Rape, Pillage and Burn
One of the many ways your hometown can become a Doomed Hometown. A group of bandits, pirates, or even mooks working for a Big Bad cause trouble primarily by sacking the town - that is, looting, damaging property, and sometimes even murdering and kidnapping innocent townsfolk. Raping is optional(-ly shown), but the town is almost always burned down afterward. This gives an excellent opportunity for the bad guys to Kick the Dog. Rape, Pillage and Burn is guaranteed to appear in any work involving Pirates or Horny Vikings. Sometimes appears, though not as frequently, in the Wild West or Medieval European Fantasy. This activity is a common pastime of The Horde.
Taggart: We'll work up a Number 6 on 'em. |
This is one way to gain Plunder. If this problem persists, villagers may resort to hiring The Magnificent Seven Samurai.
Truth in Television. This is generally a problem in areas without a strong government to keep order, even today. In many civilizations, it was not resolved until power, money, and land were consolidated under noblemen and kings rich enough to afford standing armies. It is also one reason why peasants in older times tolerated kings and nobles who were quite nasty, as the alternative was almost always constant chaos caused by dozens and dozens of rival warlords.
It should be noted that as nasty as this trope can get, its not entirely unjustified in terms of cold hard pragmatism, at least in less civilized settings. It provides food, supplies, and funds for an army far away from home which is in constant need of all three. It raises morale among the attacking forces, demoralizes the victims, and builds a fearsome reputation which can among be used to coerce surrender. The downside is that creates a lot of resentment from the population, turns enemy troops fanatical and invites reprisals, damages the economic value of the area you conquer, postpones cultural assimilation by decades, and can become addictive to the troops, which is a big problem when they return home.
And remember, to avoid (even more) Squick, it's rape, pillage, then burn.
Anime and Manga
- Inevitable in Vinland Saga, a manga about Vikings.
- ...and equally inevitable in Berserk.
- Wyald, the leader of the Black Dog Knights, just LOVES to invoke this trope.
- Just as much with the evil Pirates in One Piece.
- Hokuto no Ken, period!
- To elaborate: this trope is often what is being inflicted upon the people Kenshiro must save, and is an excellent way to encourage him to pop some heads. Especially if you even think about doing this to children.
- Hellsing: Invoked by The Major before the burning of London. The Last Battalion is only too happy to fulfill this in both letter and spirit.
- Not surprisingly, occurs in many Hentai series, with heavy emphasis on the raping part.
Comics
- In the Strontium Dog story "Traitor to his Kind", Cuthbert asks Wulf is he ever raped and pillaged England. Wulf responds that he did a lot of pillage back in the day, but there was no raping - the girls were only too willing.
Film
- Seven Samurai - The titular seven are hired to defend a village of Japanese farmers from bandits.
- The Magnificent Seven - This film is actually a remake of Seven Samurai as a Western.
- The villagers in both films are Genre Savvy enough to expect the raping part, going as far as to hide the women away from the village in both films.
- Elizabeth Swann's first encounter with pirates in Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl.
- Also was possibly Jack Sparrow's plan after he stole a ship from Port Royal, "I aim to raid, pillage, and plunder my weaselly black guts out."
- Early in Pale Rider, the Big Bad's men raid the gold miners' camp to try to scare them off the land. They even shot a poor little puppy.
- The Burmese army in Rambo does this to Complete Monster degrees.
- Blazing Saddles - hilariously subverted, as the townspeople build a fake town to lure out Hedley Lamarr's Mooks.
- And spoofed in the beginning, where the mayor of Rock Ridge complains of "women stampeded, and cattle raped."
- Tusken Raiders in Star Wars were responsible for Anakin's mother's kidnapping and death.
- In ¡Three Amigos! this is the standard M.O. of El Guapo. This leads to a bit of dialogue when Dusty poses as one of the banditos, and starts making up recollections for an inebriated and celebratory El Guapo:
El Guapo: Oh-ho, you... |
- The movie Conan the Barbarian kicks off the main plot with a barbarian raid on the title character's village when he is just a kid. Plenty of raping, pillaging and burning goes on, and both of Conan's parents are killed (the father by being ripped apart by hounds, the mother by having her head chopped off by the Big Bad). Conan and the other kids are sent off to be enslaved.
