A scholarly look at how capital punishment was understood and practiced in Jewish law and tradition.
This work traces a long arc from biblical rules to rabbinic interpretation, showing how method, procedure, and theory shaped punishment in Jewish history.
Spanning biblical prescriptions, post-biblical modifications, and medieval reflections, the study examines why certain death sentences were altered for mercy or to spare the body, how courts and witnesses were required to operate, and how legal safeguards eventually reduced the use of capital punishment to a historical theory rather than a practical option.
- How stoning, precipitation, and burning appear in early and later sources
- Reasons behind changing the methods to be more humane and less mutilating
- The rise of legal safeguards and the high court’s limited jurisdiction
- The shift from enforceable punishment to an influential, though rarely applied, legal theory
Ideal for readers of Jewish history, law, and religious studies seeking a clear, evidence-based overview.