Inventor of 'the most painful torture device' was the first victim of it (2 Viewers)

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Cold Ethyl

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Inventor of 'the most painful torture device' was the first victim of it

However, there's absolutely nobody disputing that one of the most awful fates that could befall a person was to be locked inside the Brazen Bull, and ancient device used to torture and execute people.


Created in the 6th century BC by a Greek inventor, the torture device was a hollow sculpture of a bull made out of bronze with a trapdoor fitted into it and a set of pipes near the mouth.

The idea behind it was that a person would be locked inside the Brazen Bull and have a fire lit beneath them, cooking them alive while the pipes transformed the sound of their agonising screams into bellowing bull noises.

The supposed creator of this awful torture device was a man named Perilaus of Athens (or Perillus), who built the thing and presented it to Phalaris, the tyrant of the Sicilian state of Akragas.

Phalaris was an absolutely awful person who was renowned for his appalling cruelty. It is even claimed that he was a cannibal who ate newborn babies, so he was either one of the most evil people in history or he really angered some people enough
for them to say he ate children.

Despite his renowned cruelty, Phalaris may not actually have asked for the Brazen Bull as some accounts say that rather than being commissioned to make it, Perilaus instead created the horrific contraption on his own volition and presented it to the tyrant in an attempt to get on his good side.

If you think the way to make friends with a guy is to invent the world's worst torture device for him then you might wonder if he's a friend worth having, but Perilaus didn't really consider that when he presented his gift to the tyrant.

Phalaris asked the inventor to get inside the bull and demonstrate how the person inside making noises would sound to everyone on the outside, but once Perilaus climbed inside to show how his invention worked he was locked inside and a fire was lit beneath him.

The Brazen Bull's inventor became its first victim, though he didn't die from it as after being cooked alive for a while, he was removed from the bull on the orders of Phalaris.


If the inventor was hoping that his ordeal was over then he was very much mistaken as the tyrant had him taken to the top of a hill and thrown off to his death.

As for the bull, it stayed with Phalaris and became the tyrant's new favourite toy and anyone he didn't like was thrown inside and cooked alive.

The tyrant supposedly enjoyed the spectacle of the bull rocking back and forth as someone was burned to death inside it along with the noises it made, and then he had the bones of his victims made into jewellery.

Being cooked alive inside the Brazen Bull would have been unimaginable agony, and a person would have spent up to 10 minutes experiencing the horror of being roasted alive before they died.

The tyrant's reign came to an end in 554 BC when he was overthrown and killed by being placed inside his beloved Brazen Bull.

That wasn't the end of this awful torture device, as historical records note that the Carthaginians nabbed a Brazen Bull from Agrigentum, the Roman city built atop the ruins of Akragis, while the Romans later nabbed it back.


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Necroplant

Female Butt Inspector
I hope Phalaris didn't pay gold upfront, that way he could save money after murdering the inventor.
 

Qtek2020

Luv inside of the human body
Inventor of 'the most painful torture device' was the first victim of it

However, there's absolutely nobody disputing that one of the most awful fates that could befall a person was to be locked inside the Brazen Bull, and ancient device used to torture and execute people.


Created in the 6th century BC by a Greek inventor, the torture device was a hollow sculpture of a bull made out of bronze with a trapdoor fitted into it and a set of pipes near the mouth.

The idea behind it was that a person would be locked inside the Brazen Bull and have a fire lit beneath them, cooking them alive while the pipes transformed the sound of their agonising screams into bellowing bull noises.

The supposed creator of this awful torture device was a man named Perilaus of Athens (or Perillus), who built the thing and presented it to Phalaris, the tyrant of the Sicilian state of Akragas.

Phalaris was an absolutely awful person who was renowned for his appalling cruelty. It is even claimed that he was a cannibal who ate newborn babies, so he was either one of the most evil people in history or he really angered some people enough
for them to say he ate children.

Despite his renowned cruelty, Phalaris may not actually have asked for the Brazen Bull as some accounts say that rather than being commissioned to make it, Perilaus instead created the horrific contraption on his own volition and presented it to the tyrant in an attempt to get on his good side.

If you think the way to make friends with a guy is to invent the world's worst torture device for him then you might wonder if he's a friend worth having, but Perilaus didn't really consider that when he presented his gift to the tyrant.

