Penis Pillory

Penis Pillory




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Penis Pillory
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Pillory punishment Stock Photos and Images (654) See pillory punishment stock video clips
RM D98ATP – Titus Oates (1649-1705) in the pillory as a punishment for perjury (1685). Oates was the inventor of the Popish Plot, a supposed Roman Catholic conspiracy to kill Charles II. On his false evidence up to 15 people were executed and many other imprisoned under suspicion. Engraving.
RM CY4CF0 – Pillory of public punishment. Middle Ages. Muro de Aguas. La Rioja. Spain.
RM M018MG – The pillory, a wooden or metal framework erected on a post, with holes for securing the head and hands which was used for punishment by public humiliation. From Ward and Lock's Illustrated History of the World, published c.1882.
RM FB6GX3 – Punishment in the Middle Ages. Pillory and, first, The stones of the city, used to punish adulterous women. The they wore around their necks and were forced to walk around the Main Square. Medieval Museum. Stockholm. Sweden.
RM 2JB7TNK – Vintage illustration of Men punished for a crime in a pillory, China, 19th Century
RM T95456 – German postcard depicting medieval punishment for drunkeness or debauchery. A Drunkard's cloak was a type of pillory used in various jurisdictions to punish miscreants. The drunkard's cloak was actually a barrel, into the top of which a hole was made for the head to pass through. Two smaller holes in the sides were cut for the arms. Once suitably attired, the miscreant was paraded through the town, effectively pilloried.
RF 2GBJGHM – Drawing depicts the use of the pillory in the North American colonies. From an 1888 drawing, a pillory designed to hold two individuals for likely public abuse. The shorter person on the left needs a stand to fit.
RM RJN30F – Illustration showing a baker who has given short measure (cheated), dragged to a pillory for public punishment. England 15th century
RM TR9Y4H – Punishment of a Zotenreißer at the pillory: 'Punishment because of UnflΓ€terei'. , Ad. J. (postcard, ca. 1920)
RM FF78EC – COLONIAL PILLORY. /nThe Pillory as used for punishment in colonial America: wood engraving.
RM GFDPK8 – Woman tied to the pillory and man with gauntlet. Detail of the GDR-time relief dedicated to medieval city history at the Altmarkt (Old Market Square) in Dresden, Saxony, Germany. The Altmarkt used to be a place for punishment in the Middle Ages.
RM WWANDG – PUNISHMENTS & INSTRUMENTS OF TORTURE FROM THE PAST - A man in a pillory. This form of humiliation was reserved for prisoners who would generally not be liable to execution (e.g. debtors) and would see them exposed to public view in a market or other public place and could be used for punishment by birch, cane or whip or for the cutting off of hair or a body part (e.g. ear|)
RM A8FDK9 – Offender punished by standing in the pillory in a Puritan seaport town 1600s. Hand-colored woodcut
RM ME0085 – A Drunkard's cloak, a type of pillory used to punish miscreants. Drunkards were made to wear a barrel which had openings cut in the sides, top and bottom for their arms, head and legs, they were then paraded through the streets as punishment. From Old England: A Pictorial Museum, published 1847.
RF FY2RBJ – CHINA. Punishment Tcha, Cangue (pillory, stocks) . ALEXANDER , old print 1814
RM DB7BCH – French Revolution 1789 - 1799, Jacobins at pillory, 1794, wood engraving, 19th century, punishment, punishments, justice, disgrace, disgraced, France, politics, policy, 18th century, historic, historical, people, Additional-Rights-Clearences-Not Available
RM BT6HG3 – A pillory in Paris in the 18th century.
RM JWHX8B – United Kingdom. England. Somerset. Old preserved wooden stocks in Creech Saint Michael churchyard.
RM F1M0AA – The Pillory - A medieval Custom - was a device made of a wooden or metal framework erected on a post, with holes for securing the head and hands, used for punishment by public humiliation.
RM 2BJA26T – Prisoners including Prisoner Wearing a Cangue or Tcha, a Form of Neck Yoke or Pillory Used as Punishment or Torture of Prisoners in Vietnam and Elsewhere in Southeast Asia c1890
RM ADM1X1 – Colonial Williamsburg Virginia,Duke of Glouster Street,wood frame stocks pillory,boy boys male kids children punishment,arms,head,twins,VA060516090
RM C7H67P – pillory medieval physical punishment William lawyer author polemicist political figure Puritan
RM FF7206 – PURITANS: PILLORY, 17th CENT. /nThe use of the pillory to enforce Puritan morality in colonial New England: lithograph, 19th century.
