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The Brutal Torture Devices Used on Women by the Spanish Inquisition

The Brutal Torture Devices Used on Women by the Spanish Inquisition

Under the shadow of the Spanish Inquisition, being  a woman accused of heresy, witchcraft, or even immodesty could mean a fate more terrifying than  death itself. The charge alone—often whispered by a neighbor or priest—was enough to condemn her.  No evidence was needed. No defense was heard. Known as La Suprema, the Inquisition  operated with a ruthless efficiency.

Though originally established in 1478 by Catholic  Monarchs Ferdinand II of Aragon and Isabella I of Castile to root out religious dissent,  it quickly expanded its authority. Women, particularly those who deviated from  societal norms—healers, midwives, widows, and even outspoken wives—were  disproportionately vulnerable.

Many were accused of brujería—witchcraft—or  of conspiring with the Devil. Once named in an edito de fe—a public notice  of accusations—the accused woman was dragged from her home, shackled, and confined to  dark, damp prison cells. She would wait for days or weeks, denied all knowledge  of her charges.

 Fear itself was a form of torment. The inquisitors were not bound  by mercy—they sought confession, not truth. Torture was not merely permitted. It  was institutionalized. Pope Innocent IV had sanctioned its use as early  as 1252, and under the Inquisition, it became a cold tool of control. The  aim was never justice—it was submission.

To be a woman in the hands of the  Inquisition was to be rendered voiceless. Her body became the battlefield, her silence  an admission, and her scream—an inevitability. Strappado: Dislocated Without a Drop of Blood. It was silent in the chamber—but  not still. Somewhere above, rope creaked as it slid through  a pulley.

 This was the Strappado, a device deceptively simple in appearance.  A single rope, a hook, and a ceiling beam. No blades. No flames. And yet, among the most  feared instruments of the Spanish Inquisition. Accused women were brought before this device  not for execution, but for confession. Once sentenced to torture, they were led into  the chamber, their wrists bound tightly behind their back. The rope was then looped  through the ceiling and attached to their arms.

With a nod from the inquisitor, the executioner  hoisted them into the air—by their arms alone. The shoulders bore the full weight,  often leading to severe joint damage and lasting physical consequences.  There was no blood. No visible wound. What made the Strappado especially cruel was  its illusion of mercy.

 In the records of the Inquisition, this method was classified as a  “moderate” form of persuasion. They argued it left no scars. But the reality was different.  Muscles tore. Nerves suffered lasting damage. Arms could be rendered permanently useless.  Sometimes, the torture was made worse by sudden drops—lowering the victim slightly before jerking  her back up, heightening the internal trauma.

Women who cried out were not believed. Those who  refused to speak were lifted again. And again. There are no exact numbers for how many  women endured the Strappado during the centuries of the Inquisition. Many records  were lost—or perhaps never written. What survives are the testimonies of a few  and the silent echoes of many more.

Inquisition chambers across Spain and its  colonies were equipped with these devices, their use spanning from the late  15th century well into the 18th. In the eyes of the Inquisition, this  was not punishment. It was purification. But for the women accused—many of whom were never  proven guilty—it was a descent into suffering, inflicted not by mobs or soldiers, but by a  system that believed pain could lead to salvation.

The Iron Spider: Agony Forged in Fire. Its shape was unmistakable—long, curved metal arms  ending in cruel hooks, forged not for restraint, but for destruction. The device was known as  the Iron Spider, and its very name whispered terror into the hearts of women accused  by the Spanish Inquisition.

 Designed specifically for female victims, it was an  implement of pain masked as interrogation. The Iron Spider was typically fastened to  a stone wall in a cold, echoing chamber. Victims were brought forward—bound, accused,  and often already weakened by hunger, fear, or prior ordeals.

 Historical accounts suggest  that inquisitors favored areas of the body that would cause lasting humiliation  or disablement. The metal prongs, often heated in fire beforehand, were positioned  against exposed area. The purpose was not to extract truth through logic, but to coerce  confessions through unbearable distress. Though records are sparse—often  intentionally destroyed or left vague—the Iron Spider was reportedly used  against women accused of heresy, adultery, or of having relations deemed  impure by religious authorities.

Unlike more publicly visible forms of torture, the Iron Spider left scars that were not just  physical, but deeply psychological. Survivors, if any, lived with mutilation that served as a  permanent marker of their humiliation. And yet, these women were never truly “tried” in the legal  sense.

 Inquisitorial courts operated in secrecy, and guilt was often assumed the  moment an accusation was made. Perhaps the most harrowing aspect of this device  was how deliberately it was tailored to women. The Inquisition, while publicly committed to “saving  souls,” often targeted the female body as both a symbol of temptation and a site of control.

  Devices like the Iron Spider weren’t random tools—they were calculated, ritualized acts of  domination, executed under the guise of piety. The Rack: Stretching Truth from the Accused. Iron chains clattered as a woman’s wrists and  ankles were fastened to opposite ends of a wooden frame.

 Known historically as la tortura del  potro—“the torture of the colt”—this device was simple in design but excruciating in function. The  woman was not yet guilty in the eyes of the law. She had only been accused—perhaps of witchcraft,  heresy, or consorting with the devil. And yet, her body was about to become the battleground for  a confession she may never have wanted to give. The rack, as it was known in later  English, consisted of a rectangular wooden frame with rollers at either end.

