Sadomasochism
Most famous French erotic novel apart from de Sade
The most famous erotic novel in the French language, apart from those of the Marquis, is
"Gamiani", attributed to Alfred de Musset. This book, hardly heard of in modern England, went through forty one editions before 1930. In one preface it is claimed that the author wrote it to prove that an erotic novel could be written without resort to "coarse" words.
Most famous female sadist
Our woman sadist, unlike de Sade, was a practising person, i.e. she wrote no books but killed
and tortured to
her heart's content. In 1611, aged fifty, the Hungarian noblewoman Erzsebet Bathory was
walled up alive in her
castle in the Minor Carpathians for having killed some six hundred young girls in various
ways. The judge at her
trial appears to have been particularly concerned that she murdered noblewomen as well as
mere servant-girls.
Bathory used a number of ingenious devices. For instance, she put a terrified naked girl in a
narrow iron cage
Flagellation: First organised processions
By the eleventh century the Franciscans were extolling self-flagellation as a penance. And the
Italian Benedictine
St. Pietro Damian organised group flagellation for laymen. Two hundred years later a
procession of fanatical
flagellants - closely linked to the Flagellant sect - set out under the auspices of St. Anthony of
Padua. This austere
saint, theologian and preacher-keen to combat manifest sexuality - was in fact adding to the
sexual ferment. In
1260 unofficial processions of voluntary scourgers, each member heartily whipping the man in
front of him,
Flagellation: Most curious 17th century account
In 1671 a small publication appeared entitled "Whipping Tom Brought to light, and
exposed to capital Views:
In an account of several late Adventures of the pretended Whipping Spirit". It seems
that the streets of London
had been haunted by a phantom spanker, who had been nicknamed "Whipping Tom." He
would lurk in dark
corners and, grabbing a passing wench, he would toss up her petticoats and spank her
vigorously until she cried
for help. Then he would run off like a thief into the night. Until finally captured he was
assumed to have
supernatural powers.
Most famous female flagellant
There were many high-class brothels in the nineteenth century. One of the most famous of
these was run by a
Mrs. Theresa Berkley (or Berkeley) of 28 Charlotte Street. She was a "governess", i.e. she
specialised in
chastisement, whipping, flagellation, and the like. She was even credited with the invention of
the Berkley horse,
an ingenious flogging machine that earned her a fortune. One writer (B. J. Hurwood in
"The Golden Age of
Erotica") said of her - "She possessed the first requisite of a courtezan, viz., lewdness;
for without a woman is
Sadism/Masochism: Word first coined
Just as Sacher-Masoch gave his name to masochism so the Marquis de Sade gave his name to sadism. There is controversy as to the extent to which de Sade was a practising sadist. Did he in reality act out his fantasies or were his novels the main vehicles for his sexual imaginings?
Sadism/Masochism: Most bizarre invention
There have been many sadistic inventions: the mediaeval torture chambers were full of them.
We need not give
a list here. Suffice it to mention that the inquisitors, with full theological sanction, thought it
proper to introduce
a clamp specially devised for the torture of pregnant women. In more recent times, electrical
generators have
been used on all parts of the bodies of men and women. And Chapman Pincher mentions (in
"Sex in Our Time")
a pair of binoculars in the Black Museum of Scotland Yard - "These were sent anonymously
through the post
Flagellation: First ecclesiastical exhortation
![]() Charles Monnet (1732-1808), The Flagellation of the Penitents. Engraved by d'Ambrun |
Flagellation: Most sadistic 19th century book
One of the most sadistic books of the nineteenth century was entitled, "Experimental Lecture, By Colonel Spanker, on the Exciting and Voluptuous Pleasures to be derived from crushing and humiliating the spirit of a beautiful and modest young lady; as delivered by him in the assembly room of the Society of Aristocratic Flagellants."
Sadism/Masochism: Most famous masochist
Leopold von Sacher-Masoch, born in 1836, was not the first masochist, despite the title of the
book by J. Cleugh
("The First Masochist"). Centuries before the arrival of Sacher-Masoch men and women
would surely have
discovered that in certain cases apparent suffering had the power to generate sexual delight.
Count Leopold did
however give his name to the phenomenon, and it is on this circumstance that his fame largely
rests. This is,
perhaps, a pity. He was after all a successful novelist - with over ninety titles to his credit. He
was also said to
be fond of children and cats.
