#1 Impalement With Stake, Pole, Spear, Or Hook

#2 The Pillory

#3 Goat-Licking Frame

One t*****e method that wasn’t mentioned on this list is the “Blood Eagle.” As explained by the Smithsonian Magazine, it’s an unbelievably morbid practice of detaching a person’s ribs from their torso to pull the bones and skin outward to form a set of “wings.” In the process, it removes their lungs from the chest cavity.
It’s a practice associated with Viking culture and has been fictionalized in various forms of media, from films to video games.
#4 Ducking Stool

#5 Chinese Water T*****e

#6 Schwedentrunk - Swedish Drink

The practice was so brutal in nature that it made experts wonder whether it was a literary trope or an actual way of punishing people. For University of Iceland historian Luke John Murphy, these stories may be a product of hyperbolic accounts.
“The [ritual], as it exists in popular culture today, ... owes a lot to the attitudes of Victorian scholars who were keen to exaggerate its role,” he told the magazine.
#7 The Brazen Bull

#8 Lingchi Bench (Death By 1000 Cuts)

#9 Gas Chamber

If t*****e methods were brutal, so were the various methods of capital punishment. As you can see in these images, many of the victims went through slow and painful demises.
In most practices, only the convicted is sentenced to death. But in Ancient Chona, even the extended family suffers the same fate. This harsh form of punishment is known as miezu, which, according to History, dates back 3,000 years.
#10 The Pressing Board (Peine Forte Et Dure)

#11 Schandmantel - Barrel Of Shame

#12 Saw

Miezu, also known as “nine kinship exterminations,” means even uncles, aunts, cousins, and in-laws face e*******n. The method of doing so is likewise brutal: slow slicing. That’s pretty self-explanatory.
Those who faced this type of capital punishment were likely to have been convicted of rebellion and/or treason. The Chinese government abolished the practice in 1905.
#13 Breaking Wheel

#14 The Thumbscrew

#15 The Head Crusher

We had the opportunity to speak with several experts who shared insights about these brutal practices. According to Farm & Country Insurance agent Casey Love, such savage punishments were predominant in agricultural societies.
As he tells Bored Panda, public executions weren’t solely about serving justice. They were also “community spectacles” done to maintain order during a time when law enforcement was either minimal or nonexistent.
#16 Chinese Cangue

#17 Garrote

#18 Guillotine

Love adds that the shift to more humane practices happened alongside industrialization and urbanization, when societies became more educated and interconnected. As a result, public opinion shifted towards valuing human dignity over invoking fear.
“The same way we moved from branding livestock with hot irons to using ear tags - it's about evolving standards while achieving the same practical goals,” he said.
#19 The Judas Cradle

#20 The Heretic’s Fork




