The main uses of torture, in general, were simply the chopping of heads, hands, noses, and the cutting out of internal organs, mainly performed by a headsman to a criminal or a traitor.
"Drawing and quartering" was used in that time, too. When someone was told that they would have this done to them, it meant that they would have their entrails pulled out,-drawing-and then they would be cut into fourths-quartering.
In 1485 when it became Tudor torture.
no
medieval torture chamber
Not all medieval castles had torture chambers. While some castles included spaces for torture as part of their dungeons or prison areas, many served primarily as fortifications and residences without such facilities. The presence of torture chambers depended on the castle's purpose, the lord's practices, and the legal customs of the region. Overall, torture was not a universal feature of medieval castles.
pilliwinks
In chairs.
steel chairs
There is no thumb press that is a kind of torture. It is called thumb screw torture, and it is a type of European torture in which the victims fingers and thumbs were placed inside a vice, and crushed.
Dungeons and torture chambers.
Medieval torture device.
Of course not. I would use all caps if I could.
You would get put in the stocks or you would get hung.