Phalaris asked the inventor to get inside the bull and demonstrate how the person inside making noises would sound to everyone on the outside, but once Perilaus climbed inside to show how his invention worked he was locked inside and a fire was lit beneath him.

The Brazen Bull's inventor became its first victim, though he didn't die from it as after being cooked alive for a while, he was removed from the bull on the orders of Phalaris.


If the inventor was hoping that his ordeal was over then he was very much mistaken as the tyrant had him taken to the top of a hill and thrown off to his death.

As for the bull, it stayed with Phalaris and became the tyrant's new favourite toy and anyone he didn't like was thrown inside and cooked alive.

The tyrant supposedly enjoyed the spectacle of the bull rocking back and forth as someone was burned to death inside it along with the noises it made, and then he had the bones of his victims made into jewellery.

Being cooked alive inside the Brazen Bull would have been unimaginable agony, and a person would have spent up to 10 minutes experiencing the horror of being roasted alive before they died.

The tyrant's reign came to an end in 554 BC when he was overthrown and killed by being placed inside his beloved Brazen Bull.

That wasn't the end of this awful torture device, as historical records note that the Carthaginians nabbed a Brazen Bull from Agrigentum, the Roman city built atop the ruins of Akragis, while the Romans later nabbed it back.

As for the bull, it stayed with Phalaris and became the tyrant's new favourite toy and anyone he didn't like was thrown inside and cooked alive.

The tyrant supposedly enjoyed the spectacle of the bull rocking back and forth as someone was burned to death inside it along with the noises it made, and then he had the bones of his victims made into jewellery.

Being cooked alive inside the Brazen Bull would have been unimaginable agony, and a person would have spent up to 10 minutes experiencing the horror of being roasted alive before they died.


The tyrant's reign came to an end in 554 BC when he was overthrown and killed by being placed inside his beloved Brazen Bull.

That wasn't the end of this awful torture device, as historical records note that the Carthaginians nabbed a Brazen Bull from Agrigentum, the Roman city built atop the ruins of Akragis, while the Romans later nabbed it back.

View attachment 666897
I build something like that when I was living in Argentina exactly the same material and the pipes to cook a piggy and one day me and my friends we put one military asshole inside and we cooked for the pigs. The sound is just like the description. But we laughed cos he deserved.
 

lilifrst

❤️ Proud Future Corpse ⚰️ 💋
This user was banned
Inventor of 'the most painful torture device' was the first victim of it

However, there's absolutely nobody disputing that one of the most awful fates that could befall a person was to be locked inside the Brazen Bull, and ancient device used to torture and execute people.


Created in the 6th century BC by a Greek inventor, the torture device was a hollow sculpture of a bull made out of bronze with a trapdoor fitted into it and a set of pipes near the mouth.

The idea behind it was that a person would be locked inside the Brazen Bull and have a fire lit beneath them, cooking them alive while the pipes transformed the sound of their agonising screams into bellowing bull noises.

The supposed creator of this awful torture device was a man named Perilaus of Athens (or Perillus), who built the thing and presented it to Phalaris, the tyrant of the Sicilian state of Akragas.

Phalaris was an absolutely awful person who was renowned for his appalling cruelty. It is even claimed that he was a cannibal who ate newborn babies, so he was either one of the most evil people in history or he really angered some people enough
for them to say he ate children.

Despite his renowned cruelty, Phalaris may not actually have asked for the Brazen Bull as some accounts say that rather than being commissioned to make it, Perilaus instead created the horrific contraption on his own volition and presented it to the tyrant in an attempt to get on his good side.

If you think the way to make friends with a guy is to invent the world's worst torture device for him then you might wonder if he's a friend worth having, but Perilaus didn't really consider that when he presented his gift to the tyrant.

Phalaris asked the inventor to get inside the bull and demonstrate how the person inside making noises would sound to everyone on the outside, but once Perilaus climbed inside to show how his invention worked he was locked inside and a fire was lit beneath him.

The Brazen Bull's inventor became its first victim, though he didn't die from it as after being cooked alive for a while, he was removed from the bull on the orders of Phalaris.


