Today I am relying on an old, previous post due
to a hectic schedule. Unfortunately this is likely to occur for what remains of
October. I am also having a hard time getting my laptop and blogger to play
nicely, the two seem incompatible. So I
now not only need a new phone but a new laptop as well. Anyway, a piece
regarding the last execution conducted in sweet Iceland.
Agnes and Friðrik, previously posted some time
ago:
The last executions conducted in Iceland took place in 1830 although
capital punishment was not removed from our criminal code until 1928. Trailing
the line of hapless souls deemed to make the world a better place by losing
their lives were a woman of 33 named Agnes and a young man of 18 named Friðrik.
A third accomplice, a 16 year old girl named Sigríður had also been sentenced
to death but was pardoned by the Danish king and made to serve life under hard labour
in a prison camp in Denmark as she was perceived as being “simple”.
The
crime was murder, double at that. Friðrik killed a farmer named Natan who
employed both Agnes and Sigríður, for the purpose of robbing him, as well as
ending the life of a man visiting Natan. Friðrik then set the farmhouse on fire
to make the deaths look like an accident, but multiple stab wounds on the charred
bodies were his undoing. Agnes and Sigríður aided in the murders by hiding
Friðrik in a barn until nightfall and Agnes also conspired in the whole
scenario. It is considered highly likely that she planted the idea in Friðrik’s
mind and egged him on, thus being the instigator of the murders. She had been
Natan’s lover until his attention shifted to the younger Sigríður – whom
Friðrik loved. A complicated love circumstance, involving sad people from the
lower echelons of life at the time.
There are countless executions of less deserving culprits than Agnes and Friðrik in our history. Despite this their plight has lived with us, because of the way the execution was conducted and later occurrences which further fueled interest in the story. I will attempt to briefly explain both.
At the time anyone sentenced to death was usually sent abroad to be
executed and no one had been executed on Icelandic soil for 40 years. The
Icelandic people were not fond of executions and preferred them conducted out
of sight. But two things contributed to the process being carried out here in
the case of Agnes and Friðrik. For one it was a lot cheaper not to have to send
the pair by boat to Denmark or Norway and secondly, local authorities believed
crime on the rise and they wanted to set an example. To make sure people would
sit up and notice, every farmer in the area was obliged to show up or send a
representative in his place. As a result one hundred and fifty people witnessed
the act which is a very high number considering the sparsely populated area
where the events occurred. An execution block was erected and this included a
man-made mound that still exists, the added elevation ensuring everyone present
had a good view. The execution block itself had to be imported from Denmark, as
did the axe as neither was available within the country. Once everything was
set up, Agnes and Friðrik were led up on to the mound and their heads
unceremoniously chopped off by the brother of the murdered Natan. No one wanted
to act as executioner and it even required a lot of persuasion to get the next
of kin to brandish the axe.
To get the most out of the example being set, the heads of Agnes and
Friðrik were then poised on stakes placed prominently for all to see. It is
unclear how long they were to stand there as there was no tradition to go by.
However, this never became an issue as the heads were stolen the very same
night of the execution. The unconfirmed story goes that a warm-hearted woman
from one of the few large estates in the district had one of her farmhands
remove the heads when darkness had fallen and bury them secretly in a nearby
graveyard. This last bit became part of what everyone believed true although
the records of the time only mention: “The heads disappeared during the night”.
Now fast forward 102 years to 1932. A woman
named Sesselja from Reykjavík begins to experience involuntary writing
involving messages from Agnes, instructing her to find the bodies and the
heads, dig them out and provide her and Friðrik a proper burial in hallowed
ground. The locations of the caskets containing the bodies and the location of
the heads were provided, as was a description of a piece of wood from the stake
lodged in Agnes’ skull. According to the messages the heads were not in the
graveyard at all as everyone believed. The writing stated that the farmhand had
not wanted to carry the heads the full distance to the cemetery and that he had
instead buried them near the stakes. For two years the woman was besieged with
this weird note taking before finally overcoming her reluctance to make a fool
of herself and going to the police. The church became involved and a team was
sent north to search for the caskets and the heads which incredibly enough were
exactly where the written notes described. In addition, Agnes’ skull was
pierced through the crown with a 10 cm long piece of wood as the messages had
mentioned. But through this strange channel, Anges and Friðrik ended up
receiving their proper burial.
One of the many sad facts of this story is the one regarding the fancy
brooch found in the casket containing Agnes’ bones. This type of brooch was
used at the time as a button in the traditional dressy female clothing, showing
that Agnes dressed up for the occasion of her own execution. Makes me wonder
what I or anyone else would do under the same circumstances. Not that today’s
executed prisoners are allowed this last attempt at dignity.
Yrsa - Wednesday
What an interesting post. Thanks for reprinting it.
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