- It's implied that he later raids villages for fun himself:
Chief: Conan! What is best in life? |
- In Andrei Rublev, while on the way to Moscow, a horde of Mongol-Tatars decide to prey on the undefended town of Vladimir. Men are cut down and shot with arrows, thatched roofs are set aflame, women of all ages are raped, a cow is set on fire, a horse falls down a flight of stairs; general pandemonium ensues. The majority of the townfolk barricade themselves in the town's cathedral. What makes it so heinous is that they are being guided by a pretender to the Moscow throne and many Russians are among their ranks.
- Early in Serenity, the Reavers are shown doing this to the town that the titular ship's crew are busy swindling.
- The Soviet film Come and See has the Nazis doing this to one village, then massacring the inhabitants. They get their just deserts from the partisans however.
- The city of Troy gets this treatment from the Greeks as they finally break into the city.
- Lampshaded and parodied in the Terry Jones film Erik the Viking when the inept hero defensively assures the village maiden he's failing to ravish that he's burned and pillaged his way up and down the cost, to which she responds "Burning and pillaging. What about the raping?"
- Happens at Apocalypto when the jungle village of the protagonist is razed to the ground by Mayan slavers.
Literature
- In A Song of Ice and Fire, there are too many examples of this to mention.
- This little excerpt of A Clash of Kings pretty much says it all:
Bronn: A lording down from the Trident, says your father's men burnt his keep, raped his wife and killed all his peasants. |
- The entire culture of the Iron Islands and the Dothraki are pretty much based on this.
- And then there's the Mountain That Rides, who is more or less the avatar of this trope.
- Virgil's Aeneid opens with the Greeks doing this to Troy.
- In the book The Painted Bird, this happens to several Polish peasant villages during World War II. These villages have been neglected for centuries, lack electricity, and lie in a war-torn country. Towards the end of the book, the protagonist Jewish boy comes to a village that is attacked by a band of deserters from the Red Army. They go on an orgy of gang-raping and slaughter, and it's a real Tear Jerker scene.
- The Foundation series featured whole planets being sacked.
- Eragon: The Urgals get an incredibly Narmy opportunity to Kick the Dog at Yazuac.
- All the evil armies in Sword of Truth engage in enormous amounts of raping and pillaging; not just villages, but whole cities and countries they roll over.
- Occurs in many instances in The Bible, naturally. Jerusalem has been sacked more than once.
- It wasn't always done to the Israelites either. See, e.g. Numbers 31:7-18, Deuteronomy 20:10-14, and Judges 21:10-24.
- In two Thackeray novels, Henry Esmond and Barry Lyndon, the main characters are part of armies during European wars of the 18th century and their side is depicted as doing this. Barry is a Villain Protagonist, so he joins in. Esmond is a more honorable guy, so he doesn't really take part, but does assent when his faithful servant wants to join in the raping and pillaging.
- In Interesting Times Cohen has to explain to one of his senile warriors which things one rapes, and what things you burn.
Rincewind: Rape? That's not very-- |
- Happens in The Crown of Silence by Storm Constantine. Invaders decimate a village, then rape any survivors, regardless of gender.
- The Mongols in the Conqueror books do this quite a lot, generally as punishment for not surrendering immediately.
- The Art of War advocates this practice as a way to keep an army supplied while simultaneously weakening the enemy.
- Council Wars lampshades this when Bun-Bun complains that the bad guys were getting the order wrong.
- The Draka call this L&R, "Loot 'n Rape," and they do a lot of it.
- In The Prophecy of the Stones, pillaging and burning (rape is not mentioned) is part of the Army of Darkness's (no, not that one) job description, from the sound of it.
- Cayleb Ahrmahk, Emperor of the planet Safehold's Empire of Charis, works very very carefully to avert this trope. While the burning is unavoidable, raping is punished harshly and pillaging is largely avoided by Cayleb willingly paying the going for the property and materials he takes from the people he's conquering. The reason for this, besides being a basically decent person, is that with a Corrupt Church eagerly smearing him with all the propaganda they can get or make up, Cayleb knows his best defense is to not behave the way the Church claims.
