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crime and punishment
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What are the dates for the different time periods?
Medieval -
1000-1500
Early Modern - 1500-1700
18th
and
19th
century -
1700-1900
Modern Britain -
1900-now
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How did Medieval Britain view kings?
chosen
by
God
most
important
person
controlled
land
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How did Medieval
England
view nobles?
king's
main supporters
have land
in return for land provide king with
knights
expected to keep
law
and
order
in their land
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How was the church viewed in Medieval England?
-believe in
heaven
and hell
-Church offered help to get your soul to
heaven
-Priest in every
village
-Church courts for
churchmen
-Sanctuary to
criminals
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What were peasants like during Medieval
England
?
-Worked on land of local
lord
-Close
communities
-Had no
police
so policed each other
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Anglo-Saxon: tithings
'Police
force' - every man
over age
of 12 had to join one, made up of
ten
men who were
responsible
for each other
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Anglo-Saxon
: hue and cry
If crime was committed you were expected to raise
H&C
Entire village had to hunt criminal - if not whole village had to pay
heavy fine
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Anglo Saxon
: trial by local
jury
Relied on local
communities
Made up of local men who knew
accused
/accuser and the jury decided who was
guilty
View source
Anglo-Saxon : trial by ordeal, what is it?
Religious society
- took place inside
church
with
priest
present (
god's representative
)
Used if local
jury
couldn't decide if
guilty
or not
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What were some different trial by ordeals?
Hot iron
Cold water
Hot water
Blessed bread
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Anglo-Saxons :
wergild
Fine
- compensation to victim or their family
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Anglo Saxon: capital and corporal punishment
Death penalty-
treason
,
betraying
local lord, to deter others
Corporal
- regular
offenders,
cutting off body
parts
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When was the Battle of Hastings?
1066
-
William
duke of
Normandy
won
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What changes did William make to the legal system?
Murdrum
fines
Harsher
on women
Norman-
French official language used in court
Church
courts
Parish
Constable
Trial
by combat
Forest
laws
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What did William keep the same?
Hue and cry
Tithings
Wergild
( although now paid to king's officials )
Trial by ordeal
Capital and corporal punishment
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What is a
murdrum
fine?
If a
Saxon
person murdered a
Norman
the whole town had to pay a
fine
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What were forest laws?
Not allowed to
cut down
trees
Not allowed to
hunt
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When was trial by ordeal abolished?
1215
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What changed in early modern England in crime and punishment?
Justices
of
peace
- minor crimes and quarter sessions
Law
of
treason
strengthened
Witches
were blamed more
Stocks
- not afford funds
Pillory
- selling underweight or rotten goods
Vagabonds
Jails
used for keeping criminal until trial
View source
What were the three main crimes people were concerned with during early modern England?
Heresy
,
vagabondage
and
witchcraft
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What encouraged the fear of vagrancy ? (EMB)
Media
- increased
awareness
Science
and
technology
because things could be
printed
like
books
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What are the different dates to do with punishing vagabonds (EMB) ?
1531
- whipped
1547
- 1st offence 2years slavery 2nd offence life slavery
1550
- 1547 act repealed and 1531 act instead
1572
- 1st whip or burn through ear 2nd execution
1576
- houses of correction
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Why did people become vagabonds?
Rising population =
less
jobs = more
unemployment
1500s
people could travel more
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When did witchcraft become a more serious offence and why?
1542
- religious changes under
Henry VIII
became criminal offence
Elizabeth
made tough Law
1590 -
James
I made tougher laws and wrote book of witchcraft
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Why were there more cases of witchcraft during religious unrest?
Old practices and
beliefs
changing.
Protestants
preached the devil was tempting christians away from
god
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What policing stayed the same (EMB) ?
Hue and cry
Parish constables
- still main defence
Justices of peace
- during tudors became a bigger part of local law
Citizens
still looked out for each other
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How did policing change during EMB?
Town watchmen
and
sergeants
- larger towns, patrol streets, poorly paid
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How did trials change in EMB?
Royal
judges - serious crimes
1600s people weren't allowed to claim benefit of clergy for serious offences
Habeus
corpus - 1679, stop police locking ppl up without proving
crime
, criminal had to be seen in court within certain time or released
View source
What was the
bloody
code?
Legal document that stated which laws carried the
death penalty
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How many crimes were punishable by death in 1815?
225
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What was transportation and when did it start being used?
Instead of DP people were sent away to Australia to be
slaves.
Started in the
1660's
View source
How did Henry VIII change religion in England?
Made himself the head of the Church of England
View source
How did Edward VI change
religion
in England?
More
protestant
View source
How did Mary I change religion in England?
More
Catholic
killed
300
protestants
View source
How did Elizabeth change
religion
in England?
More protestant
killed
250
Catholics
View source
What
forms
of policing were
there
in 1500-1700?
Citizens
Watchmen
and
sergeants
Hue
and
Cry
Parish Constable
Justice of
the
people
(JP's)
Rewards
for
criminals
View source
What trials were used in the Early Modern period?
Benefit of the
Clergy
- church courts
Courts
- manor court = minor crimes,
Royal
judges = serious,
Haebeas
Corpus
- stopped people being locked up for no reason 1679
View source
Why was the bloody code introduced? (factors)
Poverty
and wealth-rich wanted
protection
Government-MP's
passed the laws
Attitudes in
society-thought
crime was out of
control
Urbanisation-more
people so harder to control
Travel-streets
were more crowded so easier
Technology-pamphlets
View source
How did crime change in the industrial period?
-Last execution of
Heresy
in 1612
-Fear of
vagabonds
decreased
-1736
witchcraft
laws repealed
View source
What kind of crime were people more concerned about in Industrial times?
Crime that disrupted trading:
highway
robbery,
smuggling poaching,
trade
unions
View source
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