This is a 'list of
poisonings' in chronological order of victim. It also includes confirmed attempted and fictional poisonings. Many of the people listed here committed or attempted to commit
suicide by poison; others were poisoned by others.
Non-fiction
Confirmed poisonings
★
Socrates (d.
399 BC) , Greek philosopher — According to
Plato, killed by drinking
poison hemlock
★
Demosthenes (d.
322 BC) Athenian
politician
★
Aratus of Sicyon (d.
213 BC),
tyrant of
Sicyon
★
Antipater the Idumaean (d.
43 BC), father of
Herod the Great
★
Cleopatra VII of Egypt (d.
30 BC), poisoned herself with an
asp’s
bite
★
Julius Caesar Drusus (d.
23), son of
Tiberius
★
Emperor Hui of Jin China (d.
304)
★
Ali ibn Abi Talib (d.
661), caliph
★
Umar ibn Abd al-Aziz (d.
720),
umayyad caliph
★
Musa al-Kazim (d.
799),
Shia Imam
★
Romanus II (d.
963),
Byzantine Emperor
★
Alan III, Duke of Brittany (d.
1040)
★ Constance of Normandy (d.
1090), daughter of King
William I of England
★
Constantine II of Armenia (d.
1129)
★
Alphonse I,
Count of Toulouse (d.
1148)
★
Baldwin III of Jerusalem (d.
1162)
★
Blanche of Bourbon (d.
1361), first wife of King
Pedro of Castile
★
Louis, Count of Gravina (d.
1362)
★
Robert, Count of Eu (d.
1387)
★
Ladislaus, King of Naples (d.
1414)
★
Margaret Drummond (d.
1502), mistress of King
James IV of Scotland
★
Timoji (d.1512), Hindu privateer and Portuguese ally
★
Juan Ponce de León (d.
1521), Spanish
conquistador; after being wounded by a poisoned arrow
★
Pope Clement VII (d.
1534), ate the
death cap mushroom
★
Eric XIV, King of Sweden (d.
1577)
★
Yamada Nagamasa (d.
1630),
Japanese adventurer
★
Bradford sweets poisoning (1858)
★
Olive Thomas (d.
1920), Silent film actress, accidentally ingested a large dose of
mercury bichloride
★
Nestor Lakoba (d.
1936),
Abkhaz Communist leader, was poisoned by
NKVD chef
Lavrenti Beria
★
Abram Slutsky (d.
1938), head of Soviet spy service, poisoned with
hydrogen cyanide by
NKVD
★
Nikolai Koltsov (d.
1940), famous Russian biologist, was poisoned by
secret police NKVD
★
Erwin Rommel (d.
1944)
German general
★
Adolf Hitler (d.
1945)
cyanide and gunshot simultaneously before capture
★
Eva Braun (d.
1945)
suicide by cyanide capsule at Hitler's side as his wife
★ The
Goebbels children (d.
1945), poisoned by their parents
Magda and
Joseph Goebbels (who then killed themselves shortly afterwards by poison and gun shots before capture)
★
Heinrich Himmler (d.
1945), leader of the Nazi
Schutzstaffel (SS); suicide by cyanide capsule after being captured
★
Odilo Globocnik (d.
1945)
★
Hermann Göring (d.
1946), leader of the Nazi
Luftwaffe; suicide by cyanide capsule, long after being captured and only hours before his
hanging was to take place
★
Alan Turing (d.
1954),
British mathematician — Apparently committed suicide by painting an apple with
cyanide and taking a bite.
★
Clare Boothe Luce (1956) — Fell ill but did not die;
arsenic poisoning
★
Stepan Bandera (d. 1959) poisoned by a cyanide capsule shot from a gun by
KGB agents
★
Georgi Markov (d.
1978),
Bulgarian dissident, — Assassinated in London with
ricin
★
Peoples Temple cult-members, perhaps over 900 of them, (
1978); killed by cyanide-laced punch at
Jonestown.
★ ''
Love Canal'' (up to 1978) — Buried toxic waste was covered and used as a building site for housing and school in
Niagara Falls, New York, resulting in claims of chronic poisoning and a massive environmental cleanup.
★ ''
Bhopal Disaster'' (1984) — An accidental release of poisonous gas from a pesticide plant in
India that killed over 2,000 people and injured many more.
★ ''
Matsumoto incident'', June 27, 1994, sarin gas attack carried out by members of the
Aum Shinrikyo cult. 7 killed, approximately 200 injured.
★
Sarin gas attack on the Tokyo subway, March 20, 1995, carried out by members of the Aum Shinrikyo cult. 12 killed, 1034 injured.