RM T9545F – German postcard depicting medieval punishment quarrelsome women. The pillory was a device made of a wooden or metal framework erected on a post, with holes for securing the head and hands, formerly used for punishment by public humiliation and often further physical abuse. The pillory is related to the stocks. Ernest Nister (1841-1906) was a publisher and printer of movable books for children and paper ephemera such as greeting cards, post cards, and calendars.
RM BTXJ93 – A forestaller in the pillory, circa 1497; Black and White Illustration;
RM 2B00Y52 – China: Child taunting a prisoner in a cangue, late 19th century. A cangue was a device that was used for public humiliation and corporal punishment in China and some other parts of East Asia and Southeast Asia until the early years of the 20th century. It was somewhat similar to the pillory used for punishment in the West, except that the board of the cangue was not fixed to a base, and had to be carried around by the prisoner.
RM E5KEY4 – A Bermudian traffic warden stops to have fun with a female tourist who has been 'locked' in an old-time wooden pillory as faux punishment in Bermuda.
RM FF7NFT – COLONIAL PILLORY. /nThe Pillory as used for punishment in colonial America. Wood engraving, 19th century.
RM AKNNXT – A modern version of mediaeval stocks on display at Trim castle, county Meath, Ireland
RF 2HDHGMK – torture device, pillory, torture devices, pillories
RM G3BH7A – The Pillory and the statue of Charles I, Charing Cross, London, 18th century
RF J8C49N – hesse, punishment, pillory, jurisdiction, historical, stone, europe, iron,
RM BD8KMF – Punishment of the Pillory Illustration from John Cassell s Illustrated History of England W Kent 1857 1858
RM AWR5R2 – The Pillory, 1805, one of the costume sketches by Thomas Pyne, punishment in Georgian London, the mob rejoices
RF K8RJD8 – Pillory, pile-up, column of columns in Breslau, Pranger, Schandpfahl, StaupsΓ€ule in Breslau, Wroclaw, Poland, digital improved reproduction of a woodcut, published in the 19th century
RF 2CCCXHY – punishment in pillory, humiliation and punishment
RM JWHX3E – United Kingdom. England. Somerset. Old preserved wooden stocks in Creech Saint Michael churchyard.
RF 2BJA2B4 – Three Women or Female Vietnamese Prisoners Wearing a Cangue or Tcha, a Form of Neck Yoke or Pillory Used as Punishment or Torture of Prisoners in Vietnam and Elsewhere in Southeast Asia c1890
RM ADM1WE – Colonial Williamsburg Virginia,Duke of Glouster Street,wood frame stocks pillory,boy boys male kids children punishment,arms,head,VA060516089
RM C7H574 – pillory gateway London bridge treason heresy medieval physical punishment public humiliation criminal corporal crime law
RM RJNG9W – A woodcut engraving depicting a baker being dragged to the pillory on a sledge for giving a short measure. Around his neck is hangs one of his underweight loaves. Dated 15th century
RM T965A2 – A Drunkard's cloak was a type of pillory used in various jurisdictions to punish miscreants. The drunkard's cloak was actually a barrel, into the top of which a hole was made for the head to pass through. Two smaller holes in the sides were cut for the arms. Once suitably attired, the miscreant was paraded through the town, effectively pilloried. Drunkenness was first made a civil offense in England by the Ale Houses Act 1551, or 'An Act for Keepers of Ale-houses to be bound by Recognisances'.
RM ERGMMR – A forestaller in the pillory. The pillory was a wooden or metal post used for restraining petty criminals.The punishment, like
RM 2B00Y4F – China: Three women wearing a cangue or form of portable stocks as a punishment, c. 1900. A cangue was a device that was used for public humiliation and corporal punishment in China and some other parts of East Asia and Southeast Asia until the early years of the 20th century. It was somewhat similar to the pillory used for punishment in the West, except that the board of the cangue was not fixed to a base, and had to be carried around by the prisoner.
RM E5KEY5 – A young boy poses for a photo with his hands and feet protruding from a pillory, a common public punishment for petty crimes in early Bermuda.
RM ERGN7M – A forestaller in the pillory. The pillory was a wooden or metal post used for restraining petty criminals.The punishment, like
RM AKNNKY – A modern version of mediaeval stocks on display at Trim castle county Meath Ireland
RM EJNB6C – Pilloried, Alfie the pumpkin prowler! The fickle pumpkin may have proved a winner for Cinderella but it landed old Alfie Ayling in the pillory. His crime? The 89-year-old rascal was dangerously near a competitors prime pumpkin, wielding a cricket bat . When challenged, he replied: 'I was only trying to help him by killing the green fly!' Pint for a prisoner ... poor Alfie sweats out his punishment. 26th June 1979. *** Local Caption *** Pensioners OAP Senior Citizens
RM B4873P – Man locked in a pillory
RF J928ER – punishment, madeira, pillory, jurisdiction, historical, symbolic, stone,
RM A40TRD – Defoe in the pillory. Daniel Defoe, 1660 - 1731. English trader, writer, journalist, pamphleteer and spy.