- This happens whenever a city is captured in Bernard Cornwell's novels. Notably, in one of the Sharpe books the hero storms an impossible breach in order to get to his wife and daughter ahead of the pillaging hordes of his own side who have got in elsewhere.
- Due to the setting, common in the 1632 novels. The Americans have a few issues with this...
- The Magic Treehouse book Viking Ships At Sunrise has Jack and Annie narrowly escape a Viking raid. No violence is shown onscreen, but the Vikings clearly intend to do some raiding and sacking.
- This is what happens when a city is taken by storm in The General. Well, not burning but the troops are customarily allowed to rape and pillage for twenty-four hours. Call it incentive to surrender on terms.
- This is the modus operandi of the Rogue Warrior. He doesn't actually rape anyone, but the rest is pretty accurate.
- In The Witcher short-story "Something bigger" (Coś więcej) Dandelion mentions the attacking Nifgaard army which "burns, kills and rapes everything in it's path...not obligatory in this order".
- Marion Zimmer Bradley parodied this in a Darkover story.
We have to tell them again and again: |
Live-Action TV
- A blackout sketch from Dave Allen At Large:
Viking #1 (Allen): Rape all the men and kill all the women! |
- The Reavers. But not necessarily in that order.
- Game of Thrones shows the Dothraki indulging in this at one point which comes back to bite Khal Drogo when he needs some medical attention. Also mentioned as happening offscreen.
- The opening of Season 6 of Buffy the Vampire Slayer has a gang of demon bikers discovering the Slayer is dead and doing this to Sunnydale. At one stage Spike when watches the demons force their way into a house and hears a Screaming Woman, he has a big grin as he remembers doing such things himself. Fortunately Spike has Dawn with him.
- Farscape: Despite his efforts to stay below the radar (to avoid the various bad guys who want him dead), Crichton and his exploits still become well known...and blown way out of proportion
Borlik: You know, I heard he destroyed a Peacekeeper Gammak Base. Murdered an entire Nebari battalion--even laid waste to a shadow depository. Guy was a devil. He raped and pillaged, he popped eyeballs- |
Music
- "Gods of War Arise" by Amon Amarth
- A good portion of Manowar's lyrics
- Procol Harum, "Whaling Stories".
Sack the town and rob the tower |
- The Viking Birthday Dirge, unsurprisingly, features several references
May the candles on your cake |
Stand Up Comedy
- Comedian/Impressionist Rich Little once impersonated John Wayne as Ghenghis Khan: "We're gonna go in and we're gonna rape the women and steal the sheep. And for God's sake, get it right this time!"
Tabletop Games
- Warhammer 40000 - The Dark Eldar's main purpose in life. Don't let them take you alive. The Orks will also sack and pillage for fun, but they're Asexual and they'd be happier if the villagers put up a decent fight. Chaos Space Marines will also raid and pillage For the Evulz.
- Followers of the Chaos God Slaanesh are the best example. The Dark Eldar pillage and torture, Orks burn, pillage and burn again, followers of Khorne Killmaimburnkillmaimburn! (none of them really cares about raping), but followers of Slaanesh will pillage, torture, rape and burn, and not necessarily in that order either.
- Of course, to BME Zine readers, the Dark Eldar would probably function as high octane fetish fuel.
- In GW's sister setting, Warhammer Fantasy Battle, the Dark Elves prowl the seas making slave raids or murderous surprise attacks, the Orcs like pillaging and burning as a prelude to a good scrap, and Chaos (notice a pattern?) Marauders are a constant menace in the northern lands, particularly the Norscans and their longships
- If you have a big enough ship in Blackbeard, you might be able to sack ports. If you have enough weaponry and information from hostages, you might even be able to sack New York or Boston.
