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Torture and Punishment in Elizabethan England A notable time during the late
middle ages was when Queen Elizabeth was in power, from 1558-1603. She was a
dictating, powerful, and cruel monarch. She also believed in extreme punishment
for crime, in order to run a peaceful country. The death penalty could be
prescribed for any offense, even some as minor theft, or highway robbery. During
this time, a person of higher social standing could accuse a peasant of a crime
without any evidence. Chances are the peasant would be tortured until they admit
to the crime. Frequently, the accused would be tortured to death. If he or she
admitted to the crime, the punishment would be death, probably by hanging.
During this era, many devices were invented to dehumanize, humiliate, or simply
to be uncomfortable to the victim. For a severe crime, the devices used were
often just to inflict the most amount of pain possible onto the victim. One
punishment for women who gossiped or spoke too freely was called “the brank”. It
was a large iron framework that enclosed the woman’s head. It had a metal strip
that fit into the mouth that was either sharpened to a point or covered with
spikes, so that any attempt to speak would lead to severe injuries to the mouth.
The woman was then led on a chain by a city official through the town, and tied
to a whipping post or pillory to endure the cruel and verbally abusive public.
Another more severe punishment for women who gossiped or spoke too freely was
“the ducking stool”.
The ducking stool was a wooden or iron chair that was
attached to a large lever system. The lever allowed the chair to be raised or
lowered without tipping the chair, making it parallel to the ground at all
times. It was always placed at the waters edge so that it could be dunked
repeatedly underwater with the woman strapped to it. Based on the level of the
offense and cruelty of the deciding party, the woman could be dunked underwater
for any number of times, for any period of time. In some extreme cases, the
woman could be drowned by the amount of time spent underwater. Most ducking
stools where fixed at the waters edge as a grim reminder to the village women of
what free speaking can lead to, but some were mobile and could be moved to the
water at the necessary time. Another humiliating, painful, and uncomfortable
torture instrument was the “pillory”. It was a wooden post with holes in it for
the persons hands and head to go in, and would be locked in place. The pillory
was always displayed in public. The person would have to stand there for days on
end with minimal food and water, and was also subjected to verbal abuse, rotten
food, and having his or her hands whipped. An unusual and humiliating punishment
for public drunkenness was “the drunkards cloak”. The drunk was forced to wear a
barrel that had holes cut into it for hands and head for several days, while
wandering through town with villagers jeering and beating on him. A thief or
pickpocket would often have his or her right hand cut off, or some times their
eyes plucked out with hot tongs. If any of a persons limbs were cut off for
punishment, an amputation saw would be used.
This is a kind of saw that it much
more painful and jagged than a regular saw. There were many ways of executing
invented attempting to create the absolute most amount of possible pain, ranging
from mild to severe. The most honorable way to be executed during this time was
beheading. The lower a persons social satus, and the higher the crime, the more
painful and slow their execution would be. A person could be hung until half
dead, then disemboweled or quartered alive. They could be stretched to death, or
have weights put on their chest until the persons ribs cracked. They most common
for of execution was hanging. It was so common that there were areas were many
people would be hanged at once, called “gallows”. In conclusion, punishments of
this dark time are much more cruel than what would be allowed today. Private and
relatively humane executions have replaced public hangings and disembowelments.
Punishments for crime were extreme, and unnecessarily cruel and painful. There
are now holding cells for criminals awaiting a fair trial, instead of the
stocks. All I can say is that Im glad I’m not living in Medieval England. The
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