After Dark: Myths, Misdeeds & the Paranormal - The Dark Side of Medieval England
Episode Date: August 25, 2025This episode contains descriptions of execution and torture.To be Hanged, Drawn & Quartered. Put on the Rack. Impaled on a spike. This list paints a very dark picture. What was the reality of executio...n and torture in the Medieval world? Was it as bad as we think? Worse?Guiding us through this very grim history is Matt Lewis host of the History Hit podcast 'Gone Medieval'.Produced by Annie Coloe. Edited by Freddy Chick. Senior Producer is Charlotte Long.Please vote for us for Listeners' Choice at the British Podcast Awards! Follow this link, and don’t forget to confirm the email. Thank you!You can now watch After Dark on Youtube! www.youtube.com/@afterdarkhistoryhitSign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week and ad-free podcasts. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe. You can take part in our listener survey here.All music from Epidemic Sounds.After Dark: Myths, Misdeeds & the Paranormal is a History Hit podcast. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hello and welcome to After Dark.
Before we get into today's episode, all about medieval torture, a warning.
No surprises for guessing that this is grim stuff.
and not for younger listeners or indeed the faint-hearted.
There's going to be descriptions of torture, execution,
and generally stomach-turning chat.
So, listener, beware and continue only if you dare.
Also, we recorded this episode a little while ago,
and you might spot that there are not the usual,
dramatic, scripted sections between the chat that we usually have.
But don't worry, it's a great episode,
and the beloved dramatized sections aren't cancelled.
Last thing, it's been a while since we've remembered.
reminded you that you can get in touch with us to tell us how much you like the show. Give us
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after dark at history hit.com. Okay, that's it. On with the show.
Hello and welcome to After Dark, myths, misdeeds and the paranormal.
My name is Dr. Anthony Delaney.
And I'm Dr. Maddie Pelling.
And today we are talking about one of the most light-hearted subjects you could possibly imagine, torture and brutal execution.
Now, in medieval England, these things were used to instill a sense of fear.
And that fear was used to maintain social control.
assert power. And these extreme methods were used to deter crimes, obviously, to display authority
and to extract confessions. To list them is to immediately conjure a very dark image of the
medieval world. We're talking impaling the rack to be hanged, drawn and courted. But what did
these processes actually look and feel like? Why were they used? And was this all as grim or
grimmer than we imagine today.
Our guest today is someone who drips facts and grisly stories about medieval torture.
It is the brilliant Matt Lewis historian and co-host of our sister podcast Gone Medieval.
Matt, welcome to After Dark.
Thank you very much for having me.
I'm glad to be able to bring a bit of light to you and talk about torture and waste and murder people.
Matt, how do you feel about dripping fun facts and grisly stories?
Is the dripping inconvenient, or is that just something you've become accustomed to?
I guess it's better than being grizzly.
Sure, let's go with that.
Talk to us then about specifically in this instance, hanging, drawing and quartering.
It's something we've all heard about.
I think people are very familiar with the term, but actually, in terms of the process,
what did that look like in medieval England?
It could look like several different things, but to answer your question in the
introduction, it is way grislier than you probably ever imagined to undergo this. The point of this
was that it was for the worst crime. So in England, we're talking high treason against the crown.
It was the worst crime. It needed the worst punishment that they could come up with. Hanging was a
fairly typical punishment. That goes all their back to Anglo-Saxon times. Hanging has been a way to
kill people judicially throughout history. In the medieval period, they kind of begin to bolt things onto this,
to make it worse for the person.
So hanging itself can have two ways of killing you.
You can either die from a broken neck from the fall.
So you yank on the rope, it snaps your neck, and you die almost immediately.
Or you can be allowed to dangle there while you slowly strangle to death.
So even the hanging part, without any other frills around it,
being hanged could be more gory or less gory depending on how it was done.
And one of the most famous cases of this was,
when Guy Fawkes was sentenced to be hanged drawn and quartered for his part in the gunpowder plot
he famously manages to summon whatever energy has left
and according to some sources sort of makes a little jump up the scaffolding and jumps off
so that his neck snaps when he dies so that he doesn't have to undergo the rest of the torture
that everybody else he's already watched everybody else go through
and drawing kind of comes into it a little bit earlier as well
so actually drawing can go at the start of the process of being drawn
and hung because drawing originally referred to the way that people were bought to their execution,
you would be drawn through the town. And this starts off by being quite often tied to a horse.
