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Definition: FILICIDE

Part of Speech Definition
Noun 1. A parent who murders his own son or daughter.[Wordnet]
2. The murder of your own son or daughter.[Wordnet]
3. The act of murdering a son or a daughter; also, parent who commits such a murder.[Websters].

Sources: WordNet 3.0 Copyright © 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved. Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)

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Date "Filicide" was first used in popular English literature: sometime before 1914. (references)

Etymology:Filicide \Fil"i*cide\, noun. [Latin expression filius son, filia daughter caedere to kill.]. (references)


Extended Definition: FILICIDE


Filicide

Ivan the Terrible and His Son Ivan on November 16th, 1581., a painting of the filicide by Ilya Yefimovich Repin.
Ivan the Terrible and His Son Ivan on November 16th, 1581., a painting of the filicide by Ilya Yefimovich Repin.
Homicide
Murder

Assassination
Child murder
Consensual homicide
Contract killing
Felony murder
Honour killing
Human sacrifice
Lust murder
Lynching
Mass murder
Murder-suicide
Proxy murder
Ritual murder
Serial killer
Spree killer
Torture murder

Manslaughter

in English law
Negligent homicide
Vehicular homicide

Non-criminal homicide

Justifiable homicide
Capital punishment

Other types of homicide

Avunculicide
Deicide
Democide
Familicide
Femicide
Feticide
Filicide
Fratricide
Gendercide
Genocide
Infanticide
Mariticide
Matricide
Parricide
Patricide
Prolicide
Regicide
Sororicide
Suicide
Tyrannicide
Uxoricide
Viricide
Vivicide

Filicide is the deliberate act of a parent killing his or her own son or daughter. The term can also be applied to the parent who has committed such an act. The word filicide derives from the Latin word filius meaning "son".

In some cultures, killing a daughter who is deemed to have disgraced the family is a common occurrence (see honor killing).

A 1999 US Department of Justice Study concluded that between 1976 and 1997 in the U.S., mothers were responsible for a higher share of children killed during infancy while fathers were more likely to have been responsible for the murders of children age 8 or older. Furthermore, 52% of the children killed by their mothers were male (maternal filicide), while 57% of the children killed by their fathers were male (paternal filicide).

Sometimes there is a combination of murder and suicide in filicide cases.

Psychology

See also Infanticide Explanations For the Practice

A number of academics attribute it, both modern and historical, to psychological inability to raise children. Contemporary data suggests that modern filicide is sometimes brought about by a psychological unreadiness to raise children.[citation needed] It could also be exacerbated by schizophrenia or bipolar disorder. It is also attributed, in some cases, to the desire of unwed, underage parents to conceal their sexual relations and/or avoid the responsibility of childrearing.[citation needed] It is attributed in other cases to a strong feeling of alienation or genetic disaffection; in such cases other children are not thought to be at risk and the mother often takes on a new role in child care[citation needed].

