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Denailing

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Denailing—the forcible extraction of the fingernails or toenails—was a favorite method of medieval torture that retains its popularity in the 21st century. It is both efficient and extremely effective as a form of torture and, in modern use, causes limited physical injury: while brute-force tearing out can and does damage the cuticles, surgical extraction without anesthesia does not.[citation needed]

In its simplest form, the torture is conducted by spread-eagling the prisoner to a tabletop—securing the hands by chains around the wrists and the bare feet by chains around the ankles—and using a metal forceps or pliers—often heated red-hot—to individually grasp each nail in turn and slowly pry it from the nail bed before tearing it off the finger or toe. A crueler variant used in medieval Spain was performed by introducing a sharp wedge of wood or metal between the flesh and each nail and slowly hammering the wedge under the nail until it was torn free.[citation needed]

Another cruel variant involved using rough skewers of wood or bone dipped in boiling sulfur. A number of such skewers were slowly driven into the flesh under the prisoner's toenails. Alternately, the skewer was dipped in boiling oil, which served a dual purpose of both burning the incredibly sensitive flesh and lubricating the needle so that the torturer could freely explore a wide surface area beneath the toenail. When enough skewers had been driven home to pry each nail loose from its bed, the nail was torn out at the root with a pair of pliers. It is also recorded that, in more recent times—particularly, during the Armenian genocide of the 1910s—phonograph needles were driven under fingernails to torture the prisoner before his nails were torn out with pliers.[citation needed]

The Iranian SAVAK—the shah's secret police—developed a crude denailing machine.[1] The device fundamentally resembles an iron straightedge with an extremely sharp, slightly angled, prong. Starting at the base of the finger or toe, the device is forcibly propelled forward in one swift motion that cuts through the nail near the cuticle—thereby digging into the incredibly sensitive nail bed and so gripping the nail—and then tears the nail free. The dragging of the prong along the entire length of the nail bed is indescribably painful but does not last very long, somewhat defeating the purpose of the torture.

References

M. Donnelly and D. Diehl, The Big Book of Pain (Scroud, Gloucestershire, U.K.: The History Press, 2011).

Fingernail Torture Device, Ten Most Terrifying Torture Devices of the 20th Century, http://www.environmentalgraffiti.com/news-10-most-terrifying-torture-devices-20th-century?image=1

Notes

Citations
  1. ^ "Iranian denailing torture device". Retrieved 26 August 2012.

See also