Saturday, July 6All That Matters

A woman condemned to die of starvation in pre-Soviet Mongolia


A woman condemned to die of starvation in pre-Soviet Mongolia



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15 Comments

  • Doasis

    You know what sucks? And I mean not just the uncomfortable position that this person is in, or knowing they aren’t gonna be fed, but imagine how boring that is. Just being strapped up there until your body gives out from no foods. That just adds to the suck pile of this situation.

  • Dawalkingdude

    Today started with seeing a decapitated head in Cambodia and ends with this. That’s a depressing bookend of the day. Goodnight, internet.

  • treelife365

    This photo was taken in July 1913 by French photographer Albert Kahn. Albert Kahn was a millionaire banker who pioneered color photography using the process invented by the Lumière brothers.
    During his trip through exotic countries, Albert Kahn visited Mongolia where he took this picture of a woman who was condemned to slow and painful starvation by being deposited in a remote desert inside a wooden crate that was to become her tomb.
    Initially, the bowls on the ground had water in them, though was not intentionally refilled, and the person inside was allowed to beg for food which often just prolonged their suffering as they generally didn’t get enough food for the passersby.
    The photographer had to leave her in the box because it would be against a prime directive of anthropologists to intervene in another culture’s law and order system.
    The photo was first published in the 1922 issue of National Geographic under the caption “Mongolian prisoner in a box”. It was the publishers who made the claim that the woman was condemned to die of starvation as a punishment for adultery. Since then, many people expressed doubts over the story, although the authenticity of the photo is undisputed.
    Immurement (from Latin im- “in” and mūrus “wall”; literally “walling in”) is a form of imprisonment, usually for life, in which a person is placed within an enclosed space with no exits. This includes instances where people have been enclosed in extremely tight confinement, such as within a coffin.
    When used as a means of execution, the prisoner is simply left to die from starvation or dehydration. Immurement was practiced in Mongolia as recently as the early 20th century. It is not necessarily clear that all thus immured were meant to die of starvation, though.
    In a newspaper report from 1914, it is written: “..the prisons and dungeons of the Far Eastern country contain a number of refined Chinese shut up for life in heavy iron-bound coffins, which do not permit them to sit upright or lie down. These prisoners see daylight for only a few minutes daily when the food is thrown into their coffins through a small hole”.
    (Photo credit: The Dawn of the Color Photograph: Albert Kahn’s Archives of the Planet).

    ​

    https://rarehistoricalphotos.com/mongolian-woman-imprisoned-1913/

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