★
Marshall Applewhite (d.
1997);
cult suicide
★
Ibn al-Khattab (d.
2002), a Sunni
Jihadi fighter, died from a poisoned letter sent by Russian
FSB agency
★
Alexander Litvinenko 2006, Russian ex-spy and investigator, died three weeks after being poisoned by radioactive
polonium-210 in London.
Attempted poisonings
★
Grigori Rasputin, Russian mystic, survived being poisoned with
potassium cyanide, as well as being shot, bludgeoned, and being thrown into a frozen river before he finally died by
drowning.
★
Khaled Meshal,
Hamas Leader, survived being poisoned by Israeli assassins. The
King of
Jordan ordered the capture of the assassins, two of which were caught, and an antidote was supplied by Israel for their release.
★
Nikolay Khokhlov was poisoned by radioactive
thallium Germany in
1957 for refusing to work as a
KGB assasssin
★
Zhu Ling,
Chinese university student poisoned with
thallium in
1995. Suspect never charged.
★
Anna Politkovskaya was poisoned during her flight to
Beslan in
2004
Possible poisonings
★
Alexander the Great
★
Barbara Radziwiłł (d.
1551), Queen of Poland
★
Boudica, Queen of the Iceni and leader of the rebellion against Roman rule in Britain, suicide by poison according to
Tacitus;
Dio Cassius claims natural illness
★
Charles Darwin — possibly died due to self-medication with
Fowler's solution, one percent potassium arsenite
★
Claudius (d.
54), Roman Emperor, by his wife
Agrippina the Younger
★
Germanicus (d.
19),
Roman general
★
Huo Yuanjia (d.
1910), wushu master and Chinese national hero,
arsenic
★
Jamestown colonists — Standard historical accounts claim deaths by starvation, but the possibility of arsenic poisoning by rat poison (or of death by
Bubonic plague) has also been reported (see
here)
★
King John of England, with plums
★
Mithridates VI of Pontus
★
Napoleon Bonaparte — some claim he was killed by someone on his staff with arsenic. Evidence is inconclusive.
★
Pope Benedict XI (d.
1304)
★
Pope Pius VIII (d.
1830)
★
Ptolemy XIV of Egypt (d.
44 BC), if so, by his sister
Cleopatra
★
Robert Cecil, 1st Earl of Salisbury (d.
1612)
★
Tycho Brahe (d.
1601), Danish astronomer
★
Stefan Dusan (d.
1355), Serbian king
★
John Gallagher Montgomery (d. 1857), U.S. Congressman from
Pennsylvania
★
Maxim Gorky (d.
1936), Russian writer.
NKVD chef
Genrikh Yagoda admitted at the
Trial of the Twenty One that he ordered to poison Gorky and his son.
★
Robert Johnson (d.
1938), American musician
★
Raoul Wallenberg (d. presumably in
1947), a Swedish humanitarian, who save tens of thousands of Jews in
World War II, was reportedly poisoned in
Lubyanka prison by
Grigory Mairanovsky
★
Joseph Stalin (d.
1953) — Officially
cerebral hemorrhage; but, according to
Vyacheslav Molotov's memoirs and historians
Radzinsky and
Antonov-Ovseenko, Stalin was poisoned by
Lavrenty Beria
★
Pope John Paul I (d.
1978) (''unconfirmed'')
★
Yuri Shchekochikhin (d.
2003), Russian investigative journalist, died presumably from poisoning by radioactive
thallium
★
Yasser Arafat (d.
2004) — Arafat reputedly died from liver
cirrhosis, which may be a consequence of chronic
alcohol use or poisoning. Some Arafat supporters feel it is unlikely that Arafat habitually used alcohol (forbidden by
Islam), and so suspect poisoning. However, it is also important to note that cirrhosis is not necessarily caused by alcohol use, or indeed any poison at all.
★
Ardeshir Hosseinpour (d.
2007),
Iranian nuclear scientist, possibly poisoned/assassinated by
Mossad: death by "radioactive poisoning" or "gas poisoning"
[1] [2] [3] (unconfirmed)
★
Viktor Yushchenko, Ukrainian politician, possibly poisoned with
dioxin during the
2004 electoral campaign.
Notorious poisoners
★
Grete Beier (executed
1908), German murderess
★ Dr
John Bodkin Adams, British doctor acquitted in
1957 but suspected of killing 163 patients via
morphia and
barbiturates.
[1]
★
Anna Marie Hahn (executed
1938), American serial killer
★
Graham Frederick Young (d.
