ravenstone
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English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From a calque of German Rabenstein, equivalent to raven + stone.
Noun
[edit]ravenstone (plural ravenstones)
- (historical) A place of execution; gallows
- 1841, George Noël Gordon Baron Byron, The Works of Lord Byron:
- [...] — The raven sits / On the raven-stone, And his black wing flits / O'er the milk-white bone; [...]
- 1996, Richard J. Evans, Rituals of Retribution: Capital Punishment in Germany, 1600-1987:
- Three years later, in 1811, King Friedrich of Wurttemberg ordered the dismantling of permanent gallows and ravenstones and the ending of the practice of exposing malefactors' corpses.
- 2015, Richard Ward, A Global History of Execution and the Criminal Corpse:
- In 1811, for instance, King Friedrich of Württemberg ordered that the permanent gallows and ravenstones be dismantled and that the exposure of dead criminal bodies should be abandoned.
- (UK, dialectal) A gravestone