38
Mostly False
Athens
In ancient Athens, a guilty verdict for adultery gave the wronged husband the right to sodomize the offender with a radish or fish and depilate their pubic hair with hot ash.
The claim about ancient Athenian punishment involving sodomizing adulterers with a radish is partially supported by historical evidence, as described in comedic works by Aristophanes and references in historical texts about public humiliation practices. However, there is no strong evidence supporting the specific practice of depilating pubic hair with hot ash as a standard legal punishment for adultery. Historical sources mention severe punishments and humiliations, but details like these are more likely theatrical exaggerations meant to entertain rather than enforceable legal practices.
Individual Claims
38
Mostly False
historical
In ancient Athens, if a jury found you guilty of sleeping with another man’s wife, the man whose wife you slept with had the right to sodomize you with a radish or fish and then have your pubic hair depilated by hot ash.
Historical sources, including Aristophanes' comedies, mention the use of a radish in humiliating adulterers, reflecting societal attitudes rather than legal codification. No concrete evidence specifically describes depilating pubic hair with hot ash as a standard punishment in Athenian law. The claim appears to mix factual historical practices with anecdotal or exaggerated elements from literature.
Fact Check Score
None
Fact Check Weight
0
Web Consensus Score
45
Web Consensus Weight
50
Source Quality Score
30
Source Quality Weight
25
Llm Reasoning Score
25
Llm Reasoning Weight
25
Weighted Total
38
Evidence Summary
Evidence suggests partial truth, sodomizing with a radish noted in historical texts, but lacks evidence for depilating with hot ash.