Gibbs505
SERVORUM DOMITOR
Is that part of her punishment perhaps?The chains on the crossbeam on her arms aren't attached to anything...
Is that part of her punishment perhaps?The chains on the crossbeam on her arms aren't attached to anything...
Do you want a refund?The chains on the crossbeam on her arms aren't attached to anything...
great. but som stripes across her pussy would push fantasies......
The last three photos are from "The Round-Up", a Hungarian film of 1966.Same source as my previous post, but these are photos/movie stills. The first one I suspect is photoshopped, but nicely done. The others look to be from mainstream movies -- does anybody here recognise which movies they are from? I don't think that they ever made women run the gauntlet (they certainly didn't in Prussia), but it makes for a nice fantasy.
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1-4 are from "Sittengeschichte der Revolution" (1930).Here are some images I found in a mixed gallery online - I suspect many (or most) have already been posted here but I cannot specifically recall seeing them. No sources given.
The first few have German captions, and I strongly suspect they are book illustration from the early 20th century (possibly Rudolf Quanter's books as per my previous posts). The last two are the same, the second time as mirror image, without caption but slightly better quality.
Captions are (left to right):
1. "Interrogation of captured female communists": I suspect this is from the 1919 Spartakus rebellion. The author is given as "Carl Josef" from a book/article titled "Terror", but I can't find any reference to that artist or source online.
2. "Punishment of a serving maid": The artist is given as "G. Sieben", based on a report from a Prussian police commisar.
3. "How to dispel the urge for freedom -- after an anonymous aquarell against the cruelty of the reaction": I suspect this is from the 1848/49 revolutions, possibly Hungary.
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The other four images also look old (with the possible exception of the last one) -- does anybody recognise artists or sources?
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2. "Punishment of a serving maid": The artist is given as "G. Sieben", based on a report from a Prussian police commisar.
Thanks, Elephas -- very helpful! I was guessing you would probably be able to place these.
I have now established that the "G. Sieben" in image 2 is Gottfried Sieben (1856-1918), an Austrian illustrator who is best known for a series of anti-Ottoman propaganda illustrations titled "Balkangreuel" (Atrocities of the Balkans), published in 1909. They are pretty explicit images of rape by Ottoman soldiers, and are in high-quality scans at Wikimedia:
Category:Balkangreuel (Gottfried Sieben) – Wikimedia Commons
commons.wikimedia.org
I found another illustration by him that is on-topic in this thread, also with an (anti-)Ottoman theme but not part of the Balkangreuel series. This one shows a Turkish penetentiary, with two women being flogged and a man being given the bastinado:
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Here are two more images of sort-of judicial punishments -- a group a female Dutch collaborators in 1944, before and after headshave. According to the website where I found them, they were thereafter driven through the streets for public humiliation, but there is no photo of that. Fascinating comparison of their body language before and after.
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Thanks - I looked for but couldn't find the third one.In this case their "collaboration" was pretty much limited to dating the German occupiers.
This is Bigeikou.A couple of judicial flogging line drawings from a Chinese (?) artist -- don't know whether he has a Pixiv page or similar with more work. Apologies if already posted -- most good ones have.
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IDK Not bad I guess! I would not include Nazi symbols in my own work thoughWDYT @montycrusto ?
It's illegal in Germany and some other countries to show them even in a context where they are clearly representing the evil that they are. There are certain exceptions, but it's obviously a sensitive matter.IDK Not bad I guess! I would not include Nazi symbols in my own work though
The hills are alive ... with the sound of shredding!