Known or suspected filicides

  • On March 5th, 1999, Marilyn Lemak of Naperville, Illinois murdered her three children by giving them overdoses of Ativan.
  • Karen McCarron is suspected of smothering her three-year-old autistic daughter, Katie.
  • Alan Christopher shot and killed his sons, Cody (11) and Kevin (10), on January 19, 2007 in Scottsdale, Arizona, then committed suicide.
  • Lucius Sergius Catilina, the notorious Roman insurrectionist was said to have murdered his only son to persuade Aurelia Orestilla to marry him.
  • Neil Entwistle - Was charged in the January 2006 killing of his baby daughter Lillian in Hopkinton, MA - (infanticide).
  • Marvin Pentz Gay, Sr. shot his son, singer Marvin Gaye, during an argument in Los Angeles, California, in 1984. He was sent to a rest home for the rest of his life.
  • Susan Smith drowned her two sons Michael and Alex in a maroon Mazda Protegé in Union, South Carolina, in 1994. She was sentenced to life in prison in Union, South Carolina, in 1995.
  • Andrea Yates - Drowned her five children in a bathtub in 2001, in Clear Lake City, Texas, due to postpartum depression and other mental disorders. She was sentenced to life in prison in Gatesville, Texas in 2002, but the sentence was later overturned and was found not guilty by reason of insanity. She is now committed to a mental hospital.
  • Bradford Bishop bludgeoned his three children, spouse and mother to death in 1976. He was indicted for murders and remains at large.
  • Debora Green burned two of her three children to death in an arson attack, out of fear she would lose custody of them to her estranged husband Michael Farrar. Sentenced to life imprisonment.
  • Ivan IV of Russia (Ivan the Terrible) killed his son and heir to the throne in a fit of rage.
  • Peter the Great of Russia had his son tortured to death, being present at several of the torture sessions and allegedly participating in some of them.
  • Ernest I. Jeffries killed his infant daughter. [1]
  • Jerry Branton Hobbs inflicted 30 stab wounds against his daughter Laura Hobbs and her best friend Krystal Tobias. [2]
  • Thomas Dewald drowned his two children, aged 10 and 12, in the lake near his parents' cottage.
  • Rohini Maharaj killed her two sons by carbon monoxide poisoning in the garage and then committed suicide.
  • Ronald Clark O'Bryan poisoned his son on Halloween 1974 with cyanide-laced candy for $20,000 of life insurance money. Executed in 1984.
  • John Emil List murdered his three children, mother and his wife on November 9, 1971. He was a fugitive for 18 years. He was apprehended on June 1, 1989 after an episode of "America's Most Wanted" aired. On May 1, 1990 he was sentenced to 5 life terms in prison.
  • Christina Riggs was sentenced to death by lethal injection for killing her two children Justin and Shelby.
  • Sharon Amos, a prominent member of the Peoples Temple church in Guyana (who was not present at Jonestown, but rather at Guyana headquarters in Georgetown) slit the throats of her two children and then herself after hearing the news of mass suicide from Jonestown over the ham radio.
  • Jozsef Barsi. On July 25, 1988 child actress Judith Barsi's father entered her bedroom and shot her in her head. Judith's mother heard the gun shot and came running down the hall where she was met by her father; he then shot his wife. He then drenched the bodies in gasoline and set the house on fire before finally shooting himself in the garage.
  • Josef and Magda Goebbels poisoned their six children before committing suicide.
  • Yeongjo, king of Korea (r. 1724-1776), ordered the death of his son, Crown Prince Sado, in 1767. The crown prince had murdered people within the royal palace and was most likely mentally ill. He obeyed his father’s order to climb into a rice chest, where he subsequently suffocated to death.
  • Selim I, sultan of the Ottoman Empire (1512-1520), had all possible competitors for the sultanate assassinated, including two of his brothers, his nephews, and all of his sons but one, Suleiman I.
  • Ptolemy XII of Egypt had his daughter Berenice IV and her husband beheaded in 55 BC. This was after she had dethroned him and poisoned her sister, Cleopatra VI.
  • China Arnold murdered her newborn daughter by using a microwave oven. [3]
  • Dena Schlosser murdered her young daughter by cutting off both of her arms with a kitchen knife because "God told [her] to".
  • Diane Downs shot her three children in Oregon and shot herself in the arm. She claimed a bushy haired man shot her and her kids. Her story was made into a book written by Ann Rule and movie titled Small Sacrifices starring Farrah Fawcett
  • Mark O. Barton killed several family members including his own children before going on a shooting spree and committing suicide
  • Professional wrestler Chris Benoit killed his seven year old son Daniel, along with his wife and himself, on June 23, 2007.
  • In 2003, Manuel Gehring of Concord, New Hampshire shot and killed his two children-- Sarah, 14, and Philip, 11-- before driving cross-country to California, where he was arrested, and burying them along the way. Manuel hung himself in prison awaiting trial in early 2004, and the bodies were recovered in Ohio in late 2005. His motives were unknown. [4]
  • Robert Latimer killed his daughter Tracy on October 24, 1993, claiming it was to end her pain of being a quadraplegic with cerebral palsy.
  • In June 6, 1996, Darlie Routier murdered her two sons, Damon and Devon. Both boys were stabbed in their Rowlett, Texas home. Routier suffered self-inflicted wounds. Routier is currently serving life without perole.
  • Muhammad Parvez killed his daughter, Aqsa Parvez, on December 10th, 2007, because of her refusal to wear a hijab outside her home.
  • Chizuko Okamoto was convicted of the October 2005 killing her daughter, and she was suspected of four others of her three children and her son-in-law.