RM F23FME – William Prynne, a puritan lawyer in the pillory. In 1634, he was fined and had the top of his ears cut off for a pamphlet against stage plays entitled 'Histriomastix'. Prynne said that actresses were simply prostitutes - a tactless remark given that the wife of Charles I, Queen Henrietta Maria was acting in a masque at the time.
RM W7FPXP – Spain. La Rioja. Ojacastro. Pillory, used for punishment by public humiliation. Upper Rioja.
RM 2ATR5H5 – Engraving of an ancient pillory in Paris, France, formerly used for punishment by public humiliation and often further physical abuse.. From The Chronicles of Newgate, 1884.
RM GC8B1C – justice, penitentary system, pillory, shrew's fiddles, Wasserburg am Inn, 19th century, Heimatmuseum Wasserburg, punishment, Bavaria, Germany, historic, historical, Additional-Rights-Clearences-Not Available
RM A4JBMH – Pillory In The Market, (1885). Artist: Unknown
RM 2DETFYC – Man photographs woman in medieval pillory, Tallinn, Estonia, Europe
RM C7H69P – pillory medieval physical punishment public humiliation victim market scorn offender criminal corporal crime law ridicule
RF CPC9T3 – John Shebbeare (1709-1788) on the pillory
RM T965A8 – A Drunkard's cloak was a type of pillory used in various jurisdictions to punish miscreants. The drunkard's cloak was actually a barrel, into the top of which a hole was made for the head to pass through. Two smaller holes in the sides were cut for the arms. Once suitably attired, the miscreant was paraded through the town, effectively pilloried. Drunkenness was first made a civil offense in England by the Ale Houses Act 1551, or 'An Act for Keepers of Ale-houses to be bound by Recognisances'.
RM 2HDY2HP – 1986, historical, outside a school building, a male teacher and teenage boy demonstrate an ancient wooden 'foot and hand lock', known as the stocks, an instrument of corporal punishment, used to restrain and humiliate offenders. A key part of the stocks was the element of public punishment. It's last recored use in Britain was in 1872. The stocks differed from the pillory, which locked the head of the offender forcing them to stand and where custom dictated that their head and beard were shaved.
RM B0N9W4 – Pillory at Michelham Priory Sussex England UK
RF 2A3GET2 – old wooden stocks used for punishing offenders in the middle ages
RM AYAC2C – Stocks outside replica of Anne Hathaway's thatched roof cottage at the Old English Inn in Victoria British Columbia Canada
RM AKNY1X – A modern version of mediaeval stocks on display at Trim castle county Meath Ireland
RF R000TF – Castelo de Vide, Portugal - September 11, 2017: Town Pillory. Where the public justice and punishment was executed. Alto Alentejo
RM 2HJPN2D – Carcan Punishment in Persia, now Iran, Showing Use of an Iron or Wooden Ring for Punishment, Public Humiliation or Public Shaming of Petty Criminals or Dissidents. Vintage Illustration or Engraving 1865.
RF J91650 – hesse, punishment, pillory, jurisdiction, historical, symbolic, stone, europe,
RF EGMTFG – Portugal, Porto , carved shameful stone pillory for punishment on the square near the Cathedral Se.
RF 2HJ9CCY – Samuel M Fox photograph of Delaware pillory and whipping post. Abolished in the UK by 1837 but remaining in use in Delaware until abolished in 1972.
RM B6DPXH – Young Man and Girl pose in a replica pillory in the Historic King's Square, St George, Bermuda
RM 2A3F136 – Old wooden pillory stocks on display in the Gaol of Leicester Guildhall, England, UK
RM B2J3KP – justice, penitentiary system, pillory, shame masks, pillary boards, wrought iron, wood, Wasserburg, Germany, 19th century, Wasserburg museum of local history, historic, historical, history of law, mask, boards, punishment,
RM FF9D18 – LONDON: PILLORY, c1810. /nThe Pillory at Charing-Cross, London. Aquatint, c1810, by Augustus Pugin and Thomas Rowlandson.
RM B6YB6J – the pillory 16th centuary punishment public humiliation lethal physical abuse
RM RY34KR – Two criminals in the stocks. From Ilustracion Artistica, published 1887.