If the inventor was hoping that his ordeal was over then he was very much mistaken as the tyrant had him taken to the top of a hill and thrown off to his death.

As for the bull, it stayed with Phalaris and became the tyrant's new favourite toy and anyone he didn't like was thrown inside and cooked alive.

The tyrant supposedly enjoyed the spectacle of the bull rocking back and forth as someone was burned to death inside it along with the noises it made, and then he had the bones of his victims made into jewellery.

Being cooked alive inside the Brazen Bull would have been unimaginable agony, and a person would have spent up to 10 minutes experiencing the horror of being roasted alive before they died.

The tyrant's reign came to an end in 554 BC when he was overthrown and killed by being placed inside his beloved Brazen Bull.

That wasn't the end of this awful torture device, as historical records note that the Carthaginians nabbed a Brazen Bull from Agrigentum, the Roman city built atop the ruins of Akragis, while the Romans later nabbed it back.


View attachment 666897
Now that's some bullshit!
 

Gurgled_Sliced_Throat

Take no prisoner
This user was banned
I think Paris's medieval torture, the Pear of Anguish would be great for sexual predators. Even most of the time it was used vaginal as a punishment to miscarriages and adulterers. But it would be good to pry open a sexual predator's asshole, and pour hot liquids lol.

Scold's Bridle was another good used to stop people from gossiping and slander.
People think they have it bad now living in this day and age, how do you think the people from the middle ages felt.
 

Snoopyranger

Always sticking my beak in!
Inventor of 'the most painful torture device' was the first victim of it

However, there's absolutely nobody disputing that one of the most awful fates that could befall a person was to be locked inside the Brazen Bull, and ancient device used to torture and execute people.


Created in the 6th century BC by a Greek inventor, the torture device was a hollow sculpture of a bull made out of bronze with a trapdoor fitted into it and a set of pipes near the mouth.

The idea behind it was that a person would be locked inside the Brazen Bull and have a fire lit beneath them, cooking them alive while the pipes transformed the sound of their agonising screams into bellowing bull noises.

The supposed creator of this awful torture device was a man named Perilaus of Athens (or Perillus), who built the thing and presented it to Phalaris, the tyrant of the Sicilian state of Akragas.

Phalaris was an absolutely awful person who was renowned for his appalling cruelty. It is even claimed that he was a cannibal who ate newborn babies, so he was either one of the most evil people in history or he really angered some people enough
for them to say he ate children.

Despite his renowned cruelty, Phalaris may not actually have asked for the Brazen Bull as some accounts say that rather than being commissioned to make it, Perilaus instead created the horrific contraption on his own volition and presented it to the tyrant in an attempt to get on his good side.

If you think the way to make friends with a guy is to invent the world's worst torture device for him then you might wonder if he's a friend worth having, but Perilaus didn't really consider that when he presented his gift to the tyrant.

Phalaris asked the inventor to get inside the bull and demonstrate how the person inside making noises would sound to everyone on the outside, but once Perilaus climbed inside to show how his invention worked he was locked inside and a fire was lit beneath him.

The Brazen Bull's inventor became its first victim, though he didn't die from it as after being cooked alive for a while, he was removed from the bull on the orders of Phalaris.


If the inventor was hoping that his ordeal was over then he was very much mistaken as the tyrant had him taken to the top of a hill and thrown off to his death.

As for the bull, it stayed with Phalaris and became the tyrant's new favourite toy and anyone he didn't like was thrown inside and cooked alive.

The tyrant supposedly enjoyed the spectacle of the bull rocking back and forth as someone was burned to death inside it along with the noises it made, and then he had the bones of his victims made into jewellery.

Being cooked alive inside the Brazen Bull would have been unimaginable agony, and a person would have spent up to 10 minutes experiencing the horror of being roasted alive before they died.

The tyrant's reign came to an end in 554 BC when he was overthrown and killed by being placed inside his beloved Brazen Bull.

That wasn't the end of this awful torture device, as historical records note that the Carthaginians nabbed a Brazen Bull from Agrigentum, the Roman city built atop the ruins of Akragis, while the Romans later nabbed it back.


