The medieval torture device known as the rack might have been one of the era's grimmest tools. Victims' ankles and wrists were shackled to a roller on each end of a rectangular frame while their torturer slowly cranked their limbs out of their sockets. Besides being stretched until their muscles snapped, victims on the rack were also subject to a host of other torture methods, such as "pincers made with specially roughened grips to tear out the nails of the fingers and toes" or thin slivers of red-hot coal that sliced between the toes. A favorite torture device of the Spanish Inquisition, the rack was often used by the notorious Torquemada to force Jews, Muslims, and people of other faiths to convert to Christianity. And shockingly, it was reportedly still in use in Great Britain until the 17th century. Go inside the sickening history of the rack by visiting the link in our profile. The Sickening History Of The Rack, The Medieval Torture Device That Stretched Vict...
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