quizlet

    Cards (91)

    • 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
    • How did Medieval Britain view kings?
      chosen by God
      most important person
      controlled land
    • 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
    • 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
    • What were peasants like during Medieval England?

      -Worked on land of local lord
      -Close communities
      -Had no police so policed each other
    • 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
    • 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
    • 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
    • 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
    • What were some different trial by ordeals?
      Hot iron
      Cold water
      Hot water
      Blessed bread
    • Anglo-Saxons : wergild
      Fine - compensation to victim or their family
    • Anglo Saxon: capital and corporal punishment
      Death penalty- treason, betraying local lord, to deter others
      Corporal - regular offenders, cutting off body parts
    • When was the Battle of Hastings?
      1066 - William duke of Normandy won
    • 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
    • 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
    • What is a murdrum fine?

      If a Saxon person murdered a Norman the whole town had to pay a fine
    • What were forest laws?
      Not allowed to cut down trees
      Not allowed to hunt
    • When was trial by ordeal abolished?
      1215
    • 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
    • What were the three main crimes people were concerned with during early modern England?
      Heresy, vagabondage and witchcraft
    • What encouraged the fear of vagrancy ? (EMB)
      Media - increased awareness
      Science and technology because things could be printed like books
    • 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
    • Why did people become vagabonds?
      Rising population = less jobs = more unemployment
      1500s people could travel more
    • 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
    • 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
    • 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
    • How did policing change during EMB?
      Town watchmen and sergeants - larger towns, patrol streets, poorly paid
    • 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
    • What was the bloody code?

      Legal document that stated which laws carried the death penalty
    • How many crimes were punishable by death in 1815?
      225
    • 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
    • How did Henry VIII change religion in England?
      Made himself the head of the Church of England
    • How did Edward VI change religion in England?

      More protestant
    • How did Mary I change religion in England?
      More Catholic
      killed 300 protestants
    • How did Elizabeth change religion in England?

      More protestant
      killed 250 Catholics
    • 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
    • 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
    • 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
    • How did crime change in the industrial period?
      -Last execution of Heresy in 1612
      -Fear of vagabonds decreased
      -1736 witchcraft laws repealed
    • What kind of crime were people more concerned about in Industrial times?
      Crime that disrupted trading:
      highway robbery, smuggling poaching, trade unions
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