You'd have your ankles tied to the back of a horse and you'd be dragged through the streets.
The problem they found with this was that people would quite often bang their heads on stones
and either be unconscious or potentially even dead by the time they get to their own execution,
which is inconvenient for a crowd that's looking to cheer on and enjoy somebody's suffering.
So what they didn't want to do was damage people when they got there.
So then they alter that slightly so that you would normally be drawn there on a hurdle.
So a wooden framework, the wooden frame would be attached to the back of a horse
and you would be paraded through the town on the way to your execution.
And the point of this is to make it incredibly public
so that as many people as possible can see your shame and your embarrassment
at the public nature of your punishment for the crime that you've committed.
and they would be allowed to pelt you with whatever they wanted to, in lots of cases.
It is rotten vegetables.
You know, sometimes this is where films get things like this quite right.
Pelt you with rotten vegetables.
There are some accounts of people being pelted with feces while they're being dragged through the streets.
So this could be a pretty awful beginning to your process,
but it's actually probably the nicest thing that's going to happen to you today.
And it is, is it not the idea that you are meant to remain alive during these first two phases,
whether whichever one comes first.
The ideal, if we can use such a word,
is that you are alive during those two processes.
The state's notion,
wherever you get to that highest point of execution,
where it becomes much more gory and difficult to endure,
you know, things like the death of a thousand cuts
is a real punishment that existed in the Far East.
Wherever you reach that kind of pinnacle,
the state's objective is for you to be awake, alive, conscious
for as long as physically possible
throughout all of these, and they will quite often try to find ways to prolong it, to make you
stay alive for longer, so that your punishment is greater. Because the real reason for this, there is
a limit to how much damage you can do to a person by making their death prolonged and painful.
What they're suffering is a lesson to everybody else who might be thinking about doing what
they're doing. Really, the impact is meant to be on the crowd. It's horrible for the person that's
going through it, but the purpose of the state's interest in making it as gory and difficult
as possible is to say to everybody in the crowd, you want some of this? Fancy go? No, maybe not.
Behave. Yes, Matt, you talk about these processes being a deterrent to commit some of the
worst crimes, for example, treason. But I do think that spectacle is so important. And I think
it seems to me that it's a way of the state exercising its power in public and really performing that.
And there is nothing more performative than the final step in being hanged, drawn and quartered,
which is to be courted. So tell us what that involves and what it looks like if you are someone in the crowd watching this spectacle unfold.
It's one of those things I think that lots of people today would probably be utterly amazed at the thought that people considered this any kind of entertainment,
that you would willingly go and watch someone have to endure their deaths in as gory a way as possible.
So the hanging part in this hanging drawer and quartering would always be the strangulation rather than the quick death of the snapped neck.
So the hanging part would involve you being raised up on a rope and left there to strangle until you're almost unconscious.
So there's kind of an art here in balancing making this as difficult as possible, with making it as painful as possible, with keeping the people.
alive and conscious to endure it for as long as possible.
And again, what you want the crowd to understand is that you will be awake
through all of the suffering if you decide to go this way.
But having been strangled almost to the point of death,
you would then be brought down, laid on a table,
and this is where drawing has ended up in the middle
because the next part of drawing is often that you would have an incision made down your
stomach. It would be pulled open,
and your intestines would be very carefully lifted out
and dropped into a brazier, a burning fire next to you.
So that possibly the last thing you would ever smell in your life
is your own burning insides.
And it's possible to live for a little bit longer while this is going on.
So people would generally be conscious while this is happening to them as well.
There are occasions where presumably the cause of death
is that they then decide to also take the person's heart out
and throw that onto a brazier.
and so again there's this idea of your body is being dismembered while you're still alive
that you can't be buried whole if this has happened to you know christian concern for your body
being buried whole because on the day of judgment it's going to sit up in your grave and you're
going to face jerusalem and prepare to enter heaven well if your body is in bits and it's been
disemboweled it's not very helpful in that aim if you manage to stay awake
through having your intestines burned and you managed to stay conscious,
the final part of it will be that you would be beheaded.
If you hadn't died by this point, that would be your cause of death.
And then the final kind of embarrassment for your body
is that it would literally be chopped into four pieces, quartered.
