On this date in 1927,* the Bohemian playboy Jindrich Bažant was hanged at Kutna Hora for a murder spree directed at his several lovers.
Thanks to wealthy parents, Bazant‘s major occupation was the pleasures of the flesh.
But really, “I was destined to be a murderer,” he confessed upon arrest. He’d certainly thrown himself into the role once he tired of his girlfriends.
Two women who fancied themselves future Mrs. Bazants were the victims: Marie Safarikova, age 19, lured into a supposed elopement to Slovakia and then coldly shot dead in the woods; and Josefa Pavelkova, who was already pregnant with Bazant’s child.
Yet another lover, Bozena Rihova, almost met the same fate after she threatened Bazant with a criminal complaint for infecting her with a venereal disease. Bazant shot her, bludgeoned her with a hammer, and set her on fire — but Rihova miraculously survived to testify against her former paramour.
Bazant was among the last put to death by Leopold Wohlschlager, one of the Austro-Hungarian Empire’s five state executioners at the time of its dissolution. Wohlschlager got started in the craft at the tender age of 15, and was well into his seventies when he hanged Bazant.
* I’m going with the plurality (and the best-detailed) of Czech-language articles here, against some cites for the same date in 1926.
On this day..
- 1748: Marretje Arents, for the Pachtersoproer
- 1393: Karsten Sarnow, Stralsund mayor
- 2006: Sedley Alley
- 1906: Four Egyptians for the Denshawai Incident
- 1680: The wife of Abdullah Celebi, and her Jewish lover
- 1816: Five Ely and Littleport rioters
- 1776: Thomas Hickey, plotting against George Washington
- 1844: Gabriel de la Concepcion Valdes, "Placido"
- 1899: Ologbosere, of the Benin Empire
- 1890: Major Panitza, by Stefan Stambolov
- 1578: Five sodomite monks, by Calvinist Ghent
- 1905: Henri Languille, a man of science