Raptus
Raptus is the Latin for "seized", from rapere "to seize". In Roman law the term covered many crimes of property, and women were considered property.
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It may refer to:
- any literal seizure
- confiscation
 - robbery
 - kidnapping
 - raptio, i.e. the abduction of women, also known as Frauenraub; these are the "rapes of Zeus".
 - the term for bride kidnapping in Catholic canon law
 - rape in medieval English law
 
 - medical
 - in religion, spirituality and subjective experience
- rapture, a Protestant belief about the End Times and the transport of redeemed souls
 - status raptus, religious ecstasy
 - being "carried away" or "transported", being in good spirits, see Ecstasy (emotion)
 - out-of-body experience
 
 
See also
    
- Rape
 - History of rape
 - Raptor, certain birds of prey and dinosaurs, and the human creations named after them (military equipment, sporting teams, etc.)
 - the artistic and poetic concept of the sublime, especially in Romantic texts, inspired rapture.
- the literary critic Longinus and his essay "On the Sublime".
 
 - the protagonist in Dario Fo's play Accidental Death of an Anarchist died in raptus.
 
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