RM HHG5GJ – Jougs, juggs or joggs, the name given in Scotland to a form of pillory. It was nothing more than an iron ring or collar fastened by a chain of two or three links to a pillar or wall in some public place.
RM D3EAB9 – Pillory and stocks used for punishment and public humiliation in Brunswick Town, North Carolina.
RM H3WPFR – Engraving depicting Daniel Defoe (1660-1731) an English trader, writer, journalist, pamphleteer and spy, in the pillory at Temple Bar, London. Dated 18th Century
RM BKYYMX – In the 11th century, the pillory and the gallows rising near the castle.
RM D969EK – The Pillory. Four men being punished in the pillory jeered at by a crowd. By this date among crimes punishable by pillory were embezzlement of state property, perjury and swindling. Aquatint from WH Pyne 'Costume of England' London 1805.
RM 2H1GEEB – Two prisoners in pillory with another tied to whipping post, America
RM RJNE2K – A woodcut engraving depicting Titus Oates (1650-1705) in the pillory as punishment for perjury (1685). Inventor of the Popish Plot: his false evidence help convict up to thirty-five people who were executed. Dated 19th century
RM BHG86M – Advertisement for Museum of the Inquisition or Torture Museum with Electric Chair & Man in Pillory, Carcassonne, Aude, France
RF J8RXNC – punishment, water tower, cage, judgment, pillory, middle ages, historical,
RM 2H1GEEK – Two prisoners in pillory with another tied to whipping post below and a man with whip, at New Castle County Courthouse in Delaware, America
RF K3NE6N – Old illustration of a man suffering the chinese pillory under the view of other people, outdoor. By unidentified author published on Magasin Pittoresque Paris 1839
RM 2A0XB01 – NORTHUMBERLAND; HEXHAM THE PILLORY
RF JFNHGG – An old Pillory on display at Smithville New Jersey
RM TTJANX – View WNW of The Pillory on the green beside Llanrhidian church, Gower, Wales, UK: a limestone monolith formerly used as the village whipping-post.
RM M6MFFD – JOUGS / JOUG - Iron neck-ring from a Scottish pillory - An entry from from Chamber's 20th century Dictionary - UK - circa 1920
RM B2J3KN – justice, penitentiary system, pillory, shame mask, wrought iron, wood, height 35 cm, Wasserburg, Germany, 19th century, Wasserburg museum of local history, historic, historical, history of law, masks, punishment,
RM WWANFP – PUNISHMENTS & INSTRUMENTS OF TORTURE FROM THE PAST - Thew Jougs, Juggs, or Joggs, a locked collar with a short chain for attaching a petty prisoner to a tree, boat interior etc. Sometimes used for slaves and used in Scotland in place of a public pillory for humiliation of an offender.
RM CNTR58 – slavery, USA, slave is being lashed under the mask of freedom, satiric leaflet, 19th century, historic, historical, Columbia, lash, whip, whips, slaveholder, slave owner, slaver, slaveholders, slave owners, slavers, slave driver, punishment, punishments, penalisation, pillory, pillories, people, Additional-Rights-Clearences-Not Available
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If you thought women had it bad in the Victorian-era, spare a thought for the men this time, because this device and its use is not pretty.
If you were a man living in the Victorian-era and you happened to be experiencing anxiety, irritability or a loss of confidence, a visit to the doctor might lead to a series of embarrassing questions about your love life.
An honest and/or brave man might confess to dabbling in the occasional sport of self-love. This confession would undoubtedly unleash a diagnosis of β€œspermatorrhoea” β€” a so-called β€œillness” that sparked an influx of anti-masturbation devices that looked exactly like penis torture chambers.
Next, your doctor might insist you purchase an anti-masturbation device such as β€œjugum penis”, which was a jagged metal ring that attached to the base of the penis with a screw. Its sole purpose was to stop an unwanted erection because it inflicted so much pain on the poor man that self-love was out of the question.
Manufacturers rushed to construct horrific devices as doctors tried to cure their patients of what was known as the male version of female β€œhysteria”. Why all the fuss? While it’s widely agreed today that masturbation doesn’t have any dangerous side effects, in the 19th century it was seen as a serious threat to mental and physical health.
Women were also impacted by devices designed especially for them; some were prescribed cloth and leather chastity belts β€” but these were far less brutal than the devices made for men.
Many physicians believed masturbation led to mental illness, while others went as far as saying it could kill you.
Invented 139 years ago this month, the jugum penis was designed to stop β€œnight-time emissions” (wet dreams) with the idea that if you got an erection in your sleep, the device would cause you so much pain it would wake you up.
Let’s take a look at the most common anti-masturbation devices and discover whether spermatorrhoea actually existed or it was a way to shame me
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