This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Cambridge University Press via the DOI in this record.In 1845, the conviction of Thomas Hall for bigamy was reported as an example of the unequal way in which the law operated, with great play being made of the steps that Hall could have taken to free himself from his first wife by a divorce, were it not for the cost involved. Since then, virtually every account of nineteenth-century bigamy or divorce has included some version of the judge's apparently ‘brilliantly sarcastic’ speech. But what the judge was reported as saying at the time differs in a number of crucial particulars from what later commentators have reported him as saying. Later accounts have played up ...
In 1857 Parliament finally succumbed to public and political pressure and passed a bill creating a d...
Already in Anglo-Saxon times, England condemned polygamy as a serious moral offense. But until 1604,...
This chapter analyses the representation of bigamy within the English courts in the middle years of ...
Bigamy has attracted little attention from both criminologists and historians in the past few decade...
Though divorce followed by remarriage was illegal in early modern England, a considerable number of ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis via the...
This dissertation considers the extent to which patterns of divorce and bigamy in Liverpool changed ...
This thesis provides the first research into male bigamy in Scotland, examining criminal prosecution...
From 1857 (the year of its foundation) to 1923 (the year of the Matrimonial Causes Act) the Divorce ...
From 1857 (the year of its foundation) to 1923 (the year of the Matrimonial Causes Act) the Divorce ...
This is the author accepted manuscriptWhat was the extent of marital breakdown and separation in a s...
This article explores the potentially subversive nature of a nineteenth-century case of bigamy. It d...
The criminal justice system in eighteenth-century England was an integral part of European society. ...
This article examines the life circumstances of the mid-Victorian women who petitioned for dissoluti...
In a computer search of 18 national newspapers over a three-year period (1993–1945) 420 mentions of ...
In 1857 Parliament finally succumbed to public and political pressure and passed a bill creating a d...
Already in Anglo-Saxon times, England condemned polygamy as a serious moral offense. But until 1604,...
This chapter analyses the representation of bigamy within the English courts in the middle years of ...
Bigamy has attracted little attention from both criminologists and historians in the past few decade...
Though divorce followed by remarriage was illegal in early modern England, a considerable number of ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis via the...
This dissertation considers the extent to which patterns of divorce and bigamy in Liverpool changed ...
This thesis provides the first research into male bigamy in Scotland, examining criminal prosecution...
From 1857 (the year of its foundation) to 1923 (the year of the Matrimonial Causes Act) the Divorce ...
From 1857 (the year of its foundation) to 1923 (the year of the Matrimonial Causes Act) the Divorce ...
This is the author accepted manuscriptWhat was the extent of marital breakdown and separation in a s...
This article explores the potentially subversive nature of a nineteenth-century case of bigamy. It d...
The criminal justice system in eighteenth-century England was an integral part of European society. ...
This article examines the life circumstances of the mid-Victorian women who petitioned for dissoluti...
In a computer search of 18 national newspapers over a three-year period (1993–1945) 420 mentions of ...
In 1857 Parliament finally succumbed to public and political pressure and passed a bill creating a d...
Already in Anglo-Saxon times, England condemned polygamy as a serious moral offense. But until 1604,...
This chapter analyses the representation of bigamy within the English courts in the middle years of ...