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Mariticide (from Latin maritus "husband" + -cide, from caedere "to cut, to kill") literally means murder of one's husband. The murder of a wife is given the name uxoricide.
Under English common law it was a petty treason until 1828, and until it was altered under the Treason Act 1790 the punishment was to be strangled and burnt at the stake.[1]
In Greek mythology
Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Iran, Pakistan, European Union
Discrimination, Armenian Genocide, Ethnic cleansing, World War II, International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia
Muse, Helios, Heracles, Trojan War, Zeus
World War I, World War II, Genocide, American Civil War, Nuclear warfare
Capital punishment, Genocide, Homicide, Infanticide, Cain and Abel
Capital punishment, Genocide, Homicide, Mythology, Mass murder
Gender identity, Violence against women, Violence against men, Capital punishment, Genocide
Capital punishment, War, Infanticide, Genocide, Arsenic