Theatre
- The Cut Song "There's Something About A War" from A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum has Miles Gloriosus and the soldiers sing in praise of this:
There's always a town to pillage, |
- While Shakespeare's Henry V doesn't actually do this to Harfleur, he does have an absolutely hair-raising speech about it:
Therefore, you men of Harfleur, |
- A popular pre-show theater exercise involves the cast chanting VERY LOUDLY:
WE'RE GONNA RAPE, KILL, PILLAGE, AND BURN |
- In Pippin, after Charles defeats the Visigoths in battle, he says that it's time for his men to rape and sack. "Oh yes, it's required."
- In the Brazilian play Hermanoteu na terra de Godá, the titular prophet wannabe meets a duo of Visigoth barbarians, who pride themselves on their "rape and kill" life style.
Hermanoteu: So that's all you guys do? |
Video Games
- The bandits dooming your hometown in Fable.
- The town recovers, though. In fact, when you return there later in the game, you are greeted by girl who was looking for her teddy bear Rosie, now grown up. She recognizes you, by the way.
- You'll run into one of these in Fire Emblem.
- You can sack towns in Pirates!
- The Overlord games usually consist of a healthy amount of this, especially if you decided to play in a more Chaotic Evil fashion.
- Sacking towns is the best way to maintain a steady income in the Total War series.
- In the background options for Shepard in Mass Effect, Shepard can potentially have faced this twice; first, if the Colonist background is taken, Shepard survived a slaver attack on his/her home colony on Mindoir, but also lost his/her entire family at 16. If the War Hero background is taken, Shepard singlehandedly prevents this from happening to the colony of Elysium.
- An army of mooks get this slightly wrong in Freddy Pharkas: Frontier Pharmacist.
"Let's stampede the women and rape the cattle!" |
- No doubt a reference to Blazing Saddles, in which an army of mooks also stampedes women and rapes cattle.
- Mount and Blade, being a Low Fantasy action-RPG, will of course allow you to descend upon villages and loot them. Their model changes to a burnt out husk of its former self and for quite some time afterwards, will not be accessible; all you get upon entering it is a screen succinctly describing its destruction.
- The school and village where the player begins in Jade Empire is burned to the ground and all but a handful of its inhabitants slaughtered. What news of this reaches other villages paints it as purely pirates attacking, when it's actually mooks of the Emperor working alongside the pirates.
- This is the modus operandi of Caesar's Legion in Fallout: New Vegas. In the endgame, if the Courier has a maxed out Barter skill (which in this game means a very good understanding of economics and trade), s/he can deconstruct this by telling Legate Lanius that raiding is a very poor long term way to properly sustain a nation, especially considering that NCR towns make very poor raiding targets since they depend on trade and that even if the Legion wins the battle for Hoover Dam, they'll ultimately be defeated via attrition. This will be enough for Lanius to agree to retreat.
- Happens off-screen in the prologue of The Witcher 2: Assassins of Kings, as King Foltest's army attacks the Castle La Valette. Unusually, the player is on the attacking side as well, although you have the option to stem the worst brutalities that you come across.
- In all Civilization games, most land units can pillage the infrastructure (roads, farms, mines etc.) outside enemy towns. Marauding barbarians are especially fond of this.
Webcomics
- In Schlock Mercenary, the first maxim in The Seventy Maxims of Maximally Effective Mercenaries is "Pillage, then burn."
- Furmentation notes that you must do it in that order.
- Parodied in The Noob here. The roleplayers debate about who has the most tragic past, every one of them saying their parents were killed by orcs.
Meanwhile, in the farmlands |
Web Original
Add "pillage" to "rape" and suddenly it has an air of knockabout fun. But "pillage" is bad enough by itself. It's theft looting and arson. Being pillaged would be an awful thing to happen to anyone. What it definitely isn't is a spoonfull of sugar to help the rape go down. Nonetheless put them together and these two awful crimes apparently cancel each other out. You can almost imagine a jolly uncle saying something like: "Where are you boys off to tonight? Out raping and pillaging I'll be bound!" But you wouldn't want one of them to reply: "Well, not pillaging anyway." |
- In Greek Ninja, that's what happens to the main character's hometown.
But save the sheep!