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Looking at the Area 51 commitment page, I realized that some of the questions that were originally suggested there never got asked here, so I thought I'd add some of them. Something else I would like to see addressed as part of this question would be the reasons behind the sacrifices. Were they tied to religious or superstitious beliefs, such as appeasing gods, or were they done as a form of punishment or revenge?

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IIRC, a 7th century Egyptian tribe used to throw virgins into the Nile every year to keep the river flooding. Can't seem to find a reliable source, though. – Muz Mar 20 at 7:33

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up vote 10 down vote accepted

The Maya did: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_religion , in most cases this seemed to be more extaordinary and in a way of trying to get the attention of the gods in extreme circumstances, such as famine, flood or alternately kings ascending the throne. As did the Aztec: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aztec#Human_sacrifice , although I have never seem much in the way of explanation other than some considered it an honor to be sacrificed.

Depending on how you view the sacrifice witch burning could be another, this was religious and a punishment but again it depends on how you define it.

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According to sources I've read (Jared Diamond's Collapse among them), it had become pretty much an everyday thing for the Maya near the end. Then again, that probably was a time of extended famine... – T.E.D. Aug 26 '12 at 21:59
An extended famine would fall under extreme circumstances for me, so I'd believe they would increase it in order to get the gods to listen. – MichaelF Aug 27 '12 at 12:03

Adding up an example, if you read the old testament, you see numerous examples, most famously when Abraham was willing to sacrifise Isaac, of course we know it didn't happen. And since Abraham didn't doubt this is God's will, I think this was in a way accepted, even if it wasn't the daily practice amongst Jewish people that time.

consider the followings:
1 Kings 13:1-2
Wisdom 14:21-23
Judges 11:29-40

I am pretty convinced in ancient jewish culture this thing was more common, since the Bible don't register all the sacrifises. These sacrifises weren't as regular as in Mayan or Aztec culture, but existed.

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"ancient jewish culture" - do you mean pre-Abraham? Because technically speaking, he is the first original Jew. – DVK Mar 22 at 16:18
It's debatable whether Abraham actually expected to actually have to kill his son. It's also debatable whether the 'sacrifice' mentioned in the Judges resulted in Jephath's daughter's death. The book of Wisdom doesn't appear to be in the 'standard' biblical canon, and the passage isn't necessarily referring to Jewish culture either. I have a feeling that the way 'sacrifice' is used in Kings is less an appeasement for God, and more a judgement on those prophets ('for perverting right worship', basically). – Clockwork-Muse Mar 22 at 21:17
@DVK pre Abraham and around Abraham I meant. In the Roman time I don't remember any kind of human related sacrifises. – CsBalazsHungary Mar 25 at 8:25
@Clockwork-Muse it is debatable, as well as the whole Bible, since it was written by many authours, and since it mentions God himself, it is debatable to accept it as a historian source. I am atheist, and I claim Bible as a source of historical baseline. I can't accept it as a whole, but I see points in it to accept, since it was written by people who lived in those age, they might be wrong on certain points, but it is a good point to get history related data. – CsBalazsHungary Mar 25 at 8:29
@DVK Sorry, I didn't answer your comment properly: Even if jews count their time from Abraham, the whole culture origins before that. The exodus is a big event in their history, but their habits origined from the previous centuries, it wasn't Abraham who found the whole jewish society and culture even if he was a very special person in it. – CsBalazsHungary Mar 25 at 8:40

Every culture sacrificed humans. It's usually justified murder. The normal motives are not that different than murders.

Curiously, in China, human sacrificed is ended by a king that kill even more people, namely Yin Zheng, the founder of Chin dynasty. The reasoning is that Yin Zhen don't believe superstition.

The egypt sacrifice the king's family and the king's most loyal general so the priests can maintain the power for themselves :) Clever priests. According to Matt Ridley's "Red Queen"

By burying most loyal general along with the king, the priests can get rid the most important defender of the throne.

Also most baal worshiper sacrifice their children to signal to their friends that they're not making too many kids and hence reducing their power.

All religious dogma has reasonable simple economic/evolutionary/biology explanation.

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Downvote: this sounds very weird. – Felix Goldberg Jan 15 at 23:36
Ehm, do you have sources for all this? – Felix Goldberg Jan 16 at 1:27
red queen matt ridley. what motivates me to study humanity. Also check cocksofthealphamales.com – Jim Thio Jan 16 at 1:53
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@FelixGoldberg I don't know what's worse about that link, the juvenile title, the bizarre assertions or the fact that it uses Comic Sans... Jim crap like this don't really count as sources, especially for a site like History.SE. – Yannis Rizos Jan 17 at 17:34
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@YannisRizos: It's more like a case of sans comic, I am afraid... – Felix Goldberg Jan 17 at 17:48
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Followers of Kali in India. It was never a mass thing, but supposedly at some point a certain Kali temple sacrificed a human every day. It still happens today, but a lot less frequently.

One non-scolarly source: http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,322673,00.html

Also, Wiki ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_sacrifice#History_by_region ) has a pretty extensive list, including such unusual and unexpected examples as ancient Russia (Rus apparently sacrificed slaves/prisoners of war to Perun); pre-Buddhist Tibet; and Ancient Hawaii.

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Human scarifice in kamakhya news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/1908706.stm – user774025 Jan 28 at 14:47

One example of human sacrifice was a practice called Sati in India. It was a Hindu tradition, mostly restricted to some northern regions of India. Under Sati, a widowed woman would sit on her husband's pyre and burn along with him. What differentiates Sati from other examples above, was that this practice was voluntary and the decision rested with the widow (in theory, if not in practice). There's some debate as to how this practice started, but it seems to be more social than religion in origin.

It was discouraged/banned by several rulers, leaders etc. It was also one of the very few Hindu customs outlawed unconditionally by the British (in 1829). Nowadays, sati is very very rarely followed.

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I'd heard about this and thought about it in this question but the widow isn't really sacrificed though, it seems more like a sort of culturally imposed suicide. It is an interesting practice though, from a cultural perspective that is. – MichaelF Nov 8 '11 at 21:09
@MichaelF:Can you explain what you meant by sacrificed? If you meant killing someone in the hopes of some gains through supernatural means, then there are some fringe cultural practices that fit the bill in India. – apoorv020 Nov 9 '11 at 4:53
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Exactly, but Sati is not really a ritual killing it's more of a fit with suicide. That's all I am saying. Sati was one I originally thought about in response to the question but there is no religious authority figure doing the killing in Sati so I didn't consider it as an answer. I did upvote you though for the notations around it and the link, it's not something I had thought to look for. – MichaelF Nov 9 '11 at 12:49

One form of human sacrifice that I hadn't considered was the act of retainer sacrifice that was exercised in ancient Egypt as well as Mesopotamia. Whenever a king or ruler died, his entire household could be executed to serve him in the after-life. There even seems to be indications that this happened in ancient China as well. This form of sacrifice I suppose could have been considered an honor, but I'm not sure those who were sacrificed necessarily agreed.

In my reseacrh for a book that will be set in West Africa, I found information that some tribes there used human sacrifice to appease their gods by sacrificing prisoners that were captured in battle. There was a reference that the Kingdom of Dahomey may have been the most prominent in this, but I couldn't find anything substantial to confirm that.

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Carthage practised mass infant sacrifice to their gods in particular BaĘżal. The practices increased as Rome was defeating Carthage culminating just before the destruction of the city.

Source: NY Times and The Punic Wars by A. Goldsworthy.

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No, it was NOT their usual practice. It was a special case just during the war with Romans. – Anixx Jan 15 '12 at 19:52

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