And generally because these are high-profile state prisoners,
those quarters will be sent off to four corners of the kingdom
as a warning to people. If you weren't able to,
to make the execution, it's coming to a theatre near you, or at least a part of it is.
The head would generally be dipped in tar and that would normally be spiked on London Bridge
and that would be a reminder to anybody going in and out of London that this is the fate
that traitors will suffer. They dip it in tar to preserve it for as long as possible
so that it can stay there as a warning for as long as possible. So we think people like
William Wallace, you know, the famous Scottish rebel, he undergoes this execution in London
His head is placed onto London Bridge, and then his four quarters are sent to Newcastle-upon-Tyne, to Berwick, to Sterling and to Perth.
So all the places that he's been active are kind of framed with quarters of his body that are meant to act as a warning to people about his behaviour.
There are a couple of parts where the bit just before you die gets a little bit gory.
So there's a guy called Hugh Dispenser the Younger, who in the early 14th century, he is a close.
ally of Edward II and we get these dispenser wars because they're unpopular, they're disliked
favourites of Edward II. And eventually Hugh Dispenser the Younger is captured. He has this kind
of show trial in Hereford and quite often you see as part of these state trials the person will be
accused of theft. So Hugh is accused of stealing something like 60,000 crowns or whatever and that's
because theft is what gets you hanged. So to deliver the hanging part you have to be a thief. So you
I'll quite often see random accusations of theft being added to high treason as a way to make sure that you can layer up these punishments.
And Hugh is then taken to the market square in Hereford, where he's hanged, drawn and quartered.
But we get one account from Fwasar, a French chronicler, who talks about when Hugh is hanged, he's lowered down onto a ladder, kind of 60 foot high ladder that has been placed in the market square so that as many people can see this as possible.
that he is cut open, sort of lying almost vertically on this ladder,
cut open down his stomach and his entrails are taken out and thrown onto the fire.
But then he's also emasculated.
His genitals are cut off and also thrown into the fire for good measure too.
And this again, this is all about humiliating the person, emasculating them,
inflicting as much embarrassment on them in front of a crowd as you possibly can
to add to that deterrent.
So Fassar is actually the only source that says that this happens.
and to Hugh, but there are other accounts of people having their genitals cut off as part of this
process too. And again, it adds to that kind of humiliation element to the execution too.
And it would bring in this idea of the same-sex attraction between Edward II and Hugh Despenser
that is very prevalent in the queer archive. And I have looked at this somewhat myself as well.
And apparently Isabella France, Edward II's wife, was involved in some of the actions against
Hugh Despenser. And so in terms of the...
of removing the genitalia in terms of the humiliation of that, it feeds into this same-sex
attraction that's often linked with Edward II and his subsequent relationship with Hugh Dispenser.
So this humiliation element feeds into different aspects of social, cultural and religious life.
Absolutely. And one of the things that Fwasar says is that his penis and testicles were cut off
because he was a heretic and a sodomite, even it was said with the king. And this was why the king
had driven away from the queen.
So there is that element of the accusation of a sexual relationship
between Edward and Hugh leading to the emasculation of Hugh
and the fact that he has kind of driven a wedge between the king and the queen
being the root of the cause of all of the kingdom's problems by this point.
There's an idea here of the punishment fitting the so-called crime,
the so-called crime here being so-called crime here being so-domy,
but the actions done to the body,
this absolute obliteration of the body by the state,
reflects the things that this individual or group of individuals has done as a crime to threaten
authority. Something that really interests me, Matt, is this use of the heads after people have
been hanged drawn and courted and beheaded, either pre or post death. And of course,
for most of the period that this particular punishment is taking place, for most of that period,
there isn't their technology to reproduce images, certainly in the same way that we're
we get in the late 17th, early 18th centuries with the print sort of advent of print media coming
in where people can buy relatively cheap images of celebrities or statesmen or whoever.
And it strikes me there's something there about the head of the alleged criminal, the
condemned criminal being paraded, being shown around. It adds a level of infamy and it
allows ordinary people in various parts of the city, the town, the countryside,
wherever these body parts being paraded, to come face to face not only with the brutality
of the punishment, but with that person themselves. And I suppose going back to that idea
of spectacle, there's something there that people would have been drawn to these events
to see these famous people as much as to see them be killed by the state, I guess.
Yeah, I think just what you mentioned about the destruction of the body by the state
also acts as a reminder that your body belongs to the state.
