[COMPETITION This list contains a competition - check the first comment for details.] Death is one of my favorite topics and as it has been quite some time since I posted a list on the subject, I thought the time seemed right. In this list we look at 10 random facts that have one thing in common: they all relate to death in one way or another. Be sure to check out the original list, and add any more death facts to the comments of this list.
Gregory Biggs, a homeless man in Fort Worth, Texas, was struck by a car being driven by Chante Jawan Mallard, who had been drinking and taking drugs that night. Biggs’ torso became lodged in Mallard’s windshield with severe but not immediately fatal injuries. Mallard drove home and left the car in her garage with Biggs still lodged in her car’s windshield. She repeatedly visited Biggs and even apologized for hitting him. Biggs died of his injuries several hours later. Chante Mallard was tried and convicted for murder in this case and received a 50-year prison sentence. The film Stuck is loosely based on this unusual death.
Disenfranchised grief is a term describing grief that is not acknowledged by society. Examples of events leading to disenfranchised grief are the loss of a pet, an aborted/miscarried pregnancy, a mother’s loss or surrender of a child to adoption, the death of a celebrity, or even a fictional character. This is compared to more traditional forms of grief, such as loss of a spouse, parent, or child. Traditional forms of grief are more heavily recognized even in nontraditional living situations. Disenfranchised grief, when legitimate, can create problems with bereavement leave with work. There are few support systems, traditions, or institutions, which normally help the grieving process.
A safety coffin or security coffin is a coffin fitted with a mechanism to prevent premature burial or allow the occupant to signal that he has been buried alive. A large number of designs for safety coffins were patented during the 18th and 19th centuries and variations on the theme are still available today. The first recorded safety coffin was constructed on the orders of Duke Ferdinand of Brunswick before his death in 1792. He had a window installed to allow light in, an air tube to provide a supply of fresh air, and instead of having the lid nailed down he had a lock fitted. In a special pocket of his shroud he had two keys, one for the coffin lid and a second for the tomb door.
A death erection, angel lust, or terminal erection is a post-mortem erection, technically a priapism, observed in the corpses of human males who have been executed, particularly by hanging. The phenomenon has been attributed to pressure on the cerebellum created by the noose. Death by hanging, whether an execution or a suicide, has been observed to affect the genitals of both men and women. In women, the labia will become engorged and there may be a discharge of blood from the vagina. In men, “a more or less complete state of erection of the penis, with discharge of urine, of mucus, or of the prostatic fluid, is a frequent occurrence … present in one case in three.” Other causes of death may also result in these effects, including fatal gunshot wounds to the brain, damage to major blood vessels, or violent death by poisoning. Forensically, a postmortem erection is an indicator that death was likely swift and violent.
The walking ghost phase of radiation poisoning is a period of apparent health, lasting for hours or days, following a dose of 10–50 sieverts of radiation. As its name would suggest, the walking ghost phase is followed by certain death. The phase of apparent recovery is due to the lag time of the effects of radiation poisoning to surface. While the irradiation has resulted in bone marrow destruction and death of many rapidly multiplying cells, the surface effects do not become apparent until later. For example, irradiation kills the rapidly dividing cells of the gastrointestinal tract, however diarrhea is not apparent until the cells begin to slough off, coming out in bloody excrement. Loss of this protective lining exposes the body to bacteria within the gut causing sepsis. Also, this causes an inability to absorb nutrition from food. This is the same with the rapidly proliferating cells of the immune system. Irradiation essentially halts white blood cell production by destroying bone marrow, however the remaining white blood cells within the body are still temporarily working, until they are “used up”.
Lazarus syndrome is the spontaneous return of circulation after failed attempts at resuscitation. Its occurrence has been noted in medical literature at least 25 times since 1982. Also called Lazarus phenomenon, it takes its name from the biblical story of Lazarus, who was raised from the dead by Jesus. In one case, a 66-year-old man was suffering from a suspected abdominal aneurysm. During treatment for this condition, the patient suffered cardiac arrest and received chest compressions and defibrillation shocks for 17 minutes. Vital signs did not return; the patient was declared dead and resuscitation efforts ended. Ten minutes later, the surgeon felt a pulse. The aneurysm was successfully treated and the patient fully recovered with no lasting physical or neurological problems.
