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Violent Death in Fourteenth- and Early Fifteenth-Century England

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 June 2009

Barbara A. Hanawalt
Affiliation:
Indiana University

Extract

Murder has both an attractive and a repellent quality. The tingling, fearfully pleasurable sensation of reading or hearing about murders makes them popular in literature and in the media. George Orwell perceptively sums up this human reaction when he says of one of his characters, “Mother preferred the News of the World which she considered had more murders in it.” The fascination with split heads, spilled brains and dismembered bodies was a dominant theme of medieval as well as of modern literature.

Type
Domestic Violence
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 1976

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References

1 Orwell, George, Coming up for Air (London, 1959), 47.Google Scholar

2 To name but a few examples: The Song of Roland, the Robin Hood legends, sagas, epics, most chronicles and the poetry of Bertrand de Born.

3 P.R.O., JI 3/48 m. 9d.

4 Sharpe, R. R., Calendar of Coroners Rolls of the City of London, A.D. 1300–1378 (London, 1913).Google Scholar

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6 The pioneering study in homicide was done by Wolfgang, M. E., Patterns in Criminal Homicide (Philadelphia, 1958).CrossRefGoogle ScholarMorris, A.Homicide: An Approach to the Problem of Crime (Boston, 1955).Google Scholar The United States Federal Bureau of Investigation also provides statistics on the cyclical nature of crime in its annual Uniform Crime Reports.

7 Plucknett, T. F. T., A Concise History of the Common Law, 5th ed. (New York, 1956), 445.Google Scholar For a full discussion of pardons, see Hurnard, N. D., The King's Pardon for Homicide before A.D. 1307 (Oxford, 1969)Google Scholar and Green, T. A., “Societal Concepts of Criminal Liability for Homicide in Medieval England,” Speculum, XLVIII, no. 4 (1972), 669'CrossRefGoogle Scholar roll shows that the jurors were making decisions on some accidental homicides and not bringing criminal indictments against the killers. In a Northamptonshire case a clerk was shooting arrows at a target and accidentally struck a three-year-old girl behind it. The inquest jurors called this a case of misadventure. P.R.O. JI 2/107 m. 2. In another case one boy accidentally killed another while playing, and the jurors did not classify it as a homicide. P.R.O. JI 2/114. There is also a case in London, Sharpe, p. 83. If the jurors were softening the definition of homicide at the indictment level, they were probably also doing so at the trials by returning verdicts of innocent. In other words, the jurors were making distinctions in practice which do not become statute law until the close of the fourteenth century.

8 Plucknett, , Common Law, 445:Google Scholar

9 Kaye, J. M., “The Early History of Murder and Manslaughter, Part I,” The Law Quarterly Review, 83 (06, 1967), 365–95Google Scholar has an excellent discussion of the early distinctions and the history of the 1390 statute.

10 lbid., 371.

11 For a full discussion see Hunnisett, R. F., “The Origins of the Office of Coroner,” Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 5th ser., VIII (1959), 85104.Google ScholarHunnisett, R. F., The Medieval Coroner (Cambridge, 1969).Google Scholar

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14 Ibid., 211–13.

15 Ibid., 221. The coroners, by a statute of 1487, were to turn over their inquests and indictments to the assize justices.

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22 Felonies in the fourteenth century included robbery, burglary, larceny, arson, rape, receiving and homicide. When comparisons are made in this paper to modern homicide figures, they are also based on these basic felonies.

23 Uniform Crime Reports, 51. In calculating this figure, I have left out aggravated assault since it was not a felony in fourteenth- and fifteenth-century England. However, since it is possible to argue that more assaults ended in homicide in the Middle Ages because of ineffective medical care, I also did a calculation including assaults with homicides and arrived at 8%— still considerably lower than medieval England. Wolfgang has observed that the rising of assault and the lowering of homicide in Philadelphia is due to the influence of better medicine during the twentieth century. Wolfgang, , Patterns of Criminal Homicide, 116–8.Google Scholar In modern England the percentage of homicides compared to all other felonies is .02%. Morris, T. and Blom-Cooper, L., A Calendar of Murder; Criminal Homicide in England since 1957 (London, 1964), 277.Google Scholar

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25 In the period 1300–30, only four years of coroners' rolls have eight homicides or more, giving an average of eleven as the projected yearly number of homicides. Not only is the evidence scanty, but since the method of preservation before 1337 was erratic, we must be doubly skeptical of the results.

26 1300–29, 11 per year; 1330–39, 13 per year; 1340–49, 21 per year; 1350–59, 10 per year; 1360–69, 18 per year; 1370–79, 14 per year. The other decades do not have sufficient evidence to make an average.

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29 Although in modern criminal statistics homicide appears to be fairly stable (Morris, and Blom-Cooper, , A Calendar of Murder, 278),Google Scholar even in England homicides rose during the Second World War. Lunden, W. A., Crimes and Criminals (Ames, Iowa, 1967), 84.Google Scholar

30 1300–09, 20%; 1310–19, 20%; 1320–29, 20%; 1330–39, 27%; 1340–49, 22%; 1350–59, 23%; 1360–69, 30%; 1370–79, 22%; 1380–89, 25%; 1390–99, 19%. The decade of the sixties was the only period of strikingly high figures on homicide.

31 The application of standard statistical tests showed these figures to be significant.

32 Wolfgang, , Patterns in Criminal Homicide, 99.Google ScholarLunden, , Crimes and Criminals, 27–9.Google Scholar

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38 Northamptonshire: total number of accused 634 men, 14 women. Oxford:64 men. London: 194 men, 15 women.