You are all subjects of the king or the queen.
You theoretically at least belong to them,
and if you digress against them,
they will exercise their ultimate right to utterly destroy your body physically.
It's kind of a reminder of the position of everybody in the country beneath the monarch.
But yeah, the parading of heads is important.
For two reasons, I think, there is that element of notoriety.
So we see lots of cases where William Wallace's head is displayed.
When Jack Cage Rebellion, so the Wars of the Roses is kind of my history home,
so I always go back to the Wars of the Roses, for examples.
When Jack Cage Rebellion takes London in 1450,
some of the people that were sent against the rebels that they defeat,
they walk across London Bridge carrying their heads on spikes in front of them.
And this is a very clear projection of your power over these people.
These people have tried to beat me and they can't beat me.
And here are their removed heads for all of you to look at.
Those faces, particularly in London, would be recognisable to people.
So the other important element of this is understanding that the person is dead.
That criminal is dead.
They cannot continue to have any kind of notoriety.
And this becomes really prominent in the Wars of the Roses with,
you think about people like the Duke of York,
Richard Duke of York's head is cut off and spiked on Micklegate Bar with his son.
Edmund and his brother-in-law, the Earl of Salisbury.
And we get the frequent display of the bodies of defeated enemies in the Wars of the Roses
because it's about making sure everybody knows they're dead.
I don't want any rumours that they're still alive.
You know, Richard II, lots of rumours he's still alive in Scotland long after he's believed
to be dead.
Edward II, lots of stories he's still alive and living a comfortable life in Italy.
They want you to understand they're dead.
Here is their head, so there is the punishment element of it,
But there is also, you know, I don't want any idea that this person is living a romantic
outlaw life in the countryside or that they escaped justice in the end that they didn't have
to pay for their crimes. You want the public to understand, here is the face of this person
and they have paid for what they did. So we've looked at hanging, drawing and quartering,
but that wasn't the only form of medieval torture, although it might be the most notorious.
Can you tell us a little bit more about impaling? And specifically, if you can,
John the impaler
He sounds a little less glam
than Vlad the impaler
Good old John the impaler
But tell us
Tell us a little bit about him
Yeah so impaling
Again has an incredibly long history
It goes on for
For centuries millennia
I think impaling has been going on
There are lots of ways
To impale people
Again there's some kind of art
That grows up around
impaling people
You can aim to kill people
Immediately by impaling their bodies
On a spike
Or you can develop
up techniques, which some people did, to get a spike into someone, but make sure they stay
alive. And there are some accounts that talk about people surviving six, even eight days
impaled. They kind of worked out that if you used a thinner metal rod, and if you follow,
because the damage is done if you hit an internal organ, so then it becomes infected or you bleed
out or whatever else you can die relatively quickly in that way. They worked out that if you follow
the course of the spine, you're not going to hit any major internal organs. So they could get a
spike in through normally the anus, but it could go anywhere convenient, work its way up the
course of the spine, and then it could come out kind of in the back of the neck or the throat
or anywhere else through the mouth if you could, you know, I don't know how you want to work
where this comes out. But then you could keep someone alive for six to eight days. And then you're
at the point where you're presumably paralysed, but you're essentially just then starving to death
and dehydrating to death or dying of exposure if you're out in the heat or anything like that.
So it isn't the impaling that kills you.
There are other versions of impaling where you're impaled kind of into your body so that it goes
into your stomach and out your spine.
There are different directions that you can impale people.
you can kind of tie them to the stake so their legs are kind of wrapped around it,
all sorts of weird and gory ways that people have found to inflict this death.
But I guess the most famous person is Vlad the Impaler, Vlad Tepper, so Vlad Drackel,
the guy who gets written off in history as Dracula,
the kind of prototype for Dracula.
And he, so he was raised kind of in the Ottoman Empire,
the Muslim world to his southeast.
and when he takes over his own kingdom of Wallachia,
he kind of uses impaling, which was fairly common in the Ottoman Empire,
to impose his rule on his own territory.
So he begins impaling enemies when they're defeated in battle,
but he very quickly uses it also as a punishment to his own people
for crimes that they commit.
There are accounts in which Ottoman armies begin to invade Vlad's territories,
and the armies literally stop, turn around and go home
because they're walking along streets
that are lined with tens of thousands of impaled Ottoman soldiers.
