Which preposition to use with gibbeted

in Occurrences 9%

He attacked a man of incomparably superior powers, for whom his utter want of humoursave in its comparatively childish formsmade him a ludicrously unequal match, and paid the penalty in being gibbeted in satires that will endure with the language.

of Occurrences 6%

This man, without being allowed to defend himself, was tried by an extraordinary commission of parliament for embezzling the public money, was condemned to death, and was hung on the gibbet of Montfauçon.

on Occurrences 6%

" "I thank thee for thy care, though the sight of yonder old palace is as good a hint to the loose tongue as the sight of a gibbet on the sea-shore to a pirate.

with Occurrences 4%

John now determined to bring him to punishment as an impostor; and though the man pleaded that his prophecy was fulfilled, and that the king had lost the royal and independent crown which he formerly wore, the defence was supposed to aggravate his guilt: he was dragged at horses' tails to the town of Warham, and there hanged on a gibbet with his son [l].

at Occurrences 2%

And a moment later they were running side by side down a narrow street, where a single lamp swung from a gibbet at the corner and flickered in the wind of Saragossa.

without Occurrences 1%

"I would have thee prove me for thy behoof, Sir Jocelyn; for I am he that with aid of five good men burned down the gibbet without Belsaye.

before Occurrences 1%

In the Indian villages scattered among the wild valleys of the Peruvian Andes figures of the traitor, made of pasteboard and stuffed with squibs and crackers, are hanged on gibbets before the door of the church on Easter Saturday.

for Occurrences 1%

I want thee in Garthlaxtonthere be gibbets for thee above the keepalso, there are my houndsaye, I want thee, Messire Beltane who art Duke of Pentavalon!

like Occurrences 1%

Slipping on his beaver jacket, he stepped outside and struck two blows on the great iron ring, a bent rail, that swung from its gibbet like a Chinese gong.

as Occurrences 1%

The notorious William Thomas Fitzgerald had been for many years the regular contributor of the poem, and his efforts on the occasion are remembered, if only through the opening couplet of Byron's English Bards and Scotch Reviewers, where Fitzgerald is gibbeted as the Codrus of Juvenal's satire: "Still must I hear?

Which preposition to use with  gibbeted