Ritual suicide
| Suicide |
|---|
| Types of suicide |
| Teenage suicide |
| Euthanasia/Assisted suicide |
| Murder-suicide |
| Suicide attacks |
| Ritual suicide |
| Cult suicide |
| Mass suicide |
| Suicide pact |
| Internet suicide |
| Copycat suicide |
| Forced suicide |
| Suicide by cop |
| History and methodology |
| History of suicide |
| List of suicides |
| Parasuicide (threats of suicide) |
| Suicide methods |
| Suicide note |
| Suicide watch |
| Views on suicide |
| Cultural |
| Legal |
| Medical |
| Philosophical |
| Religious |
| Right to die |
| Resources for dealing with suicidal thoughts |
| Crisis hotline |
| Assessment of suicide risk |
| Suicide prevention |
| Crisis hotlines by country |
| Medical views of suicide |
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Ritual suicide is the act of suicide motivated by a religious, spiritual, or traditional ritual.
An extreme interpretation of Hindu custom historically practiced, mostly in the 2nd millennium, was self-immolation by a widow as an assurance that she will be with her husband for the next life. Other rituals of self-immolation or self-starvation were used by Hindu, Jain and Buddhist monks for religious or philosophical purposes, or as a form of extreme non-violent protest. In China, some groups would practice suicide for similar reasons. In Japan, rituals of suicide like seppuku were practiced.
See also
- Cleopatra VII
- Cult suicide
- Heaven's Gate
- Immolation
- Jigai
- Martyrdom
- Order of the Solar Temple
- Peoples Temple
- Sallekhana
- Seppuku (Hara-kiri)
- Suicide bomber