And this is so terrifying to them
that they're just like, you know,
what, we don't want any of this,
and they will literally turn around and go back into the Ottoman Empire.
So as a deterrent, it works.
We're told in some sources that Vlad enjoyed seeing people impaled.
He enjoyed hearing their screams of,
agony and anguish to the point where some sources say he would sit and eat his meals
surrounded by forests of people on steaks who were slowly dying and screaming and he would
just sit there and eat his food but ultimately this is about similar to hang drawing
and quartering it's not all that different really it sounds more gory i think to our mind somehow
but is it really any different this is about the public display of power and authority
in an effort to restore law and order and to project strength
so that people won't challenge your position.
You need it to be as gory as possible.
And if Vlad, in sitting there and having his dinner,
it sounds quite sadistic.
But perhaps it's less sadistic and it's more about saying,
you know, I'm in control.
I'm willing to punish people who misbehave around me
and I'm willing to make sure that this punishment is delivered
in the most gruesome way that is possible.
John the Impaler is perhaps
a slightly softer version of that.
His English cousin.
His English cousin.
So this is a guy called John Tiptoft,
who was the Earl of Worcester.
And this is in the Wars of the Roses.
So in 1470,
there is a rebellion against Edward IV.
The Earl of Warwick is fermenting
lots and lots of problems.
And a bunch of rebels are captured
on the South Coast.
And we're told that they are executed,
that they are hanged and then beheaded.
And actually, they're only impaled then after death.
So I don't know if this is a slightly more gentle version of impaling
because what John does, John is constable of England.
So the role of constable is to deliver law and order in England.
He's responsible for, I guess, the modern equivalent would be the head of the police.
He's in charge of the judiciary and all that kind of thing.
So on behalf of Edward VIII, he delivers this sentence of execution
and then has the corpses impaled.
So he has stakes placed into the ground and the torsosos have,
have steaks driven through them from the buttocks up through the neck, they're rammed down
onto the stake and then the decapitated head is placed on top of the spike as well.
And so this is all about the display of bodies again.
So these executions take place on the south coast, Southampton, I think.
And so they're not at London to put the heads on London Bridge to display them.
So I wonder whether this is a way of creating that public display of the remains when you don't
have London Bridge, which is the normal place.
that you would send these heads to be dealt with.
Maybe they're in too much of a hurry to do stuff like that.
Maybe there are people on the South Coast
who they think are still encouraged in this rebellion
and what they want to do is say,
this is your fate if you do it.
Not only will you be executed,
but your remains will be humiliated in front of everybody.
I find it hard to believe that John tipped off
didn't do this with the knowledge of Edward VIII,
so there is a sense that the king would have been aware
that John was going to impale all of these bodies.
John had, I mean, up to this point, this is a brutal episode in John's life, but up until this point, he has a fairly sparkling career. He's a learned man. He's been to Italy to learn all his letters. He's an incredibly well-traveled man. And has maybe heard the stories of what Vlad is doing contemporaneously in Wallachia and thought, do you know what? Sounds like it might work as a deterrent. Why don't we bring some of that over? It's the only example that I know of people being impaled in Medell.
England and it was done to them after they were already dead but nevertheless we
do have our very own John the Impaler.
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So we've talked about these punishments that are intended, as we've said, to quite literally eradicate individuals who've committed crimes against the state.
But there are punishments in the medieval world, in medieval England in particular, that are used to extract information during torture.
largely I suppose with the aim of not killing someone
but bringing them close enough to death
that they will give up their secrets
and one of these processes is The Rack
which I have to say for me
just conscious images of Monty Python
or maybe Alan Rickman in the Robin Hood film
what is happening with the Rack in reality
is this something that's used widely in the medieval world
or is this something that's bit rarer
and that's crept into our Hollywood portrayals of this period
I'm probably going to show my age here and say that the rack makes me think of carry-on Henry
when Charles Hawkins' character comes in about eight-foot tall because he's been racked.
That's probably just me showing my age.
Matt, you could play Henry the 8th, a young Henry the 8th.
You totally could.
That is the worst insult you could possibly give to a historian of Richard the 3rd.
Oh, fair enough.
Okay, sorry, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I look like a chuda.
To be fair, I've been told that before, and I always have to hang on to the hope that you mean Henry the 8th
when he was significantly younger than me.
I said younger.
I said younger.
Yeah, younger, definitely.
