Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Crime and Punishment -History
- 1000c-1500c
- Crime
- Saxon Laws
- England was divided into 7
kingdoms, each with it's own
king, and laws.
- Laws had two
main aims: to
protect
landowners'
property, and
minimise
violence.
- A king would consult his nobles, and
bishops before processing a law.
- A person could claim wergild which meant
bloodshed would be compensated for
through a fine
- This was mainly to stop blood feuds
- The middle ages
- Theft and
pickpocketing
became more
popular
- People who made laws were the ones in
power; the wealthy
- Many more
ordinary people
started to commit
petty crimes
- The Norman Conquest
- William sometimes used brutal methods to
ensure that the english follow his laws.
- He introduced forest laws
- It meant that someone couldn't hunt
on the king's land.
- Castles were built across the
country to show norman power
- William used the death penalty for
serious crimes
- Outlaws
- Gangs were feared and stole
from anyone
- Outlaws mainly kept the money
rather than distributing it to the
poor.
- Outlaws regularly used violence to get
their way
- Many gangs would evade capture due to their
wealthy connections
- Punishment
- Medieval punishment and law enforcemnt
- Treason, arson, and
betraying your lord were
capital offences.
- Maiming was
used for
punishment
- A person who didn't attend
court was known as an outlaw
- all men over the age of 12
belonged in a tithing.
- Each man was responsible for group
behaviour.
- The hue and cry was used
which meant the entire
village would join the hunt.
- Parish constables were
appointed in 1250, they were not
paid.
- Trials
- Trials took place in front of juries of local
people
- Trial by ordeal was used as God would decide
one's guilt.
- It was abolished in 1215
- Trial by hot iron and trial by hot water
are examples of trial by ordeal
- The church
- The church had increased influence after
the Norman invasion
- Punishment should be able to reform
- All clergy could be tried in a
church court.
- Nobody could be arrested
if they were in church
- Known as the right of sanctuary
- Punishment
- Country courts were
held by justices of the
peace.
- Capital punishment was
the most common
punishment in royal
courts.
- Punishments
were carried out
in public
- Prisons were used for those awaiting
trial
- The stocks, pillory and
whipping were also
used.
- 1500-1700
- Crime
- Factors affecting crime rate
- They saw an increase in crime
- New laws known as the bloody code
- Taxes were high because of wars
- A stronger government meant lower crime rates
- Why did crime increase
- There was an
increase in
population
- More poeple moved to urban areas
- Increase in
unemployment
- More begging and
Elizabeth I passed laws
against begging
- Trade and roads inproved
- Highwaymen
- Reduction of common land
- More poaching
- Trade resctrictions
- Smuggling
- Begging and vagrancy
- The Vagabonds
and Beggars act
1494
- Rulers felt
to harshly
punish to
deter
others
from
crime.
- Beggars were seen as
threats.
- Deserving beggars were ill
so they were allowed to beg
- Sturdy beggars were
lazy and punished
- Treason
- Became more
common after 1485
- Changing religion of the
monarchs
- Public excecution
- Punishment
- The bloody code
- They increased the
number of crimes
carrying the death
penalty.
- Flogging and hanging
were public to deter
- From 1688-1823 the
capital offences rose
from 50 to over 200.
- Didn't work
- House of
corrections
AKA the first
prisons
- Transportation;
late 1700s
- Policing
- 1663- Watchmen were paid to
patrol london
- Parish
officers were
known as
constables
- Thief takers were paid by
victims to catch criminals
but many of them were
criminals themselves.
- Trials and jury
- Minor cases were held by justices of
the peace
- Serious crimes
were seen by
royal judges
who could
sentence the
death penalty.
- Punishments would vary depending
on class and gender of the criminal
- Gunpowder plot
- Famous example of
treason
- Nov 5 1965
- They wanted a
catholic
monarch
- They put gunpowder
under the cellar in
parliament
- They were tortured and sentenced to death.
- 1700-1900
- Crime
- changes in society
- Many people moved from the
country side to the towns
- Petty theft was the most
common crime
- Reasons for increse in crime
- Extreme poverty
- Professional gangs in urban
areas; overcrowded areas
- Industrialisation
- Factories developed
- more jobs
- increase in population
- Increase in
street theft,
burglary,
public disorder.
- Prostitution increased.
- Chartists protested
conditions for workers
- 1715- riot act made it
a capital offence for
more than 12 people
to group together.
- crimes against authority
- The French revolution made upper
classes worried the same may happen in
England
- People wanted reforms like the right to vote.
- 1833- Tolpuddle martyrs
- sentenced to 7 years of transportation
- Returned in 1836
- Protesters were treated harshly
- Crimes against person
- Violent crimes decreased
- 1850s- 'garroters' who would rob
and strangle people
- 1888- Jack the
Ripper in
whitechapel
- Smuggling
- Increased
during
1740-1850
- It was a social crime
- Made big profits
- Decreased after 1850 as tax imported goods were cut
- Punishment
- Bow street runners
- Watchmen patrolled at night
and Parish constables dealt
with petty crime
- Set up by John and
Henry Fielding in
1750
- Basically first police force
- Robert peel, reduced
the number of death
penalties.
- London was
increasing there
weren't enough
patrols
- Introduction to the police
- 1829- Metropolitan
Police Act
- 1856- Became
compulsory for all
counties to have a
police force
- 1842- Detective department
was set up
- At first the public
disliked the police
- Transportation
- During the 17th and 18th
centuries they transported
people to colonial countries
- It was a deterrent
- It was hard labour
- Prisons were over crowded
- it was abolished in 1868
- Prisons
- Death Penalty became
less acceptable so people
were jailed instead
- The separate and silent
systems isolated prisoners
and they did hard labour
- People had to pay to
be released from
prison
- Prison reformers
- John Howard was
a reformer
shocked by
conditions
- They wanted improved
health and sanitation, and
better warders
- Robert Peel
set up the
1823 Gaol
Act to pay
gaolers
- Elizabeth Fry set up
education classes to
reform prisoners
- 1900- Present
- Punishment
- Technology
- Policing has improved
with technology
- CCTV
- Forensic science
- Transport: police cars
- Policing changes
- Now work worldwide
- Motorised transport
- Multicultural + Women
- 1982-Neighbourhood
watch scheme
- Community engagement through social media
- Special Police Units
- CID - Criminal
Investigations
department
- DNA -
prevent
terrorism
- NCA- national
crime agency
- Traffic department
- Capital Punishment
- Last used 1964
- Abolished 1965
- Many of the
innocent were
murdered.
- New punishments
- Rehabilitation of criminals
- Community service
- Treatment programmes for addicts
- electronic tagging
- Prison
- Education is available
- Prisoners can be
released on probation
- 1948-corporal
punishments in prisons were
abolished
- 1982-
Youth
detention
centres
were set up
- Crime
- Crime rates
- More
reliant on
technology
- More things
classed as
crimes
- Violent crimes and
anti-social
behaviour
- Victims are
more likely
to report
- Older criems
- Driving offences,
vandalism, burglary
- Disturbances with
anti-social
behaviour
- Drug smuggling
- New crimes
- Sex
discrimination,
hacking, traffic
crime, and race
crimes are all
new
- Motor crimes
- People trafficking
- Criminal Gangs
- Cyber crimes
- fraud online
- Terrorism
- IRA
- Al Qaeda
- 1965- Race relations act