Filicides in myth and fiction

  • In the PS2 God of War (video game) series, Kratos is tricked, by Ares, previous god of war, in the series, into killing his own child and his wife. Kratos decides to get back at Ares for doing so, as well as for what Ares did to Athens.
  • In the PS2 sequel to God of War (video game), God of War II, Zeus, attempts to kill Kratos, who at the end of the game is revealed to be Zeus's son. Although this merely counts as attempted filicide, due to Kratos' release from the grips of Hades (The Greek god of the Underworld).
  • Titus Andronicus, Shakespeare - Title character kills his daughter Lavinia. This is an attempt to restore her honor after she was raped, her hands were amputated, and her tongue cut out. Titus previously kills her attackers (then apparently puts pieces of the men's dead bodies into a pie that he serves their mother), marking this play as Shakespeare's most gruesome.
  • La Llorona (The Weeping Woman) - This Hispanic American folktale tells of a woman, Maria, whose husband is unfaithful. In her rage, she throws their children into the river, where they are drowned.[5]
  • In the Medea of Euripides, Medea kills her children, in retaliation for being abandoned by her husband, Jason.
  • Agamemnon sacrifices his daughter, Iphigeneia, to the goddess Artemis in Aeschylus' The Oresteia and in Euripides' Iphigeneia at Aulis.
  • Orchamus, a king in Greek mythology ordered his daughter Leucothea buried alive upon learning that she was in love with Apollo.
  • In the HBO series Oz, white supremacist Schillinger has his son killed by providing him with poisoned narcotics while he is in solitary confinement.
  • In the video game Castlevania, a witch named Actrise relishes the memory of sacrificing her child to the Devil in return for eternal life.
  • In the Ulster Cycle of Irish mythology, Cuchulainn unwittingly kills his son Conlaoch when Conlaoch arrives in Ulster and, under a geis from his mother, the warrior queen Aoife, refuses to give his name to the king. Cuchulainn recognizes his son by a golden ring only after he inflicts a mortal wound with his magical spear, the Gae Bolga.
  • In the 1990 film The Grifters, con artist Lilly Dillon unintentionally kills her son while trying to take his money.
  • In Beloved, Sethe kills her daughter Beloved to save her from being returned to slavery.
  • In the book of Genesis, Abraham agrees to kill his son at the bequest of God.
  • Hercules of Greek Mythology killed his wife and children in a fit of rage induced by Hera
  • In the FOX Network show Justice, a woman is tried and convicted of shooting her son, who threatened to reveal the mother's drug dealing business.
  • In the FOX Network show 24, Graem Bauer (Paul McCrane) is killed by his father, Phillip Bauer (James Cromwell) before he can reveal Phillip's involvement in the nuclear attacks against America in Season 6.
  • In the V.C. Andrews novel Flowers in the Attic, Corrine kills her young son Cory and then tries to kill her other children (including main character Cathy) with aresnic in order to get her parents' inheritance.
  • The 2007 film Before the Devil Knows You're Dead ends with a scene in which the character played by Albert Finney smothers his son (played by Philip Seymour Hoffman) with a pillow after Hoffman's character confesses that he was responsible for the botched robbery that resulted in his mother's death.

Related terms

  • Prolicide is the killing of offspring.
  • Infanticide is the killing of an infant from birth to 12 months.
  • Patricide and matricide are the converse of filicide: the killing of a parent by his or her child.
  • Fratricide and sororicide refer to the killing of one's sibling.

And as for non-familial killing terms from the same root:

  • Regicide is the killing of a king or ruler.
  • Tyrannicide is the killing of a tyrant.
  • Homicide is the killing of a human.
  • Genocide is the killing of an ethnic, religious or national group.
  • Ecocide is the damaging of the ecosystem
  • Suicide is the killing of oneself.
  • Deicide is the killing of a god.
  • Uxoricide is the killing of one's wife.

Also consider filial cruelty (cruelty toward one's own child), child cruelty (cruelty toward an unrelated child), and child murder (the murder of a child in general).

See also

  • Lists of people by cause of death
  • Binding of Isaac
  • Honor killing

External links


Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia; from the article "Filicide". Image Credit.



Topics by Level of Interest: FILICIDE

Topics sorted by level of Interest Level (1=low, 600=high)     Topics sorted Alphabetically Level (1=low, 600=high)
Filicide 21     Filicide 21

Source: the editor, created by/for EVE to gauge likely levels of human interest in linguistically triggered topics (compiled across various sources, such as Wikipedia and specialty expression glosses).