View attachment 666897
 

Qtek2020

Luv inside of the human body
I build something like that when I was living in Argentina exactly the same material and the pipes to cook a piggy and one day me and my friends we put one military asshole inside and we cooked for the pigs. The sound is just like the description. But we laughed cos he deserved.
It's real. That chamber of torture is probably being used for milk. But that was my first murder, 15 years old. Then everything goes easy
 

Zeodus

Molecular thing
They were quite innovative back then with devices and methods of torture and death. They didn't have to deal with all the science behind it and 'precise' measurements like lethal injection. Just throw the fuck in the bull and roast him.

Now it's all trivial, how much it costs to execute a person yada ya. Plus now society is becoming more criminal friendly. Back then someone could be skinned alive and their skin put on display as reminder for those thinking of commiting the same crime, and it was a family event! Nowadays parents get butthurt about seemingly everything.
 

I Ripyourfaceoff

I'M "RIPPY", I'LL CALL YOU, DON'T HOLD YOUR BREATH
Inventor of 'the most painful torture device' was the first victim of it

However, there's absolutely nobody disputing that one of the most awful fates that could befall a person was to be locked inside the Brazen Bull, and ancient device used to torture and execute people.


Created in the 6th century BC by a Greek inventor, the torture device was a hollow sculpture of a bull made out of bronze with a trapdoor fitted into it and a set of pipes near the mouth.

The idea behind it was that a person would be locked inside the Brazen Bull and have a fire lit beneath them, cooking them alive while the pipes transformed the sound of their agonising screams into bellowing bull noises.

The supposed creator of this awful torture device was a man named Perilaus of Athens (or Perillus), who built the thing and presented it to Phalaris, the tyrant of the Sicilian state of Akragas.

Phalaris was an absolutely awful person who was renowned for his appalling cruelty. It is even claimed that he was a cannibal who ate newborn babies, so he was either one of the most evil people in history or he really angered some people enough
for them to say he ate children.

Despite his renowned cruelty, Phalaris may not actually have asked for the Brazen Bull as some accounts say that rather than being commissioned to make it, Perilaus instead created the horrific contraption on his own volition and presented it to the tyrant in an attempt to get on his good side.

If you think the way to make friends with a guy is to invent the world's worst torture device for him then you might wonder if he's a friend worth having, but Perilaus didn't really consider that when he presented his gift to the tyrant.

Phalaris asked the inventor to get inside the bull and demonstrate how the person inside making noises would sound to everyone on the outside, but once Perilaus climbed inside to show how his invention worked he was locked inside and a fire was lit beneath him.

The Brazen Bull's inventor became its first victim, though he didn't die from it as after being cooked alive for a while, he was removed from the bull on the orders of Phalaris.


If the inventor was hoping that his ordeal was over then he was very much mistaken as the tyrant had him taken to the top of a hill and thrown off to his death.

As for the bull, it stayed with Phalaris and became the tyrant's new favourite toy and anyone he didn't like was thrown inside and cooked alive.

The tyrant supposedly enjoyed the spectacle of the bull rocking back and forth as someone was burned to death inside it along with the noises it made, and then he had the bones of his victims made into jewellery.

Being cooked alive inside the Brazen Bull would have been unimaginable agony, and a person would have spent up to 10 minutes experiencing the horror of being roasted alive before they died.

The tyrant's reign came to an end in 554 BC when he was overthrown and killed by being placed inside his beloved Brazen Bull.

That wasn't the end of this awful torture device, as historical records note that the Carthaginians nabbed a Brazen Bull from Agrigentum, the Roman city built atop the ruins of Akragis, while the Romans later nabbed it back.


View attachment 666897
GREAT POST AS USUAL, ETHYL ............ I ENJOYED THE BACKGROUND STORY ............ THANKS !
 

new user

Rookie
There are accounts that it was never used. Some say it was others say it was a myth and then others are not sure one way or the other.

As for the pear of anguish.

Existing examples of the so-called pear of anguish contain coiled springs, which suggests the people who crafted them lived during the early modern period that followed the Middle Ages. These examples have an unclear provenance, and there are questions about how functional they actually would have been as orifice-widening torture devices.
 

Chief Queef

Last of the Mohicans
I can think of way worse and far prolonged methods found throughout history. Though the concept of the bull, especially the mournful screams of the dead being orchestrated, is just wicked twisted...
 
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