[INDOLOGY] Techniques of Blinding

Allen Thrasher alanus1216 at yahoo.com
Sun May 3 18:29:39 UTC 2020


 I remember the Byzantine-Bulgarian (or Macedonian) incident that Aleksandar mentions from a course in Byzantine history given by Robert Lee Wolff many years ago. The Wikipedia articles Basil II, Byzantine Conquest of Bavaria, and Battle of Kleidion all confirm that Basil "the Bulgarslayer" divided the prisoners into groups of 100, and took our both eyes of 99 of them, leaving one eye to the remaining soldier to lead his comrades back home The last article adds that some Byzantine authorities gave smalller numbers for the prisoners, and also that Basil may have considered them traitors to himself and the Empire, and blinding was the usual punishment for traitors.

To give the Byzantines credit, blinding, castration, and mutilation of the nose were used against high-rank political rivals (aka 'traitors') as a substitute for and mitigation of execution.

Allen
     On Sunday, May 3, 2020, 10:57:18 AM EDT, Uskokov, Aleksandar via INDOLOGY <indology at list.indology.info> wrote:  
 
 #yiv1430463984 P {margin-top:0;margin-bottom:0;}Dear Walter, 
This is somewhat circumstantial as it does not pertain to South Asia (and is based largely on my High School memory, so -- take it with a grain of salt), but there is the tradition of the Battle of Kleidon / Belasitsa between the Byzantine Emperor Basil II and the Bulgarian (or Macedonian, as my countrymen would claim) Emperor Samuel, in 1014, when some 15,000 soldiers of Samuel were allegedly blinded by the Byzantine army by gouging out their eyes with knives (or some form of iron object). That would put the practice (or a similar practice) close to Turkey, as Matthew's reference from Orhan Pamuk suggests, but not quite in "Ottoman Turkey" yet. This suggests that the practice might be Byzantine in origin. 
Best wishes,Aleksandar 

Aleksandar Uskokov

Lector in Sanskrit 

South Asian Studies Council, Yale University 

203-432-1972 | aleksandar.uskokov at yale.edu 
From: INDOLOGY <indology-bounces at list.indology.info> on behalf of Walter Slaje via INDOLOGY <indology at list.indology.info>
Sent: Sunday, May 3, 2020 10:22 AM
To: Madhav Deshpande <mmdesh at umich.edu>
Cc: Indology <indology at list.indology.info>
Subject: Re: [INDOLOGY] Techniques of Blinding Dear Madhav and Matthew,
first, thank you for alerting me to my "touching" connotation blunder, and second, yes, blinding - especially of pretenders to the throne - was certainly not uncommon. To the references already given by you to Ottoman and Mughal practices we can furthermore add Humayun’s blinding of his brother Mirza Kamran andJahangir’s blinding of his first son Khusrau by using the needle (in1607). In this context it is perhaps interesting to note that what Śrīvara has reported dates only from Sultanate Kashmir of the 15th century. To my knowledge no earlier occurrences are documented in the Rājataṅgiṇīs. Should we regard the practice of blinding with the needle an Islamic import? How does this technique conform to the Sanskrit notion of utpāṭana ("tearing out"). This is why I was asking for evidence of techniques from other and ideally pre-Islamic sources.

Thanks again,Walter
_______________________________________________
INDOLOGY mailing list
INDOLOGY at list.indology.info
indology-owner at list.indology.info (messages to the list's managing committee)
http://listinfo.indology.info (where you can change your list options or unsubscribe)
  


-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://list.indology.info/pipermail/indology/attachments/20200503/5b07d690/attachment.htm>


More information about the INDOLOGY mailing list