List of people convicted of treason

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of people convicted of treason.

Some countries, such as the U.S., have a high constitutional hurdle to conviction for treason, whilst many countries, especially absolute monarchies and dictatorships, have less stringent definitions.

Contents

[edit] Armenia

  • Meruzhan Artzruni, Lord Prince of Vaspurakan (? - 369), for conspiring with one of the Great Persian Kings, Shapur II against his liege-lord, Armenian King Arshak II, whom he betrayed to Persia. He was captured by Arshak's son King Pap and executed.

[edit] Austria

[edit] Austria-Hungary

[edit] Canada

[edit] China

[edit] Republic of Congo

[edit] Czechoslovakia

[edit] Denmark

[edit] East Germany

[edit] England

For those after 1707, see Great Britain and United Kingdom.

[edit] Fiji

[edit] France

[edit] Germany

[edit] Great Britain

For those before 1707, see England and Scotland. For those after 1800, see United Kingdom

[edit] Greece

[edit] Hungary

[edit] Israel

[edit] Japan

[edit] Kenya

  • Hezekiah Ochuka, Kenya airforce soldier, for conspiring to overthrow the government of Daniel Moi in 1982

[edit] Kuwait

[edit] Netherlands

[edit] New Zealand

  • Hamiora Pere, for fighting against the British government in Te Kooti's War.

[edit] Norway

[edit] Poland

For betrayal general Stefan Rowecki to Gestapo:

  • Eugeniusz Swierczewski (“Genes”), executed 1944
  • Ludwik Kalkstein ("Hanka"), protected by Gestapo during the war, emigrated to France in 1982
  • Blanka Kaczorowska (“Sroka”), as above, emigrated to France in 1971

[edit] Russia

[edit] Scotland

For those after 1707, see Great Britain and United Kingdom.

[edit] Soviet Union

[edit] Spain

[edit] Sweden

[edit] Switzerland

  • Jean-Louis Jeanmaire, sentenced to 18 years of prison (released after 12 for good behavior) for leaking information to the Soviet KGB.

[edit] United Kingdom

For those before 1801, see England, Scotland, and Great Britain.

[edit] United States

[edit] Zimbabwe

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Conway, Moncure Daniel [1892] (1893). The Life of Thomas Paine. New York: Knickerbocker Press, p. 375. Retrieved on 2006-07-06.