Republican marriage (French: mariage républicain) was a form of execution that allegedly occurred in Nantes during the Reign of Terror in Revolutionary France and “involved tying a naked man and woman together and drowning them”. This was reported to have been practiced during the noyades massacres that were ordered by local Jacobin representative-on-mission Jean-Baptiste Carrier between November 1793 and January 1794 in the city of Nantes. Most accounts indicate that the victims were drowned in the Loire River, although a few sources describe an alternative means of execution in which the bound couple is run through with a sword, either before, or instead of drowning. While the murders of men, women and children by drowning in the noyades is not generally disputed, the factuality of the “republican marriages” in particular has been doubted by several historians who suspect it to be a legend.
The London Necropolis railway station was a special railway station constructed by the London Necropolis Company for funeral trains, specifically to serve their Brookwood Cemetery. The station opened on 13 November 1854 just outside London’s Waterloo station on the London and South Western Railway. Three-carriage trains took coffins and mourners from the station — located between York Street (now Leake Street) and Westminster Bridge Road — directly to platforms within the cemetery. The station was rebuilt a short distance away at 121 Westminster Bridge Road in 1902 when the mainline station was reconstructed. Prior to 1900 funeral trains usually ran once each day, but after this only operated “as required”, until by the mid-1930s they only ran twice each week; much of their traffic having moved to the road network. On the night of 16 April 1941 the station was hit by bombs and never rebuilt or re-opened. However, the entrance to the station still stands in Westminster Bridge Road.
Lal Bihari (born 1961) is a farmer from Uttar Pradesh, India who was officially dead between 1976 and 1994. He founded Mritak Sangh or the Association of the Dead in Uttar Pradesh, India. He fought Indian government bureaucracy for 18 years to prove that he is alive. When Lal Bihari tried to apply for a bank loan in 1976, he found out that he was officially dead: his uncle had bribed a government official to register him as dead, so that he would get the ownership of Bihari’s land. Bihari discovered at least 100 other people in a similar situation, being officially dead. He formed Mritak Sangh in the Azamgarh district. He and many other members were in danger of being killed by those who had appropriated their property. Nowadays the association has over 20,000 members all over India. By 2004 they had managed to declare four of their members alive (including Bihari).
Maschalismos is the practice of physically rendering the dead incapable of rising or haunting the living in undead form. It comes from the Ancient Greek word and was also the term for procedural rules on such matters in later Greek customary law. The term maschalismos has widened to include the customs throughout the different cultures of the world in ritually mutilating their dead to prevent their wrath from affecting the living. In the Moluccas, a woman who has died in childbirth is buried with pins stuck through the joints, and an egg under the chin and or armpits; believing that the dead fly like birds and the presence of eggs will bring out maternal instincts which make the ghost not leave the eggs and thus stay with its former body. In Europe, it was sometimes common that suicides were buried with a stake driven through the heart, the body buried upside down, or the head cut off and placed between the legs; still practiced in many parts of Britain as well as the continent is tying together the feet or large toes of the dead. The Omaha, a tribe of American Indians, slit the soles of the feet of those killed by lightning; the Basuto and Bechuana slit the sinews and spinal cord of their dead; the Herbert River aborigines of Australia beat the body enough to break its bones and fill incisions made in the body with stones. Further forms of maschalismos are equally common among peoples the world over. [Image Source]
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. Text is derived from Wikipedia.






























#7: Posthumous ***** = vigor mortis
Remembered from an old old Playboy’s Party Jokes.
Great list. Love the death lists. It’s terrible what the people in #2 have to go through to try and get their lives back. Then the possibility that someone will really kill them before they are declared legally alive must be a terrible thing to deal with.
I love death! Remember the biggest cause of death is living.
Wouldn’t having someone declared officially dead ultimately be counter-productive? That person could get away with anything, unless there are laws there that allow dead people to be charged with a crime.
I, also, find these lists fascinating. Much of my fascination was honed during the years I served working for the Mystery Writers of America. Those guys have stories to make your hair curl!
