Beginning in the 1500s, Russia exiled their capital offenders to Siberia. There, they began their hard labor, working in the mines that were just being opened. While the frozen horrors of the Siberian labor camps tumbled about in the imaginations of people across the world, reports of what it was like inside these prisons, later called gulags under Stalin, began to appear in newspapers by the late 1800s.
10#Brutal Numbers
Among the prisoners sent to Tomsk were the sick. The prison had enough room to hold 275 sick prisoners, but the actual number of sick exceeded the space that was available. For example, in 1887, 512 of the prisoners were listed as being sick. Most of these men had typhoid fever. Since there wasn’t enough room for them, they were sometimes moved outside into the open air to exist in near-freezing temperatures.
Naturally, the mortality rates at Tomsk were rather high, with 360 to 400 men being buried each year.
9#Cannibalism In Sakhalin
Men and women were viciously flogged, sometimes to death. Their bodies were mutilated. There were also incidents of cannibalism because the prisoners weren’t being fed or getting enough food to sustain themselves.
8#Ball And Chain
They also had to wear the chains when they worked their ten-hour days in the copper mine. During those long hours, he and the other prisoners were permitted three or four breaks during their shift, where they could return to the surface and let their clothes dry off a bit before heading back down into the mine
7#No Contact With The Outside World
Because of her gender, she was given the task of cutting trouser legs in a clothing factory. She had problems meeting their 300-pair-a-day quota, and as punishment, she was not given her full allotment of food. The daily diet consisted of water, dry bread, the husks of soybeans, and cabbage water.
6#Suicide Was Common
In 1912, 40 political prisoners were sent to the Nertoinsk prison. There, they received 30 lashes. The men suffered from terrible hunger and, no doubt, fear. Two of the men committed suicide by “opening veins,” and another two men killed themselves with poison.
5#Notched, Slit, And Branded
First, both of the men were marked as convicts. Their ears were notched, and their nostrils were slit open. This was to make the men easily identifiable should they escape the work camp. According to Professor Ossendowski, “Every Russian citizen meeting men with such marks had the right to kill them.”
The men were also branded. The marks “were so deeply burned that one could see the barely-covered ribs.”
4#Skin Pocket
The account stated that the professor wished he had a small pocketknife to skin whatever it was that he had shot. When the convict heard this, “He put his hand to his naked hip, and right at the place where the abdomen joins the hip, he laid back a fold of the skin.” The convict pulled out a small knife, explaining that, “We old convicts always undergo this operation. We have to have weapons in our fights with the jailers or soldiers pursuing us.”
3#Chained To A Wheelbarrow
This was considered “a terrible and much-dreaded” punishment and rightly so. The person chained to the wheelbarrow could not find any comfort at night when attempting to sleep and had to push the wheelbarrow with him everywhere he went. It also made another attempt at escape nearly impossible.
2#Forced Marriages
The lives of the female convicts were no better than their male counterparts. There were numerous accounts of women convicts being beaten, flogged, and punched.
1#Sleeping Conditions
Overcrowding was a huge problem at this prison. Back in 1888, it was reported that one of the cell rooms had enough room for 35 men, but at the moment, there were 160 stuffed into the room.
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