Translations: FILICIDE

Language Translations (or nearest inflections or synonyms, in parentheses)
Albanian fëmivrasje (filicide), fëmivrasës (filicide). Additional references: Albanian, Turkey (Europe), filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
Arnaut fëmivrasje (filicide), fëmivrasës (filicide). Additional references: Arnaut, Turkey (Europe), filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
Bohemian zavraždění syna (filicide), zavraždění dcery (filicide), vrah syna (filicide), vrah dcery (filicide). Additional references: Bohemian, Czech Republic, filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
Cestina zavraždění syna (filicide), zavraždění dcery (filicide), vrah syna (filicide), vrah dcery (filicide). Additional references: Cestina, Czech Republic, filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
Chinese Simplified 杀子女者 (filicide), 杀子女 (filicide). Additional references: Chinese Simplified, China, Brunei, filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
Czech zavraždění syna (filicide), zavraždění dcery (filicide), vrah syna (filicide), vrah dcery (filicide). Additional references: Czech, Czech Republic, filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
Dari فرزند كش (filicide), پسركشي (filicide). Additional references: Dari, Iran, Indo-European, filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
Français filicide (filicide). Additional references: Français, France, Algeria, filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
French filicide (filicide). Additional references: French, France, Algeria, filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
Hanguk Mal 자식살해범 (filicide), 자식살해 (filicide), 자식 살해 (filicide, prolicide). Additional references: Hanguk Mal, Korea, South, Korea, filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
Hanguohua 자식살해범 (filicide), 자식살해 (filicide), 자식 살해 (filicide, prolicide). Additional references: Hanguohua, Korea, South, Korea, filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
Hungarian gyermekgyilkos (infanticide, filicide). Additional references: Hungarian, Hungary, Austria, filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
Japanese 子殺し (infanticide, filicide, prolicide), 兄殺し (filicide), 姉殺し (filicide, sororicide). Additional references: Japanese, Japan, Taiwan, filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
Korean 자식살해범 (filicide), 자식살해 (filicide), 자식 살해 (filicide, prolicide). Additional references: Korean, Korea, South, Korea, filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
Magyar gyermekgyilkos (infanticide, filicide). Additional references: Magyar, Hungary, Austria, filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
Parsi فرزند كش (filicide), پسركشي (filicide). Additional references: Parsi, Iran, Indo-European, filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
Persian فرزند كش (filicide), پسركشي (filicide). Additional references: Persian, Iran, Indo-European, filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
Persian (Farsi) فرزند كش (filicide), پسركشي (filicide). Additional references: Persian (Farsi), Iran, Indo-European, filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
Portuguese filicídio (filicide). Additional references: Portuguese, Portugal, Angola, filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
Russian детоубийство (infanticide, filicide). Additional references: Russian, Russia, China, filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
Russian (transliteration) detoubiystvo (infanticide, filicide). Additional references: Russian, Russia, China, filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
Russki детоубийство (infanticide, filicide). Additional references: Russki, Russia, China, filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
Russki (transliteration) detoubiystvo (infanticide, filicide). Additional references: Russki, Russia, China, filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
Serbian (transliteration) ubica svoje dece (filicide). Additional references: Serbian (transliteration), filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
Shkip fëmivrasje (filicide), fëmivrasës (filicide). Additional references: Shkip, Turkey (Europe), filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
Shqip fëmivrasje (filicide), fëmivrasës (filicide). Additional references: Shqip, Turkey (Europe), filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
Shqiperë fëmivrasje (filicide), fëmivrasës (filicide). Additional references: Shqiperë, Turkey (Europe), filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
Skchip fëmivrasje (filicide), fëmivrasës (filicide). Additional references: Skchip, Turkey (Europe), filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
Tosk fëmivrasje (filicide), fëmivrasës (filicide). Additional references: Tosk, Turkey (Europe), filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
Zhgabe fëmivrasje (filicide), fëmivrasës (filicide). Additional references: Zhgabe, Turkey (Europe), filicide. (volunteer & more translations)
Source: Eve, based on a combination of meta analysis and graph theory (for near and back translations). Top

Constructed Language Translations: FILICIDE

Language Translations for “filicide” or closest synonym(s); back translations in parentheses.
Athag fathagilathagicathagide (filicide). Additional references: Athag, filicide. (volunteer)
Double Dutch fagilagicagide (filicide). Additional references: Double Dutch, filicide. (volunteer)
Leet |#¦1¦<¦[)3 (filicide). Additional references: Leet, filicide. (volunteer)
Oppish fopilopicopide (filicide). Additional references: Oppish, filicide. (volunteer)
Pig Latin ilicidefay (filicide). Additional references: Pig Latin, filicide. (volunteer)
Terran B fimivrasy (filicide). Additional references: Terran B, filicide. (volunteer)
Ubbi Dubbi fubilubicubide (filicide). Additional references: Ubbi Dubbi, filicide. (volunteer)
Source: compiled by the editor. Top