I actually remember the incidents in numbers 10 and 2. They stuck in my memory because of the bizarre nature of the people involved. I never could understand how someone could be drunk enough to hit someone hard enough to blast him through the windshield and not get help for him! It’s utterly inhumane…and inhuman. It showed such a complete amoral attitude toward life one has to wonder just how she was reared.
Lal Bihari’s story is frightening in a completely different way, although no less bizarre. The thought that someone can have you declared dead and take over your life’s work is scary. I try to tell myself it couldn’t happen here, in the westernized world, but then I remember that the opposite happens all the time. People who are dead are kept alive on paper so that care-givers can continue to receive their government checks. It’s quite a racket, in fact.
Death as a racket. Sounds like the title of a cheap mystery novel.
@kevin5280: I was wondering the same thing. They would have no way to identify him.
Hope to snag the book! Another great list, BTW
It’s not weird we all seem to enjoy these lists so much, I don’t think. I think it’s normal to be fascinated with what happens after we die,because it’s something we will never know until we experience it. I remember when #10 happened, that was so sad and senseless. I’ve seen that movie too.
#6 scares me a lot and I’m not sure why, I don’t see myself getting radiation poisoning anytime soon but I still get freaked out by the idea. I’m such a paranoid freak.
I know I’m not getting the book but I’ll try anyway, nice list.
Great list Jamie. As usual.
@deeeziner (119): me either.
Does a walking ghost “feel” ok, then rapidly decline then die?
Oooooooo-good list. (duh!) I’ve never heard of ‘Stuck’. Worth checking out?
I always love the Jfrater lists about death. YAY death!!!
To add my own strange death fact – I have heard somewhere that everyone loses a small amount of their weight when they die. It was something like 20 or 30 grams, but apparently everyone, no matter how much they started off weighing, loses this amount. Unfortunately, I can’t remember where I heard that… sorry…
@rowena (134): The movie 21 Grams is about this. Alos, here’s the Snopes of it: http://www.snopes.com/religion/soulweight.asp
*also
@rowena (134): ames801 pointed out an excellent article about that. In addition to the article, I can add that if the soul exists, it is immaterial and as weight is a consequence of matter, the soul can have no weight and any measure of weight change upon death must be due to some other cause.
I see many of us commented to get a chance of winning the pot at the end of the rainbow. Thats why there are so many unnecessary comments.
Do you think that #7 could have something to do with erotic Asphyxiation?
#2 made the hair on the back of my neck stand on end. I’d love to think this couldn’t happen here, but with the amount of identity theft, it’s only a matter of time
@jfrater (137):
You surprise me with such a definitive response to the weight of the soul.
Personally I feel that there is nothing “immaterial” about the human soul. It is an energy and a life force, and the vessel of all that makes us each what we are.
But I also do not have anything scientific to back up my feelings on the matter.
Does your statement have any theological doctrine attached?
#7 reminds me of the movie Clerks hahaha
I never thought things like number 2 actually happened, scary how corrupt some people are.
Regarding the disenfranchised grief, I
often think of how my cat(s)–particularly one that I’m very much attached to–would react/feel if I die first.. I watched that movie about the Japanese dog, “Hachiko”, a few weeks back. It made me think that when pets grief from the loss of their owner, it must be more difficult. I figure humans have other activities and the “life goes on” cliche, while for them, their lives with their owners is all the lives there is to know.. I don’t know if that makes sense, it’s just so sad when I think about it.. *hugs my cat*
The five winners of the competition are comments:
17: galfordsg
36: lab276
43: madhavmania
115: jordan0250
122: michgirl
Congratulations! Please email me (jamie at frater.com) with your real name and address for the delivery of your prize.
Congrats to the winners!!
well done,the people who won are the ones who wrote loads and most probably just copied and pasted from wikipedia of course.They are most probably local or regular user to save or make more money for jfrater.A good site but what a fix.
One other thing the older lists are full of trojans and other viruses.So be warned.
Bugger. When’s the next competition? Not that I’m desperate or anything? BTW has the book been released in Australia? I haven’t seen it, but then I don’t haunt bookshops like I used to, and I’ve got other things to spend money on, like my wife.
@hermy304: Please give Jamie some credit for possessing some sense. He can spot multiple posts as well as anyone else. Although he didn’t say so, I’m sure he only counted everyone once.
