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Hannibal - the pussycat?
Two relatively recent and particularly gruesome Hollywood
blockbuster films have featured a character known as Hannibal Lecter,
otherwise known by his descriptive nickname Hannibal the
Cannibal. If legend is to be believed however, when compared with
the exploits of one Mr Sawney Bean, it may appear more appropriate to rename him Hannibal
the pussycat.
Little is known for certain
about his early life, however Sawney Bean is believed to have been
born in East Lothian in the late 13th century, and was a tanner by
trade. The latter part of his life is a little better documented
following his relocation across country to Ayrshire and his
marriage.
The newly wed Mr and Mrs Sawney Bean set up home at Bennane Cave, by
Ballantrae in Ayrshire, Scotland. Bennane Cave was rather an
imposing abode, with tunnels penetrating the solid rock and
extending for more than a mile in length. In addition, the
accommodation featured lots of side passages where a young couple
could extend into, and convert over the next 25 years, to
accommodate a growing family. Draught exclusion features included
the fact that the cave's entrance was flooded for several hundred
metres, twice a day at high tide.
Lacking
a trade, it was Sawney's plan to support his new wife on the
proceeds of robbery. It proved a simple enough matter to ambush
travellers on the lonely narrow roads that connected the villages of
the area. Then it dawned on him that in order to help make sure that
he could never be identified for his crimes, he should murder his
victims. Further, to avoid those unnecessary visits to the shops for
provisions whilst at the same time disposing of any evidence, he
came on the bright idea of butchering the bodies to provide a high
protein diet of human meat for him and his wife.
The high protein diet seemed to have been effective as Mrs Bean
began to produce little baby Bean's. Fourteen little Beanie babies
in total, each with a very unhealthy appetite for human flesh. As
the Beanie babies grew up and in turn, through incest, produced
Beanie babies of their own, their cooking pots increased in size
dramatically. Over two decades, generations of Beanie babies grew up
in Bennane Cave, refining their skills of murder and cannibal
cuisine including, the now lost art of salting and pickling the
flesh. Finds of curiously preserved but decaying body parts were
discovered washed up on the surrounding beaches in the area.
The local authorities had by now established what must have been,
and what must still be to this date, the longest missing persons
list ever produced. Although mass searches of the area were carried
in order to locate either the missing people or their murderers,
nobody ever thought to search the depths of Bennane Cave.
As the years went by the family grew older and thanks to their high
protein diet, bigger. And as the family grew so did their appetite.
As many as half a dozen victims would be ambushed and killed at a
time in military style operations by the Sawney Bean army. The
bodies were taken back to the cave to be carefully prepared for the
larder by the women folk.
Even in the best-planned operations however, things sometimes go
wrong. It happened one evening for the Sawney Bean army, when they
attacked a man and his wife as they were returning home from a
nearby fair. One group pulled the women from her horse and had her
stripped and disemboweled before the other group had chance to
wrestle the man to the ground. Realising the fate that was about to
fall him he fought desperately to escape, driving his horse into and
over his attackers. As he fought for his life, a group of twenty or
so people also returning from the fair happened upon the scene.
After a brief and violent exchange the Sawney Bean army found
itself, for the first time ever, at a numerical disadvantage and
promptly retreated back to the cave to consider this situation. As
they retreated they left behind the mutilated body of a woman as
evidence, a score of witnesses as well as one very angry husband.
The
man was taken before the Chief Magistrate of Glasgow, who after
hearing the tale and putting this together with his longest missing
persons list ever, and further putting this together with the many
reports of the mysterious pickled parts, decided to take the matter
straight to the top. King James I promptly arrived in Ayrshire with
a small army of four hundred men and a pack of tracker dogs, and
together with a band of local volunteers, launched one of the
biggest manhunts the country had ever seen.
Like before, the search extended through the Ayrshire countryside
and coastline and like before, nothing was discovered. That was
however, until the dogs picked up the scent of decaying human flesh
whilst passing a partly waterlogged cave. The manhunt was closing
in!
By torchlight the troops entered Bennane cave and with swords drawn,
they proceeded down the mile-long twisting passage to the inner
depths of the Sawney Bean family lair. Nothing could have prepared
them for the sight they witnessed that day. The damp walls of the
cave were strewn with row upon row of human limbs and body parts,
like meat hanging in a butchers shop. Other areas of the cave stored
bundles of clothing, piles of watches and rings and heaps of
discarded bones from previous feasts.
After a brief fight, the entire Sawney Bean family, all forty-eight
of them, were arrested and marched off to Edinburgh by the King
himself. Their crimes were considered so heinous that the normal
justice system, for which Scotland is so renowned, was abandoned and
the entire family were sentenced to death. The following day the
twenty-seven men of the family met a fate similar to that of many of
their victims, by having their legs and arms cut off and being left
to slowly bleed to death, watched by their women. The twenty-one
women were burned like witches in huge fires.
And so the ballad
of Sawney Bean records their end:
They've hung them high in Edinburgh toon
An likewise a their kin
An the wind blaws
cauld on a their banes
An tae hell they a
hae gaen.
Please note however that although the tale of
Sawney Bean and his infamous family is recorded in several notable
publications, factual documentation is lacking to validate the
events.
©
Historic UK
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