After Zhu Yuanzhang established the Ming Dynasty, he knew well the sufferings of the people and knew that all the unstable factors of the people came from the corruption of officials. In order to warn officials not to take bribes and bend the law, Zhu Yuanzhang ordered officials to be tortured by peeling as long as they took bribes with more than 60 silver. In fact, the punishment of peeling was not unique to the Ming Dynasty, but it had existed before, but it was abolished because it was too cruel in successive dynasties.
Zhu Yuanzhang really wrote the punishment of peeling into the criminal law of the dynasty. Aquamarine, the founding hero of farmland with Zhu Yuanzhang, died because of the criminal law of skinning. However, he died unjustly. Someone reported to Zhu Yuanzhang that Aquamarine wanted to rebel and died under the criminal law of skinning, so as to show people that they did not dare to have a little rebellious heart. In fact, Zhu Yuanzhang believed in Aquamarine's criminal evidence rather than that he wanted to kill the hero to stabilize his country. Unofficial history recorded that aquamarine was peeled and then sewed back, and it took him seven days to die.
After Emperor Chongzhen hanged jingshan park from a tree, Nanjing's Ming Dynasty royal middleman soon established Nanming, and Sun Kewang was accused by Li Ruyue, a loyal minister of Nanming, of having bad intentions, which was a false death. However, the emperor of Nanming tried to kill Li Ruyue in order to save himself from offending Sun Kewang, and even used a cruel skinning penalty. Think about how a civil servant could stand that kind of pain.
Folks say that the Ming dynasty also peeled, and that's how it came about when it died. Zhu Yuanzhang used peeling to punish, and Nan Ming used peeling to kill loyal ministers. Such a kind of torture was adopted, and it really deserved to be destroyed, and it was used on loyal subjects.