cases, the ancient Bretons (Britain), also most likely out of perverted motives, or out of a sense of solidarity, simply marked adulteresses to death.
Together we changed - together and jump!
In Africa there is a small kingdom of Luango, where they say there is still a custom of throwing a traitor and her lover from a steep cliff.




I got tired of it - he executed me and told everyone that she was cheating!
In some European countries, the wife was tried by the husband himself: he executed her on the spot if he believed that she was guilty; this can be called an echo of that long tradition, according to which husbands could get rid of their wives who were bored with them.





Savages - they are savages.
The savages of the Miami tribe cut off the noses of the adulteresses, the Abyssinians dragged them out into the street and tore them into pieces.
Scalp for treason.
It is believed that the natives of Canada made a neat cut on their head and then tore off their scalp. But scientists are not confident in this fact and the debate is still going on.
Changed - it means for sale!
In the Eastern half of the Roman Empire (Byzantium and Constantinople), sinners were sold in the market square to everyone.
The whole family gets a knife.
In Diyarbakir (just don’t ask where it is), the criminal was executed by the whole family and everyone had to strike her at least once with a dagger.
How is this NOT Sparta?
In some provinces of Greece (in some colonies), where, unlike Sparta, adultery was not allowed, anyone could kill a traitor with impunity
Changed it - ate it!
The savages of the Guax-Toliam tribe, discovered by French explorers in America, threw the traitor at the feet of the leader, cut her into pieces, and everyone present ate her.
The main thing is that children do not see!
The Hottentots, who allowed parricide and the murder of mothers and children, treated adultery harshly. They punished the traitor with death, and even the testimony of a child served as proof of guilt.

1917, the longest year in Russian history, was also the most turning point. Including the abolition of punishment for treason.

In this regard, our country has found itself at the forefront of “humanization”. Sexual revolution, 1964, the International Congress in The Hague adopted a resolution: “Adultery cannot be considered a criminal offense and therefore not subject to judicial punishment.” In Italy and France, criminal penalties were abolished only in 1975. And before that, for example, Sofia Loren had to leave Italy due to an extramarital affair with Carlo Ponti. In Turkey, crawling with Russia in a race to the European Union, the law was repealed in 1996. In Switzerland, to this day it can be prohibited to enter into a new marriage for 3 years. Brazil abolished the punishment in 2005, and Mexico just recently, in 2011.

1. The Babylonian Talmud names four types of capital punishment: strangulation, cutting off the head with a sword, burning, throwing on stones.
Strangulation was considered the easiest form of death penalty. Its essence was that a piece of linen was wrapped around the neck of the convicted person and two witnesses to the crime or specially appointed persons pulled the ends of the linen in different directions. This death penalty was imposed by the court for crimes such as: beating the father or mother, as well as causing them bodily harm; capturing or kidnapping a Jew for ransom, selling him or her or forcing him into slave labor; having sexual intercourse with married woman(adultery); adultery against one's husband without the intent to discredit him before the Jews.

2. According to the so-called Middle Assyrian laws (XIV - XIII centuries BC)
A husband who found his wife with her lover had the right to kill them both on the spot. If he did not do this, then the court imposed on the adulterer the same punishment that the husband wished to subject his wife to.

3. In modern Turkey:
Since 1996, punishment for adultery has been provided not only for women, but also for men. Compared to the previous law, it is very lenient - five years in prison. For comparison: in Saudi Arabia people still get stoned for this kind of thing.

4. In Iran, Mauritania, United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Nigeria ( Islamic countries) According to Sharia, those caught in infidelity are stoned. Stoning is a form of punishment applied only to married people, and exclusively to women. Men get off with public censure.
At the same time, the authorities are moving towards even greater tightening. Since 1990, Iran has had a law according to which a woman caught in adultery has the right to be killed by a male relative (not necessarily the husband himself) without trial.

5. In Pakistan, by decision of the Sharia court, women can be executed by hanging for adultery.

6. In Afghanistan, the transitional government has restored the religious morality police that operated in the country under the Taliban. The range of punishments for traitors is very wide: from public flogging to 10 years in prison.

7. In Indonesia, adultery is punishable by up to 15 years in prison.

8. But the non-Muslim Republic of Papua New Guinea holds the palm in the severity of punishment for adultery. For example, in the Madang district, where ancient Papuan laws are still in effect, deceived husbands are not only allowed, but also ordered to behead their wives' lovers. The wives are not killed, but before execution the condemned man must eat the finger of his mistress.

9. In Germany in the old days people were quartered for adultery. .According to one version, the custom of locking a woman with a padlock (chastity belt) appeared precisely in Germany among the aristocracy. Each time, going on a military campaign, the husband forced the blacksmith to put an iron belt on his wife, which he personally removed after his return.

10. IN medieval Europe 15-16 centuries wives caught in treason were punished by lifelong imprisonment in a monastery or disfigured by depriving them of their nose, lips or ears. The death penalty for treason was also common. The English king Henry XIII sent two of his wives to the scaffold - Anne Boleyn and Catherine Howard. Only women were punished for adultery.
In Great Britain, for a long time there was a law according to which a deceived husband had the right to a one-time monetary reward. Moreover, it must compensate not only the material costs of the husband for his wife for the entire life together, but also “the moral damage caused to his feelings and pride.”

11. In Bulgaria, alimony is also collected from the guilty spouse in the divorce - in favor of the innocent one. But in Switzerland they do not take money from adulterers, but the court can prohibit the cheating spouse from entering into a new marriage for three years.

12. In Northern Burma, the problem of punishing women is solved simply and technically: from childhood, girls are put ritual hoops around their necks. They greatly lengthen the neck and at the same time support the head, which can no longer support itself on the atrophied cervical vertebrae. If betrayal is discovered, the hoops are removed from the neck of a Burmese woman. This is enough for her to either die from a broken cervical vertebrae or remain crippled.

13. In some African tribes the cheating wife was subjected to castration without fail - the uterus was cut out.

14. In medieval Russia, the code of law of 1550 expanded the scope of crimes punishable by death. These included adultery.

15. IN modern China: In Guangdong province, local legislators have banned extramarital affairs. The punishment for treason (for both men and women) is two years in prison and confiscation of half the property.

16. In 10 US states there is a prison sentence for going “left”. For example, in Minnesota, both husband and wife can receive 5 years in prison and be fined $1,000, or both.