  Ropes were attached to the victim’s wrists and ankles. As interrogators turned the  rollers—sometimes slowly, sometimes with sudden violence—the ropes would tighten,  pulling the limbs in opposite directions. The pain was relentless—not meant  to kill, but to crush the spirit. This method was used under the  authority of the Spanish Inquisition, known formally as the Tribunal del  Santo Oficio de la Inquisición.

 Though the Inquisition publicly emphasized  spiritual correction over cruelty, documents from the period, including procesos  inquisitoriales (inquisitorial trial records), reveal its systematic reliance on “moderate  torture” to extract confessions—especially from women.

 Many accused heretics were illiterate  or unfamiliar with Latin, the language in which their charges were read. Under such conditions,  the rack became not just an instrument of pain, but a means of forced submission to both  religious and institutional authority. Women were especially vulnerable. Accusations  of sorcery or moral transgression—often based on hearsay or local suspicion—could be  enough to justify interrogation under extreme conditions.

 Once strapped  to the rack, the accused was asked questions repeatedly. If she denied guilt,  the rollers turned further. If she confessed, it was often because her body could bear  no more. Some chroniclers recorded that confessions were followed by absolution and  penance. Others were burned at the stake. The rack left no visible blood, but it dismantled  lives.

 For the Inquisition, the rack was a silent partner in its mission of control—forcing  the truth not by reason, but by rupture. The Pear of Anguish: A Tool of Silent Terror. She sat in silence, her fate sealed behind the  thick stone walls of an inquisitorial chamber. There were no crowds, no formal court—only  the dim light of a torch and the presence of a device known in later centuries as the “Pear of  Anguish.

” Though its exact origin remains debated, this metal instrument is cited in  several post-Inquisition accounts and later torture catalogues. Shaped like a pear  and divided into segmented “petals,” the device was used in inquisitorial settings to punish  individuals accused of various transgressions. Depending on the nature of the accusation,  it was inserted into a bodily orifice and then expanded by turning a screw—causing  intense internal pain without visible injury.

The device, made of iron, was not designed  to kill outright. It did not cause external bleeding, and the pain it inflicted was  internal. When inserted into the mouth, it was often used on those accused of “blasphemy”  or spreading heretical speech. For women, however, its use was most commonly linked to accusations  of moral transgression, occult practices, or associations deemed spiritually corrupt.

 Its  use—whether historically confirmed in full by contemporary Spanish Inquisition records  or inferred from later legal and punitive manuals—reflected a disturbing intersection  of control, shame, and bodily violation. While not mentioned explicitly in the core  trial logs of the Tribunal del Santo Oficio, its categorization among instruments of  ecclesiastical torture in post-Inquisition collections suggests it belonged to the  broader punitive culture shaped by that era. The Inquisition maintained that torture was  to be applied without effusion of blood. Devices

like the pear, then, met the criteria—inflicting  extreme pain, yet leaving no open wounds. Its psychological effect was as severe as its  physical one. The act of forced insertion was an assertion of dominance, especially in  a system where moral “purity” was policed through ritualized suffering.

 It weaponized  the body’s own openings—its most vulnerable passages—to punish women not only for what they  did, but for what others claimed they represented. The Judgement Chair: Spikes for the Accused. Known in later texts as the Judgement Chair, or  sometimes the Interrogation Chair, this device was forged entirely from iron or thick hardwood  and covered with hundreds—sometimes thousands—of sharp metal spikes.

 These protrusions  were deliberately positioned on the seat, backrest, armrests, leg supports, and even  the footrest. Once seated, the accused—often a woman charged with witchcraft, heresy, or moral  transgression—would be strapped tightly in place. Historical models of the torture chair  appear throughout early modern Europe, but Inquisition-aligned jurisdictions  preserved its symbolism with special precision. The victim was forced to remain  motionless.

 Iron bindings at the wrists, ankles, neck, and waist ensured that any  attempt to shift weight—to escape even slightly—would press her skin further  into the spikes. In some instances, the chair was heated from below with  coals, turning pain into searing torture. The Spanish Inquisition did not always list  specific devices by name in its official archives.

However, accounts from regions under inquisitorial  influence—particularly in Aragon, Castile, and the Kingdom of Naples—reveal the use  of silla de interrogar (interrogation chair) as a method of pre-judicial  coercion. It was intended not to kill, but to extract information, force confession,  or soften the will before further questioning.

Once strapped into the Judgement Chair, the accused was asked to confess. Refusal  meant hours—sometimes days—of restrained agony. The Judgement Chair did not declare guilt.  It merely made resistance unbearable. In the eyes of the inquisitors,  that was often more than enough. The Spanish Inquisition weaponized fear, faith,  and flesh to enforce obedience—not only through execution, but through instruments that  redefined the limits of human suffering.

How did religious courts justify torment  in the name of salvation? Comment below. As Johann Weyer, a 16th-century physician  who opposed witch trials, warned: “The cruelty of these men is not less than  that of the tormentors of the martyrs.”