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Encyclopedia > Breaking on the Wheel

The breaking wheel (originally, the whele) was a torture and capital punishment device of the Middle Ages and early modern times.


The wheel itself was similar to a large wooden wagon wheel, with many radial spokes. The victim's arms and legs were placed one by one over two sturdy wooden beams. A large hammer was then applied to the limb over the gap between the beams, breaking the bone. This process was repeated several times per limb.


Afterwards, the victim's shattered limbs were woven through the spokes of the wheel. The wheel was then hoisted onto a tall pole, so that birds could eat the still-living victim.


Legend has it that Saint Catherine of Alexandria was to be executed on one of these devices, which thereafter became known as Catherine wheels.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Breaking Wheel (592 words)
Breaking on the wheel was a form of torturous execution formerly in use, especially in France —where it is said to have been first used— and Germany.
As execution by breaking on the wheel was reserved in France, and some other countries, for crimes of peculiar atrocity, roué came by a natural process to be understood to mean a man morally worse than a pendard or gallows-bird, who only deserved hanging for common crimes.
The Finnish word for the breaking wheel is ''teiliratas'' and the verb for execution on the wheel is ''teilata''; in Modern Finnish the word ''teilata'' refers to forceful and violent critique or rejection of performance, ideas or innovations.
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