Criminal punishment in Edo-period Japan

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During the Edo period, Japan utilized various punishments against criminals. These can be categorized as follows:

Contents

Serious crimes such as murder and arson were punished by death. The shogunate maintained execution grounds for Edo at Kozukappara (or Kozukahara) and Suzugamori. It executed criminals in various ways:

The death penalty often carried collateral punishments. One was parading of the criminal around the town prior to execution. A similar one was public display of the criminal prior to execution. A third was public display of the severed head.

Samurai were often sentenced to commit seppuku in lieu of these forms of punishment.

Depending on the seriousness of the crime, magistrates could sentence convicts to incarceration in various forms:

Exclusion from the location of the crime was a penalty for both commoners and samurai.

  • Tokoro-barai, banishment to a certain distance, was common for non-samurai.
  • Kōfu kinban, assignment to the post of Kōfu in the mountains west of Edo, is an example of rustication of samurai.

For crimes requiring moderate punishment, convicts could be sent to work at labor camps such as the one on Ishikawa-jima in Edo Bay. More serious acts could result in being sent to work in the gold mine on the island of Sado.

A penalty that targeted merchants especially was kesshō, the confiscation of a business.

Handcuffing allowed the government to punish a criminal while the criminal lived at home. Depending on the severity of the crime, the sentence might last 30, 50, or 100 days.

Flagellation was a common penalty for crimes such as theft and fighting.

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