A torture chamber is a room where torture is inflicted.[3][4] The medieval 
torture chamber was windowless and often built underground, was lit by a 
few candles and was specifically designed to induce "horror, dread and 
despair" to anyone but those possessing a strong mind and "nerves of 
steel".[5]\n\nHistorically, torture chambers were located in royal palaces, 
in castles of the nobility and even buildings belonging to the church. They 
featured secret trap-doors which could be activated to throw victims into 
dark dungeons where they remained and eventually died. The skeletal remains 
of people who disappeared were strewn on the floor of the hidden dungeons. 
Other times the dungeons under the trap-doors included pits of water where 
the victim was thrown to drown after a lengthy torture session in the 
chamber above.[6]\n\nskyrim torture chamber mod\nDownload 
https://8burtugregmo.blogspot.com/?download=2wI2S3\n\n\n\nIn Peru, the 
torture chambers of the Spanish Inquisition were specifically constructed 
with thick walls so that the screams of the victims could not penetrate 
them and no sound could be heard from the outside. Other more sophisticated 
designs used principles of acoustics to muffle the screams of the tortured 
and included walls which recessed and protruded in such a fashion as to 
reflect the screams of the victims so that the sounds would not be carried 
to the exterior.\n\nThe mere presence of the torture chamber was used as a 
form of intimidation and coercion. The victims were first shown the chamber 
and if they confessed they would not be tortured inside it. Other times the 
torture chamber was used as the final destination in a series of prison 
cells where the victims would gradually be moved from one type of cell to 
another, under progressively worsening conditions of incarceration, and if 
they did not recant in the earlier stages they would finally reach the 
torture chamber. The final stage of actually going to the torture chamber 
itself, just prior to the initiation of torture, was euphemistically called 
the "Question".[1]\n\nThroughout history, torture chambers have been used 
in a multiplicity of ways starting from Roman times. Torture chamber use 
during the Middle Ages was frequent. Religious, social and political 
persecution led to the widespread use of torture during that time. Torture 
chambers were also used during the Spanish Inquisition and at the Tower of 
London.[7][8][9]\n\nAnother example of a torture chamber, perhaps not 
generally well known, is "The Thieves' Tower" in the Alsace region of 
France. Once a tower used for torture, it is now a small museum displaying 
instruments used upon the prisoners to get them to confess 
crimes.[10]\n\nIn Venice, the Palazzo Ducale had its own torture chamber, 
which was deemed to be of such importance that renovations started in 1507 
so that the chamber walls could be kept strong and secure: "considerata la 
grandissima importantia de j cameroti di la Camera del tormento che siano 
forti e securi".[11]\n\nAccording to the narrations of Ashokavadana, King 
Ashoka, prior to his conversion to Buddhism, was a fierce and sadistic 
ruler, known as Ashoka the Fierce, who built a palatial torture chamber 
known as Ashoka's Hell. The legend of the torture palace is detailed in the 
writings of the Ashokavadana.\n\nAccording to Ashokavadana, Ashoka asked 
Girika, who was the official executioner of his kingdom, to design an 
elaborate torture chamber disguised as a beautiful and "enticing" palace 
adorned with all kinds of decorations and full of amenities such as 
exclusive baths decorated with flowers, fruit trees and many ornaments. It 
was artfully designed to make people long to just look at 
it.[12]\n\nAccording to legend, beneath the veneer of beauty deep inside 
the exclusive mansion, torture chambers were constructed which were full of 
the most sadistic and cruel instruments of torture including furnaces 
producing molten metal.[13]\n\n\n\nAccording to the accounts contained in 
the Ashokavadana, Girika, the architect of the chamber, was inspired by 
descriptions of the five tortures of the Buddhist hell for the design of 
the torture chamber and of the torture methods he inflicted upon his 
victims.[14][15] The torture chamber was so terrifying, that King Ashoka 
himself was thought to have visited hell so that he could perfect its evil 
design.[16]\n\nSome time later a Buddhist monk by the name of Samudra 
happened to visit the palace and upon entering he was informed by Girika 
that he would be tortured to death,[19][20] and was subsequently led into 
the torture chamber. His torturers however failed to injure him and he 
appeared able to neutralise their torture methods by performing 
miracles.[12][17][20]\n\nAshoka converted to Buddhism when he witnessed 
Samudra's miracles inside the torture chamber.[12][17][20] He also ordered 
Girika burned alive and ordered the demolition of the torture palace. 
