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Fratricide

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Fratricide (from the Latin word frater, meaning: "brother" and cide meaning to kill) is the act of a person killing his or her brother.

Related concepts are sororicide (the killing of one's sister), child murder (the killing of an unrelated child), infanticide (the killing of a child under the age of one year), filicide (the killing of one's child), patricide (the killing of one's father) and matricide (the killing of one's mother).

Fratricides in literature

Known or suspected historical fratricides

Ottoman Empire

In the Ottoman Empire there was a policy of judicial royal fratricide. When a new Sultan succeed to the throne he would kill all of his surving brothers by strangling with a silk cord. The largest killing took place on the succession of Mehmed III when 16 of his brothers were killed and buried with their father. The aim was to prevent civil war as Islamic cultures had no fixed rules for royal succession (such as primogeniture) and bloody conflicts would errupt as the old king was approaching the end. The practice was abandoned in the 17th century by Ahmed I, a man known for his humanity, subsequently the Sultan's brothers were imprisoned in a prison known as the Kafes.

Fratricide and friendly fire

The term may also used to refer to friendly fire incidents. In a United States military context, it may also refer to an incident where the catastrophic failure and disintegration of one jet engine in a twin-engined fighter aircraft causes the damage or destruction of the second engine, and possibly leads to the loss of the entire aircraft.

 


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