Falling is execution by throwing or dropping a person from a great height. It has been used since ancient times. People executed in this way die from injuries caused by hitting the ground at high speed.
Suetonius records the rumours of cruelty by Tiberius during the later part of the emperor's reign while the latter was living at Capri. Tiberius would execute people, most notably boys whose sexual company he had grown tired of, by having them thrown from a cliff into the sea while he watched.[5] Some were tortured before being executed, and if they survived the fall, men waiting below in boats would break their bones with oars and boathooks.
In pre-colonial South Africa, several tribes including the Xhosa and the Zulu had named execution hills, from which miscreants were hurled to their deaths. These societies had no form of imprisonment; thus, legal penalties necessarily consisted of corporal punishment, capital punishment, or expulsion. It is alleged that during the Namibian war of independence numerous, SWAPO rebels were dropped from South African helicopters over the sea.[6]