1990), British serial killer
★
Pope Alexander VI (Rodrigo Borgia)
★
Thomas Neill Cream (d.
1892), serial killer
★
Charles Sobhraj, a serial killer who preyed on Western tourists throughout Southeast Asia during the 1970s.
★ Members of the
Aum Shinrikyo cult in Japan in the 1990s often used poisons for murder, including chemical weapons such as
VX and
Sarin.
★
Grigory Mairanovsky, who received Soviet PhD degree for testing poisons on
political prisoners
Fiction
''Due to the plot strength of poisoning in
crime fiction, this is an inexhaustive list.''
Novels
Crime fiction
=
★
Anthony Berkeley: ''
The Poisoned Chocolates Case''
★
Ann Granger: ''
Say It With Poison''
★
Francis Iles: ''
Before the Fact'' (filmed as ''
Suspicion'')
★
Francis Iles: ''
Malice Aforethought''
★
Agatha Christie: ''
Three Act Tragedy''
★
Agatha Christie: ''
A Pocket Full of Rye''
★
Agatha Christie: ''
Crooked House''
★
Agatha Christie: ''
And Then There Were None''
★
John Dickson Carr: ''
The Burning Court''
★
John Dickson Carr: ''The Black Spectacles'' (US title ''The Problem of the Green Capsule'')
★
Raymond Postgate: ''
Verdict of Twelve''
★
Freeman Wills Crofts: ''
The 12.30 from Croydon''
★
Ann Granger: ''
Say It With Poison''
★
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle: ''
A Study in Scarlet''
★
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle: ''The Adventure of the Devil's Foot''
★
Dorothy Sayers: ''
The Unpleasantness at the Bellona Club''
★
Dorothy Sayers: ''
Strong Poison''
★
Rex Stout: ''Fer-de-Lance''
★
Rex Stout: ''The Red Box''
★
Rex Stout: ''Black Orchids''
★
Cornell Woolrich: ''
Waltz into Darkness'' (filmed as ''
Mississippi Mermaid'' and ''
Original Sin'')
Other fiction
★
Alexandre Dumas, père: ''
The Count of Monte Cristo'' and ''
The Three Musketeers''
★
Gustave Flaubert: ''
Madame Bovary''
★
Kaori Yuki: ''
Count Cain (GodChild after vol. 5)'' Protagonist Cain Hargreaves is known as the Count/Earl of Poisons. He has quite a collection of poisons, and frequently solves murder cases, almost all of which involve poisons.
★
Romeo suicide by poison in ''
Romeo and Juliet''
★
Snow White ate a poisoned
apple
★
Vladimir Harkonnen of ''
Dune''
★ unsuccessful poisoning of
Ron Weasley in ''
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince''. The intended victim was
Albus Dumbledore
★
David Eddings' ''Mallorean''. The Emperor Zakath of Mallorea is poisoned with thalot, and cured by Adara's Rose, called by Cyradis, the Seeress of Kell, the "universal remedy". In ''The Elenium'', the Primate Annias poisons Queen Ehlana with Darestim, so he can have access to her treasury to fund his campaign of becoming Archprelate. Her champion, Sparhawk, and his companions find the magical jewel Bhelliom to cure her. It is later revealed that Ehlana's father King Aldreas was killed with the same poison, given to him by his sister, with whom he was romantically involved.
Films
★
D.O.A.
★
Arsenic and Old Lace
★
The Young Poisoner's Handbook
★
Jill Tracy-
The Fine Art of Poisoning
★
Crank
Plays
★
Joseph Kesselring: ''
Arsenic and Old Lace''
★
Shakespeare: ''
Romeo and Juliet''
★
Hamlet,
King Claudius,
Gertrude and
Laertes, characters in
William Shakespeare’s tragedy ''
Hamlet, Prince of Denmark''
★ Imogen, in
William Shakespeare’s play ''
Cymbeline''
References
1. Cullen, Pamela V., "A Stranger in Blood: The Case Files on Dr John Bodkin Adams", London, Elliott & Thompson, 2006, ISBN 1-904027-19-9
See also
★
List of people by cause of death –
List of unusual deaths
★
List of deaths from carbon monoxide poisoning
★
Antidote
★
Assassination
★
Biosecurity
★
Cult suicide
★
Food poisoning
★
Food taster
★
LD50
★
Lead poisoning
★
Lethal injection
★
Pesticide poisoning
★
Poison
★
Poisonous animals
★
Poisonous plants
★
Pollutant
★
Toxicity
★
Venom
★
List of fictional toxins