If you do some research, you’ll find that 4 of the 5 winners posted once, and the other 3 times. That does not strike me as unreasonable.
@El the erf (20): Rotten hasnt updated since 2007! They were censored by the Patriot Act!
Rotten was started in 1958 by the Disney Corporation.
@ jds1080
I dont believe the family would be compensated since suicide victims aren’t liable to be compensated for lack of the safety equipment like nets from a building, just imagine if wht u said was true then every jumper’s family would possibly be compensated by the owner of building he just jumped from
first off yay i won i won i won!!!
95 @jds1080
i have trouble believing that a jumper would be compensated for jumping of a building without a safety net, i thought suicidal intent absolves insurance companies from any and all liabilities.
sorry for the repeat, my broadband is giving me problems again.
@madhavmania (152):
It is not the lack of a net it is the shot gun blast that would be the grounds to sue. By killing the person 8 floors early the person was deprived of a few seconds of life and that would be the grounds to sue eventhough he was going to kill himself. This was explained to me by my Torts professor.
makes sense not too much mind
@hermy304 (147): On the contrary – non of the winners had long posts, nor did any of them put in any extra wiki research. Damn it, I’m never gonna win that book – even though I’m probably IN it.
@ames801 (135): Very interesting!
@deeeziner (141): A worthy subject, and one which has been debated for a very long time. What is the soul? Is it the same an the ‘spirit’? Do we have one, or is it just religious fantasy?
To begin with, Soul and Spirit are not the same thing according to the Bible; which insists man is tripartite (soul, spirit and flesh), and all three must be present to have a living creation.
The Spirit (with the capital ‘S’) commonly refers to the Holy (Holistic) Spirit of the Creator, while ‘spirit’ is synonymous with a ‘presence of being’ e.g. a spirited (driven) person, getting into the ‘spirit’ of things (perhaps through alcoholic ‘spirits’), and referring to such things as an ‘evil spirit’ or a general ethereal presence (e.g. ‘spirit’ as in Ghost). The term “What’s gotten into you?” refers directly to this concept.
Both types of S/spirit are often lumped together – using terms such as the Life Force, Prana, Chi, Vital Energy or even Nature – to represent an ever flowing chain of energetic transmutation. In everyday terms, this is like the liquid ocean – from which all life is thirsty to drink – and which all water came from and will one day return to.
So what of the soul? Going back to the tripartite theory – imagine a plant. The plant may have physicality (flesh), and water to drink (spirit), but the ‘soul’ aspect determines whether that plant is alive or dead. The plant can be alive even without leaves or roots, or dead even with an abundance of water. The word ‘soul’ is closely related to the word ‘Sol’ (the Sun) – and the Sun is also the third vital element in all life. Hence, we get the phrase “The Father (the flesh, the fodder), the Son (the Sun), and the Holy Spirit (the water)”, with all three aspects necessary for life to flourish.
Now, defining these aspects in philosophy is one thing, but practically relating them in material terms is quite another. As we know from particle physics, over 99.9% of an atom’s mass is concentrated in the nucleus. This lead quantum physicists to believe that the physical universe we see – the material universe – also accounts for only 0.01% of all existence; just as the visible light spectrum only accounts for 0.01% of all possible wavelengths and frequencies. So what of the rest? What about the frequencies which lie beyond ‘matter’ – those elements which we know to exist but cannot hope to defect or measure using physical/material apparatus?
With no way to draw a shape in seven dimensions, religion thinks it knows the answer but cannot prove anything. With no way to detect a seventh-dimensional shape, science has no way to disprove anything. And so science and religion continue their stalemate to this very day.
–
The above is expressly theoretical, and is meant to ask questions rather than to provide concrete answers. I mean no harm to anybody, so please don’t be offended.
This is why I git hooked on Listverse in the first place… I love these weird, bizarre-facts lists!
# 9- While I do understand the grief of losing a beloved pet, I think expecting bereavement leave with work is a little over the top…
#6- I think this is one of the most horrible ones… You know you are inevitably going to die a slow, agonizing death and yet for the moment you feel fine… until you get to the whole bloody excrement…
@Lifeschool (157):
Thank-you for your insights on the subject.
I tend to look at the weight loss described in rowena and ames801′s posts as the weight of our energy. If that energy can also be considered “the human soul” than so be it.