Sorry, let's get back to medieval torture.
That's fine. That was a medieval torture for me.
I'm joking.
There isn't wide evidence for the rack being frequently used in medieval England.
I think there's a perception that medieval justice was incredibly cruel.
And I know we've talked about some of its gory and most brutal elements so far.
But torture wasn't something that was widely used during the period.
There is a story that the rack in the Tower of London
became known as the Earl of Devon's daughter
because he would use it so much
but we can't actually find records of him ever using the rack in the tower.
It's not documented.
We know that when in the gunpowder plot in 1605
when Guy Fawkes is racked,
it requires special written permission from the king.
So James I first and sixth has to specifically write to say
I hereby authorise the use of torture
because it was illegal, really.
It wasn't the done thing.
So I don't think there is a resort to torture
quite as often as we think there might have been.
But racking, when it did happen, was fairly horrendous.
It did happen to Guy Fawkes,
and that's the reason that we see on his confession,
his signature is so almost illegible
because he's been tortured just so much.
And racking literally involves your four limbs
being tied to four corners of a contraption
that can then be slowly wound to stretch you further and further.
And I guess it begins being quite uncomfortable, quickly gets quite painful.
And you're talking here about your muscles being stretched,
your tendons and sinews being stretched to the point that they will break,
and then you're dislocating joints all over the body
and the kind of pain that would go with that.
And the idea would be that this would encourage you to give up your secrets.
There's a story of one Catholic priest in Elizabeth I, the first reign,
who is in the Tower of London
and they're torturing him
desperately trying to get him
to give up his Catholic allies
around the country.
He's chained to a wall
sort of suspended off the ground
for periods of time.
He's deprived of sleep.
He's not giving food and water and things.
And actually they decide
they're going to rack him
and they take him to the rack
and he kind of says,
what does he say?
He says he'll never give them up
any name but the name of Jesus
so they can rack him
to their heart's content kind of thing.
And they actually decide not to bother
they're racking him because they think it would be pointless.
Now, this guy has resisted everything else so far and given us nothing.
There is a danger now if we put him on the rack that he's just going to allow us to
kill him because he's clearly so resolute.
So at that point, they decide not to rack this priest because it has dangers involved in it.
So I think torture is actually fairly rarely used in the medieval world.
There are elements of medieval punishment that sound like they might be torture,
but they're actually just self-contained punishments for the crimes that you would
have committed. So blinding is quite often used as a form of punishment. It's widely used in the
Anglo-Saxon world and the kind of later medieval world as a way to deal with political enemies.
If you blinded someone, it hampered their capacity, for example, to be king. So heirs to the throne
would sometimes be blinded. And there are moments where that blinding causes infection or causes
too much damage or is done in a dangerous kind of way that ultimately leads to the death
of the person involved.
There is a case with Henry I,
where he kind of oversees an adjudication
between some political enemies,
and they're given hostages for each other.
So the one family give a son as hostage,
and the other family blind this son,
which they weren't entitled to do.
So the family go to Henry I first and say,
look, this wasn't part of the deal,
they've blinded our son.
So what Henry does is give the other family
two of the daughters,
and those daughters are blinded
and have their noses cut off,
in retribution. And those two daughters are granddaughters of Henry I first. He allows his own
granddaughters to be blinded and have their noses cut off. And this is kind of the medieval idea of
restorative justice, I guess, of the punishment fitting the crime, that you can't get away
with doing these kinds of things. And it sounds like torture, but it's kind of self-contained
punishments, really. So, yeah, I mean, that's a really long-winded way of saying that I think
racking was fairly uncommon in the medieval world and that lots of forms of torture. And that lots of
weren't kind of as commonplace as we might think they.
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I'm interested in what you said, Matt, as well, about the priest who they decide not to rack him
because there is a danger that he will allow them to go so far that he will die, that they will have
killed him.
And I suppose there's something there about torture is quite a dynamic scene, isn't it?
It's a bit of a sort of psychological struggle between the person being tortured and the person
doing the torture.
in terms of the outcome of the torture that did happen,
was there a belief in the legitimacy of information
that could be extracted from people who had been tortured?
Or was there a hesitation when it came to believing the things that people would say
if, for example, they were put on the rack
or whatever the torture was that they were subjected to?
I think there's an element of both of those things.
