Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Early Modern
Crime and
Punishment
1500-1750
Anmerkungen:
- Key controversy: More of the same or significant change?
- Enforcement
- Continuity
- Hue
and cry
- Enforcers
- Still
unpaid
- mostly new
people
dealing with
- relied on help
of local
people
- Repeat
offenders
a problem
- BUT - John
Ayley - repeat
offender
chosen as
constable!
- Structure
of courts
- Changes
- Sheriff far
less imp - JPs
take over
- As towns
grow
watchmen
more imp
- Courts
- Assizes
- Serious
cases
- e.g.
murder,
arson, rape,
highway
robbery
- Capital
crimes
- County - six
'circuits' two
judges
each, 2x per
year
- Quarter
sessions
- JPs
- New powers
under
Eiizabeth I
- Fix roads
- fix
wages
- arrest
vagrants
- Less
serious
cases
- Most
=
petty
crime
- Theft
less than
1 shilling
- Petty
sessions
- small groups JPs
met in local
areas
- Because not
all cases can
be cover by
quarter
sessions
- Petty
crime
- Minor
assaults,
drunkeness
- Gradually
took over
from
manor
courts
- Manor
Courts
- Same as
Medieval
- Became less
imp - petty
sessions
took over
- Church
courts
- same as
medieval
- particularly
important
during late 1500s
-early 1600s -
puritans
influence
- Crime and
Criminals
- Changes
- Crimes of
Concern
Anmerkungen:
- These aren't necessarily new crimes - some = crimes that already existed but became became increasingly feared
- Vagrancy
- Begins after
BD but
becomes big
prob in EM
period
- Causes
- Increased pop -
2.4million (1520) to
4.1million (1600)
- Lack of work -
people
wander - look
for work/steal
- Rising
Prices
- Made worse when
Harvest fail or wool
trade declines
- Examples
- Upright
man
- Carries
staff.
Demands
money
- Counterfeit
crank
- Pretends to
be ill e.g.
soap trick
- Greatly feared
but not reality -
Printing press =
books/pamphlets
e.g.
Harman
- Exaggerate threat
- very few 'gangs'
most travel alone
or in 2s or 3s
- Moral
Crime
- Puritans
influence
increase =
more
'crimes'
punished
- Examples
- Swearing
- having
affairs
- not going
to
church
- Organised
Crime
- Smuggling
- Why?
- High taxes
on
imported
goods
- Easy way
to make
money
- Earn as much in
one night as
weeks wage
- What?
- 1600s =
Tobacco
- After 1720s
Brandy, tea,
silk (taxes
increase to
30%)
- How?
- Gangs - 40-50
people. Often
had support
of locals
- Highway
robbery
- First a prob
in
Elizabethan
times -
1558-1603
- New/better
roads
- Unlit,
through
remote
areas - easy
targets
- Stagecoaches
introduced
- Often v
violent
- Rob and
rape
women
- 1722 - Woman who said
she knew who highway
men were - tongue cut
out
- Witchcraft
- Number of trials
varies across period
- Different kings e.g
James I was very
interested in
witchcraft - wrote
books
Anmerkungen:
- Macbeth was written for him
He wrote 'Demonology' - how to spot witches
- Increase in times
of famine/plague -
blamed for what
don't understand
- During Civil War
(1642-49) trials
increase
- Who?
- Those
accused often
weak - easy
targets
- Way to get
own back
on someone
- Women
(mostly)
- End
violence
to from
nobles
- End of Wars of
Roses - Tudors
= more settled
dynasty
Anmerkungen:
- Although this ignores the fact that Eng Civ War 1642-1649
- Change
in
Crime
rates
- rise to peak
in 1620
then
decline
Anmerkungen:
- True for Murder and theft
- Decrease
when less
pressure
on
economy
- Due to pop
increase, rising
prices, falling wages
Anmerkungen:
- When people are poor, they can't find jobs and prices are high crime increases - pretty obvious really!
- Continuity
- Similar types of
crime to
Medieval
- Petty
crime
most
common
- Theft
most
common
crime
- Violent nature of
crime continued
- High homicide rate
- people
carried
weapons
- Poor medical
care
- Punishments
- Public
humiliation/shaming
- Cucking/ducking
stool
- Whipping/branding
- Scold's
bridle
- Stocks/pillory
- Penance
- continued
from
Medieval -
became more
widespread
- Capital
punishment
- Changes
- Bloody Code
- 1723 -
Black
Act
- Poaching
deer/hrabbit/fish
= death
- Increase in
crimes
punishable by
death
- 50 in
1688
to 200
in 1820
- BUT - numbers of
people hanged
decreases
- Judges
unwiling to
sentence to
death for
minor
crimes
- Reduced value
of goods
stolen
- Acquitted
due to
little
evidence
- Used
transportation
rather than
death
- most
common
=hanging
- long, slow,
painful -
strangulation
- treason
- Noblemen- Axe
- Everyone
else =
HDQ
- Imprisonment
- Bridewells
- For vagrants -
became
workhouses
- Prisons
- Little change
- for debtors
- awaiting trial
- have to pay for
food etc.