Crime and Punishment

    Cards (121)

    • Crime and punishment in Saxon England included drinking too much, insulting your neighbor, stealing, murder, and plowing someone else's land
    • Punishments in Saxon England
      • Tithings
      • Hue and cry
      • Parish constable
      • Trial by local jury
    • Trial by local jury
      1. Accused and victim give their version
      2. Jury decides based on knowledge of people
      3. Jury finds accused guilty or not guilty
    • Trials by ordeal in Saxon England
      • Trial by hot iron
      • Trial by hot water
      • Trial by cold water
      • Trial by blessed bread
    • Wergild
      System of fines for different crimes used by the Saxons
    • The wergild system was not a fair one as more powerful members of society were protected by higher fines
    • Punishments in Saxon England
      • Capital punishments
      • Corporal punishments
      • Public humiliation
    • When William the Conqueror took control of England, he brought new ideas about crime and punishment
    • Posse Comitatus
      Group of able-bodied men gathered by the sheriff to hunt for a criminal
    • Trial by combat
      The accused fought with the accuser until one was killed or unable to fight on, the loser was then hanged
    • William and the Normans ended the wergild system, all fines for crimes were paid to the king and no longer the victim's family</b>
    • The Normans introduced church courts which were more lenient as there were no capital punishments
    • The Norman king Henry II made further changes to crime and punishment laws to increase his personal power
    • Changes made by Henry II
      • Introduction of incarceration as a form of punishment
      • Ending of trial by ordeal
      • All cases now had to be settled by a 12 man jury
      • Justices of the peace
    • Benefit of the clergy allowed people accused of a crime to be tried in a judge's court where punishments were less severe
    • Sanctuary allowed criminals to claim protection in a church for up to 40 days before having to leave the country
    • The church ended trial by ordeal in 1215 as it was seen as unreliable
    • Factors that changed the nature of crime and criminals 1500-1700
      • Population growth
      • Economic changes
      • Printing
      • Religious turmoil
      • Political turmoil
      • Landowners' attitudes
      • Vagabonds
    • The Tudors had different attitudes towards the poor, distinguishing between the deserving and undeserving poor
    • Law enforcement 1500-1700
      • Hue and cry
      • Posse Comitatus
      • Parish constables
      • Watchmen and sergeants
      • Rewards
      • Justices of the Peace
      • Manorial courts
      • Quarter sessions
      • County Assizes
    • Justices of the Peace
      Set up in the medieval period, became a major part of law enforcement between 1500 and 1700, important local people landowners who judged local or minor court cases
    • Justices of the Peace
      • Allowed to find people, put people in the stocks or order them to be whipped
    • Justices of the Peace
      1. Handled minor crimes on their own
      2. Met with other JPS in the same County four times a year for quarter sessions
      3. Most serious crimes would be considered at quarter sessions
      4. JPS would have the right to pass the death sentence
    • Royal judges
      1. Visited each County twice a year to handle the most serious offenses
      2. These were known as County Assizes
    • Benefit of clergy
      By the 1600s many people could read and were able to cheat the benefit of clergy rules so it was gotten rid of
    • Habeas corpus
      This Act was passed in 1679, prevented the authorities from locking up a person indefinitely without evidence that they were guilty
    • Laws concerning punishment for crimes got a lot stricter, this was known as the bloody court
    • Punishments used
      • Capital punishment (hanging, burning at the stake, beheading)
      • Pillory
      • Fines
      • Whipping
      • Houses of Correction
      • Gaols
      • Carting
      • Dunking stool
    • Between 1645 and 1647 there were 250 cases of witchcraft in East Anglia alone
    • Matthew Hopkins
      Employed to catch witches, used torture to get them to confess, victims were often old women
    • Witchcraft accusations were a sign of increased tension between the poor and those richer than them, combined with the instability caused by the Reformation and the Civil War
    • Britain became the first country to industrialize in the years after 1750, this changed the way people worked and had an effect on society itself
    • New or increasingly important crimes
      • Highwayman
      • Poaching
      • Smuggling
      • Unionizing
    • Highwayman
      Robbers who targeted travelers in wooded and dark areas near the capital city, using only a cheap pistol and a horse
    • Smuggling
      Illegally importing goods such as tea and tobacco to avoid import taxes, estimated 20,000 active smugglers in 1748
    • Poaching
      The crime of poaching which described as a social crime had been around for a long time, authorities were not tolerant and the 1723 black Act made hunting deer, hare or rabbits a capital offense
    • Law enforcement
      • Passed from ordinary people and volunteers in the local community to a full-time trained and professional police force
    • Metropolitan Police Force
      Introduced in 1829, replaced the system of Watchmen and parish constables, composed of 3,200 men who wore a uniform
    • After 1829 the police force spread outside of London, by 1856 it was compulsory for all towns and counties to have a police force and they were widely respected by the public
    • Transportation
      Convicted criminals were removed from the country by being sent abroad, first to America then later to Australia, seen as a punishment less harsh than hanging
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