So I think today we would absolutely not accept a confession that's extradct.
under torture, we would deem that to be utterly unreliable. In the medieval world, I think in lots
of these cases, particularly where we might be talking about treasonous things, there is a belief
that if you know the person is guilty, there's perhaps that not that requirement for due
process of the law to be undertaken. If you believe that person is guilty, then extracting a
confession justifies torture because you need them to admit their crime so that they can be punished
for it. There is also the element of if there is a wider conspiracy, there is a time
pressure to finding out who else is involved in this conspiracy. Again, if we think about the
gunpowder plot a little bit, the government would have been incredibly tense and nervous about
who else was involved and how far this had spread. So what they wanted from Guy Fawkes was a list
of names of other people that were involved. And I think to them that would justify the resort
to torture in those instances. And I don't think they had the same kind of concern that
something extracted under torture was invalid. But I do think they had an understanding that
that torture was designed to make you confess,
whether you've done something or not.
You inflict so much pain that someone will say what you want them to say.
That is inherently unreliable.
And I think that's why people don't resort to torture
as often as we perhaps think they do.
They did have this understanding
that information isn't going to be reliable,
that it was legitimate as an ultimate step,
as a final step if you couldn't achieve
what you needed to in any other way,
or if there was some kind of time constraint
that meant you needed to find out the information
that that person had.
And again, maybe Hollywood gives us this idea that medieval people kind of relished in torture,
that they wanted to torture people.
I don't think that's true at all.
We don't see much evidence.
They were certainly gruesome in the ways that they executed people who'd been found guilty of crimes.
That was all about the display and being as gory and gruesome as possible.
But I don't think they relished inflicting physical torture.
I mean, to some extent, you go back to the religious mind of the medieval church,
it was a crime to inflict injuries on fellow Christians.
So routinely torturing and harming and killing innocent people
wasn't a great place for you to be in, to be doing those things.
So there are reasons to think they were cautious about the use of torture
and relying on information that was gathered under torture.
But I think we today go a lot further than they probably did.
I think they would have felt that there was a point at which torture was justified.
I really like this distinction.
I think it's really helpful, and I've never thought about it this way before,
the distinction between torture and punishment.
I think that's a really nice distinction.
If you're taking one thing away from this conversation,
that would be something to take away.
Another thing I'd like to get your insight on
is we've talked a little bit about execution
in hanging, drawing, and quartering.
But I'd like to know what you find
the relationship between execution, torture, and punishment is then,
bringing those three elements together,
how they sit side by side.
And is there a kind of gradation from one to the other
or do they operate quite separately?
I think they're all part of the same arsenal of weapons
that are in the government's locker to deal with criminals.
And perhaps there's a sense in which they did have an idea
that the punishment ought to fit the crime far more.
I mean, I'm wary of sounding like I approve of medieval methods of execution
because I absolutely don't.
But we do seem to have this idea now where for a crime that's committed today,
the punishment is prison.
there's very little else that is available to deal with that.
And the medieval world seemed to have a much wider array of things.
If you do a certain thing, it will lead to this kind of thing.
Again, Henry I, when he found out that lots of people were debasing his coinery,
so making the coins valued less silver content than they should have had,
he had the hands chopped off all of his coin makers.
Seemingly, whether he felt they were guilty or not,
He just had all of their hands cut off.
So, you know, if you use your hands to inflict harm on me, I'll take your hands away.
And I think there was an element there of the medieval world feeling like the punishment ought to fit the crime,
or it was somehow more justified if it was a punishment that was in line with the kind of crime that had been committed.
But there is definitely a point at which it reaches cruelty.
And a hanged drawn and quartering, flaying was a way that people used to kill people.
when Richard I first is shot with a crossbow arrow
that turns gangreness and eventually kills him,
his men go and find the lad that shot him with a crossbow bolt
and they flay him alive, they peel his skin off him while he's still alive.
And that is just about cruelty and retribution
and making the death, you know, they could have just cut his throat,
but they didn't.
They chose to make it as painful as they possibly could for him
as a form of retribution.
So I think they would probably have seen it as quite well categorised.
there are punishments, there are forms of torture, and there are gruesome forms of execution.
And I think maybe we don't see it in quite that kind of categorised way.
We see it in a much more grey kind of medieval people liked being violent and hurting other people
far more than we do because we have a view of them as being slightly barbaric and maybe a
little bit backward, which is unfair.