39 Sharpe, , London, 87–8.Google Scholar

40 Hanawalt, B. A., “The Female Felon in Fourteenth Century England,” Viator, V (1974), 259.Google Scholar

41 Bohannan, , “Patterns of Homicide,” 219.Google Scholar The homicide pattern of African tribal women was close to the medieval figures, 2% to 9% of the total offenders. In United States, women commit 18% of the homicides. Lunden, , Crimes and Criminals, 102.Google ScholarWolfgang, , Patterns in Criminal Homicide, 32,Google Scholar found the same figure (18%) in Philadelphia.

42 Verkko, V., “Static and Dynamic lsquo;Laws’ of Sex and Homicide,” Studies in Homicide, Wolfgang, M., ed. (New York, 1967), 42.Google Scholar

43 Wolfgang, , Patterns in Criminal Homicide, 62–3.Google Scholar It does not fit American homicide figures and it leaves out a variety of other factors which might explain the differences in rates between men and women.

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48 Hanawalt, , “The Female Felon,” 254–61,Google Scholar for a brief summary of the problem.

49 Northamptonshire: 503 men, 172 women. London: 46 men, 11 women. Oxford: 23 men, 8 women. In suicide the sexes are split equally.

50 Cooper, B. P. and Nicholas, G., Crime in the Sixties (London, 1963), 20.Google Scholar About one-fifth of the victims of murder were children under the age of five.

51 P.R.O. JI 2/109 m. 7.

52 P.R.O. JI 2/107 m. 5d.

53 P.R.O. JI 3/48 m. 4d.

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60 Sharpe, , London, 91–2.Google Scholar

61 P.R.O., JI 2/106 m. 1. Another example JI 2/111 m. 27.

62 It would perhaps be more accurate to describe these as lower middle groups within the peasant community. The minimum assessment of movable goods for tax purposes in the fourteenth century was about 10s. Willard, J. F., Parliamentary Taxes on Personal Property, 1290–1334 (Cambridge, Mass., 1934), 88.Google Scholar

63 Hunnisett, , The Medieval Coroner, 31, 33.Google Scholar

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66 Seventy percent were killed in their place of residence, 15% were killed one to five miles from it, 10% six to ten miles and 5% more than ten miles.

67 Westman, B. Hanawalt, “The Peasant Family and Crime in Fourteenth-Century England,” The Journal of British Studies, XIII (05, 1974), 4.Google Scholar

68 Morris, and Blom-Cooper, , A Calendar of Murder, 280.Google Scholar In Philadelphia 29.2% were related. Wolfgang, , Patterns in Criminal Homicide, 209.Google Scholar

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70 Bohannan, , “Patterns of Homicide,” 223–5.Google Scholar

71 Sheehan, M. M., “The Formation and Stability of Marriage in Fourteenth -Century England; Evidence of an Ely Register,” Medieval Studies, XXXIII (1971), 249–52.Google Scholar

72 Compare to modern England where 33% of the murderers used sharp instruments. Gibson, and Klein, , Murder, 24.Google Scholar In Africa 30% to 71.4% of the murderers used sharp instruments. Bohannan, , “Patterns of Homicide,” 227.Google Scholar

73 P.R.O. JI 2/110 m. 13.

74 Gibson, and Klein, , Murder, 24.Google Scholar In modern England 17.4% use blunt instruments. Among African tribes, 11.8% to 5 1% used blunt instruments. Bohannan, , “Patterns of Homicide,” 227.Google Scholar

75 The Bedfordshire data for the late thirteenth century derived from Hunnisett, R. F., The Bedfordshire Coroners' Rolls (Bedfordshire Historical Society, XVI, 1960)Google Scholar is more detailed and gives the following breakdown: arguments are 4 8% of the total homicides; 18% unspecified, 6% drinking, 17% property, 2% revenge, 5% domestic quarrels. These figures are probably more accurate since the coroners' rolls were more carefully kept in the thirteenth century.

76 Wolfgang, , Patterns in Criminal Homicide, 191.Google Scholar 191. In Philadelphia 35% of all homicides are the result of trivial arguments. Gibson, and Klein, , Murder, 23Google Scholar find that in modern England 33% originate in trivial arguments.

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84 Fourteen out of 2,933 homicides in gaol delivery rolls or .5%. The percentage was .3% in the Northamptonshire coroners' rolls.

85 Westman, Hanawalt, “The Peasant Family and Crime,” 1112.Google Scholar

86 For examples see P.R.O., JI 3/113 m. 14d. and Hunnisett, , Bedfordshire Coroners' Rolls, 114.Google Scholar

87 P.R.O. JI 3/48 m. 6.

88 Hurnard, , King's Pardon for Homicide, 161–70.Google Scholar

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90 Rot. Part. II, 170.Google Scholar

91 In the last five years the percentage of solved murder cases in the United States has been going down because the pattern of criminal homicide has been changing. There is more random killing of victims, which makes it more difficult for the police to trace suspects.

92 Redfield, H. V., Homicide, North and South (Philadelphia, 1880).Google Scholar

93 Machiavelli, N., The Prince, tr. Bergin, Thomas G. (New York, 1947), 49.Google Scholar

94 Court Rolls of the Manor of Wakefield, II,Google Scholar tr. Baildon, W. P. (Yorkshire Archaeological Society Record Series, 1901), 140, 141.Google ScholarCourt Rolls of the Manor of Ingoldmells in the County of Lincolnshire, tr,Massingberd, W. O. (London, 1902), 119–20.Google Scholar