Crime and Punishment in Eighteenth Century EnglandRoutledge, 17.06.2013 - 432 Seiten McLynn provides the first comprehensive view of crime and its consequences in the eighteenth century: why was England notorious for violence? Why did the death penalty prove no deterrent? Was it a crude means of redistributing wealth? |
Inhalt
1 | |
17 | |
3 Homicide | 36 |
4 Highwaymen | 56 |
5 Property Crime | 83 |
6 Women 1 | 96 |
7 Women 2 | 116 |
8 Crimes of the Powerful | 133 |
12 Rioting | 218 |
13 Theories on Crime and Punishment | 242 |
14 Execution | 257 |
15 Secondary Punishment | 277 |
16 Crime and Social Change | 299 |
17 The Impact of War | 320 |
Afterword | 341 |
Notes | 347 |
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arrested authorities Beattie Beggar’s Opera benefit Black Act Blackstone Bloody Code Bow Street runners burglary capital punishment coining Colquhoun contraband convicted court crime criminal crowd customs death penalty deterrent difficult duel E. P. Thompson economic eighteenth century eighteenth-century England elite England English executed felony Fielding Fielding’s figure financial find fine fire first first place five footpad found guilty gallows gang gaol Gentleman’s Magazine George Gordon riots hanged Henry Fielding high treason highway robbery highwaymen History homicide Horace Walpole ibid influence Jacobite John Jonathan Wild jury justice killed King’s labour London Chronicle Lord magistrates manslaughter murder Newgate offence officers op.cit pardon pickpocketing poachers poaching police political prison prosecution Radzinowicz rape returned rioters riots robbed sailors sentence servants significant smugglers smuggling social society statutes Street suicide theft thought took trade transportation trial Tyburn victims violence vols Walpole Correspondence weavers Wild’s William woman women