My brain keeps going back to some scientists theory that if anything were to be burned under a bell jar, all the original mass/weight could be accounted for if you weigh EVERYTHING remaining in the bell jar. Or some such thing of that nature.
But now I just ramble upon things that have no relationship…or do they? *Twilight Zone theme song HERE*
wow thats some weird stuff.
especially the first one
Wow…What an awesome list!
@jfrater (145):
Thanks for the win!
@deeeziner (159): Yes, thats a toughy – I don’t know for sure. The first thing that occured to me was the fact that because the experiment was set up to show weight loss in man, but no weight loss in dogs, he proved both correct because thats what he was LOOKING to prove. I know thats an easy answer; intension buggers up the results. (another quantum theory). Another possible aspect is that energy does contain mass while it is locked inside something, but looses it’s mass when that energy is released. Sunlight contains a vast about of energy – but what about mass? Does electricity have mass? We know it has energy!
Perhaps the dogs’ energy loss was simply too small to measure using a decidedly combersome weighted system, and he would have been better with a larger animal?
I know from my own experiments that the Vital Energy / chakra / spirit network continues to independantly function for a while even after the person is officially soul-dead (relating to #5: Lazarus). When my great grandmother died I did a full body scan using reiki and found the heart chakra in particular was as strong as ever; it took a while for everything to slow down and stop working – perhaps over an hour. This would also account for Out Of Body experiences, where the person is able to return without serious harm. Of course I could go further but I want to open up options and possibilities rather than be labeled a ‘new age hippy’.
I didn’t know that death could be so complicated. Interesting list.
@Lifeschool (163):
“Perhaps the dogs’ energy loss was simply too small to measure using a decidedly combersome weighted system, and he would have been better with a larger animal?”
My thoughts as well–But are elephants really that easy to come by?
Metaphysics are a very tricky subject–but I have a great belief that I will know EVERYTHING…once I am on the other side. (Far in the future.)
@jfrater and all follow ups: This reply is perhaps a tad late, but I wanted to say that I do not believe souls have weight, though I do believe we have souls. I was merely adding this as another strange death-related possibly-fact.
For myself, it does seem that it is quite possibly just measurement error or something of the like. This does not disprove the existence of a soul though…
@deeeziner: “But are elephants really that easy to come by?”
– no, but cows are; we slaughter them every day.
@Lifeschool:
But everybody knows cows ain’t got no soul.
(Don’t correct me….I don’t want to be afraid my cheeseburger is haunting me. *wide eyes* )
wow. .even in the face of death a man still has the capacity to erect! haha. .but when i die *****s, are not part of my top ten list. .hahaha
if u are prone to disenfranchised grief dont watch higurashi no naku koro ni lol
yeah, I'm a dude, but picture in no. 9 made me cry. I had a pet cat that died a month ago
Lazarus syndrome is cool though
Regarding the "Walking Ghost" phase of radiation poisoning: There's a theory that certain ailments may be caused by organisms (parasites) living undetected in the body. If a dose of radiation killed this or these organisms, a person might actually enjoy greatly improved health… for awhile.
Is the avatar for this post a screencap from Duke Nukem 3D?
Also, I definitely believe that there should be a bereavement period for deaths of cats and dogs, or at least dogs. The fact that there is back-and-forth communication between the parties means there is a definite relationship there. People get attached to children who have been vegetables since birth and have given them nothing; why are dogs treated differently?
Poor Gregory Biggs … Sad story.
I’ll say. If that driver was really sorry, she would have called 911 and have him taken to hospital.
#9 Disenfranchised Grief –
Copied verbatim from Wikipedia.
Way to be original. Pricks.
Can't you read, dumbass? "Text is derived from Wikipedia."
Way to be clever. Idiot.
“Disenfranchised grief is a term describing grief that is not acknowledged by society. ”
I actually didn’t know that the society I live in holds me losing my baby to a natural miscarriage (as opposed to a chosen abortion or adoption) in the same regard as me losing my pet rat.
So the people who still practice maschalismos are likely to be the new superpowers after the zombie apocalypse. If only the rest of us had taken steps to control the undead…
#2 Only 4 out of 20,000 being declared alive? That’s sad.
Republican Marriage………..nuff said.