According to the Ashokavadana, "the beautiful jail was then torn down and a 
guarantee of security was extended to all beings".[12][17]\n\nAccording to 
Frederick Howard Wines in his book Punishment and Reformation: A Study of 
the Penitentiary System there were three main types of coercion employed in 
the torture chamber: coercion by cord, water, or fire.[23] There were five 
stages of torture that could have been applied to the accused: he could 
have been threatened with torture,[24] he could have been taken to the 
torture chamber and been shown the instruments, he could have been 
undressed as if in preparation to be tied to the instrument, without 
actually being tied, he could have been tied to the instrument of torture 
but not actually getting tortured and finally he could have been tied to 
the instrument and tortured.[25][26][27]\n\nThe process of being tied and 
led to the torture rack inside the torture chamber was a form of 
intimidation and was called territio realis as opposed to territio verbalis 
oder lexis which was the verbal threat of torture being made at the 
judgment hall. Territio realis as well as the actual torture session were 
called examen rigorosum.[27]\n\nIn the book Crime and Criminal Justice in 
Europe and Canada it is mentioned that fear was a factor in the process of 
torture and that there was a form of torture known as La présentation de la 
question or simply the "Question",[1] where the prisoner was led to the 
torture chamber and was shown the implements of torture. While at the 
chamber, sentence to full torture was pronounced but, immediately after, 
the prisoner was taken back to the prison cell, without actually having 
been tortured.[28]\n\nThe torture chamber was specifically designed to 
evoke fear in the victims.[29] It was usually built underground and only 
dimly lit. Inside the chamber waited the executioner, his face completely 
covered apart from two holes in the garment to enable him to peer through 
and wearing a black hood; his menacing appearance being described as "most 
diabolical" and "satanic".[29]\n\nWhen during the Question, the view of the 
chamber, the torture implements and the executioner did not cause the 
victim to confess, a full-scale torture session was planned. To prepare for 
torture, the victim was stripped naked with hands tied. The penultimate 
step to torture included a repetition of the questions asked earlier of the 
victims. If the victims still proclaimed their innocence, full torture was 
initiated.[1][29]\n\nThe most common instrument of torture was the 
strappado,[2] which was a simple rope and pulley system. With the pulley 
attached to ceiling of the chamber, the lifting rope was tied to the wrist 
of the victim, whose hands were tied behind their back. Subsequently, the 
victim was raised to the ceiling and then lowered using a jerking motion 
causing dislocation of the shoulder joints. To increase the suffering 
caused by the strappado, weights were attached to the feet of the 
victim.[1][2]\n\nChurch doctrine protected human life so it was problematic 
if a victim were to die, especially before he or she confessed. In 
difficult cases, when a victim would not readily confess or was too weak to 
continue in an uninterrupted torture session, breaks were allowed between 
torture sessions because Inquisition regulations allowed only one torture 
session per victim. That way, a torture session could resume after a break 
to allow time for the victim to recover or reconsider his or her opposition 
to confessing, and it was considered to have been the continuation of the 
previous torture session and not a new one.[1]\n\nBecause confession under 
torture was not acceptable, the victim had to sign a written confession 
after he or she had made his or her oral confession under torture. 
Typically, during confession, the inquisitors demanded that the prisoner 
implicate as many people as possible and not only him or herself. If the 
prisoner resisted signing, the inquisitors could always resume the torture 
by claiming that they had just halted the session, just for the signing, 
but did not really put an end to it.[1]\n\nThe method of construction of 
the torture chamber of the papal palace at Avignon, used during the 
Inquisition, has been described as ingenious. The construction of some of 
the torture chambers at Avignon was based on principles of acoustics, 
specifically designed to muffle the screams and cries of the tortured.[30] 
The walls of the torture chamber recessed and protruded in a complementary 
fashion to the walls on the opposite side so as to reflect the screams of 
the victims locally, ensuring that their shrieks would not be carried to 
the exterior.[30] A chamber located above the main torture chamber had a 
dungeon with a hole near the middle of the floor through which, according 
to accounts, the tortured bodies of the prisoners were thrown into a 
cavity.[30] The chamber where the victims were being burnt was of circular 
construction and resembled the furnace of a glass-house with a funnel-like 
chimney at the top.[citation needed]\n\nThere were secret staircases and 
hidden spaces which were used to overhear the discussions in the prison 
cells. The ceiling of the torture chamber was especially designed to muffle 
the cries of the victims. Inside the torture chamber, furnaces and grates 
were also present.[31] Up to 1850 the chambers were shown to visitors after 
which time the ecclesiastical authorities of Avignon decided to shut them 
down. In a similar vein the torture chamber of the Spanish Inquisition in 
Lima, Peru had one metre thick walls so that the screams of the victims 
could not penetrate them.[32]\n eebf2c3492\n

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