The Rasphuis was founded after the torture of 16-year-old assistant tailor Evert Jansz. Jansz confessed, as a result of the torture, to theft on two occasions from his boss. The usual punishment for this was public flogging, but the city council decided to try to rehabilitate Jansz, who was from a good background. Under the influence of
Dirck Volkertszoon Coornhert and
C.P. Hooft the city decided, on 19 June 1589, to build a prison. Shortly after the opening, Jansz was sentenced to a light beating and forced labour; he never took the rasp. The founding of the Rasphuis signified a sea-change in Dutch correctional thinking. Until then it was universally believed that criminals needed to be punished. In the Rasphuis, the effort was made to instill a sense of order and duty into the young men. The Rasphuis was thus intended as an institute for rehabilitation. Over the entrance gate, which still stands, is the inscription
Wilde beesten moet men temmen or 'Wild beasts must be tamed'. There is a persistent myth that the Rasphuis contained a "water dungeon," the so-called
Waterhuis. If prisoners refused to work they were placed in a cellar that quickly filled with water after a
sluice was opened; they were handed a
pump that enabled them to keep from drowning, provided they pumped energetically and continuously.
Geert Mak and other historians, however, point out that there is no evidence whatsoever for the existence of this room and this punishment. ==Exploitation==