Being medieval is quite often still used as a pejorative term today.
I've seen it in the news in recent times.
People will say, you know, this is such a medieval way to behave.
behave. And that's because we think these people were somehow more cruel and more backward than we were when actually they just lived in a different world that had different values and everything else than we do today. So I don't know if that's answered your question, Anthony. I've kind of waffled on a little bit round it probably. No, it has because the point I was trying to get to was this idea that medieval people were notoriously violent and that they surrounded themselves with violence by default. And actually what you're saying is it's far more nuanced than that.
And it's possibly the more extreme versions that we have been left with that makes a lasting
impact that makes us think it was far more prevalent than it was.
I mean, I would have thought that torture was far more prevalent in the Middle Ages than you're
saying it is.
So that's a real new nugget of information for me as well.
But here's the final question before we wrap up.
You have both Maddie and Matt done something absolutely awful.
And it is 11, no, let's go 30 and 49.
you've done something absolutely horrendously bad
it's been against the law
the king is implicated
things are not good
you have to choose
from crushing the rack
impaling
or being hanged drawn and quartered
which are you going to choose
as your form of punishment
not that you would get the choice
but I'm giving you the choice now
because I'm kind
you're so generous Anthony
I think for me
it would be hanging
drawing and quartering
with the hope
I'd probably do a guy forks
and have to leap to my death
with the hope that
you wouldn't make it to the quartering process.
I mean, none are a good choice, I have to say.
None are great.
Matt, what are you choosing?
Yeah, which is the lesser of these many, many evils.
If I thought I was going to die from the impaling, from the spike going in,
I might go for that.
Hanging, drawing and quartering, I guess, would be the next option
because there is at least an end to it.
You will endure this process, but it's only going to be 10, 15, 20 minutes,
and then it will be done.
At some point, it will be ended.
The worry, I guess, if you're impaled is that you,
could be there for days and days in absolute agony going through it. If I had to choose,
it might be that one. Yeah, no, I mean, hang me, draw me and quarter me. I am not getting impaled,
not sticking around. And I would also say that if Maddie was a noble woman in 1349, she couldn't
be executed. Oh, well, I can commit whatever a crime I want then. Do you know, I often think about,
I mean, often, this is my Roman Empire. How often do you think about this every other day?
I often think about Margaret Clitherow, who is crushed, I think in the 16th century in York on
on the Ouse Bridge.
And I think she's crushed under the weight of her own door.
I mean, it's insulting.
Wait, why is it insulting?
Why is the door insulting?
I feel it's insulting for someone to use her own front door to crush her.
I just...
They put the rocks on top of the door, though.
No, I mean, crushing is an interesting thing
because it was quite often used as a way to extract a plea from someone.
If you went to court, you would be asked to plead guilty or innocent.
If you refuse to enter a plea, which people were quite often,
do on the basis that if you don't enter a plea, your goods can't be seized from you. So if you
enter a plea of guilty or not guilty, and then you're found guilty, all of your goods can be seized
and your family would lose everything. If you don't enter a plea, your goods simply can't be seized,
even if you're then executed. So you're protecting your family by not doing that. And so
crushing was kind of used as a way to force people. This was probably more of a torture as a way
to force people to enter a plea. So they would be, they would have stones placed on top of them
gradually heavier and heavier and heavier
causing them pain until they did die
or they eventually entered a plea
and I guess the question is can you hold out
from this pain long enough to protect your family
kind of a pretty brutal position to be in
when Charles I was bought before the court
of the Commonwealth he refuses to enter a plea
because he doesn't recognise the authority of the court before him
and they toy with the idea of crushing him
but then they decide it's too much of a dangerous spectacle
to crush the king
and potentially have him die that way,
not having answered the charges that are placed before him.
So they seriously think about doing this to a king,
but they decide it's a bad way to deal with that process.
But Charles understands the law well enough
to know that if he doesn't enter a plea,
he can't be found guilty in the court eventually.
And it comes back to that weighing up of the spectacle
and the punishment,
and it has to serve both purposes, I guess.
I think that's probably a good place to leave it today.
and I'm sure listeners will be now thinking of ways in which they would prefer to die in the medieval world.
Thank you very much for listening, everyone.
And you can catch Matt's podcast Gone Medieval, wherever you get your podcasts.
It's part of the History Hit Network.
Please leave us a review, follow us along, and we will see you next time.
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