Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { ?s ?p "William Duell was a 17-year-old English boy convicted of raping Sarah Griffin in Acton, London. He was sentenced to death. On 24 November 1740, he was hanged in Tyburn, along with four others. His body hung for about 20 minutes before being cut down. It was then brought to the Surgeon's Hall to be anatomized for a medical training college, a common practice at the time."@en }
Showing triples 1 to 4 of
4
with 100 triples per page.
- William_Duell_(criminal) abstract "William Duell was a 17-year-old English boy convicted of raping Sarah Griffin in Acton, London. He was sentenced to death. On 24 November 1740, he was hanged in Tyburn, along with four others. His body hung for about 20 minutes before being cut down. It was then brought to the Surgeon's Hall to be anatomized for a medical training college, a common practice at the time.".
- Q8008055 abstract "William Duell was a 17-year-old English boy convicted of raping Sarah Griffin in Acton, London. He was sentenced to death. On 24 November 1740, he was hanged in Tyburn, along with four others. His body hung for about 20 minutes before being cut down. It was then brought to the Surgeon's Hall to be anatomized for a medical training college, a common practice at the time.".
- William_Duell_(criminal) comment "William Duell was a 17-year-old English boy convicted of raping Sarah Griffin in Acton, London. He was sentenced to death. On 24 November 1740, he was hanged in Tyburn, along with four others. His body hung for about 20 minutes before being cut down. It was then brought to the Surgeon's Hall to be anatomized for a medical training college, a common practice at the time.".
- Q8008055 comment "William Duell was a 17-year-old English boy convicted of raping Sarah Griffin in Acton, London. He was sentenced to death. On 24 November 1740, he was hanged in Tyburn, along with four others. His body hung for about 20 minutes before being cut down. It was then brought to the Surgeon's Hall to be anatomized for a medical training college, a common practice at the time.".