Abstract: This paper takes a fresh look at the use of judicial violence in the societies of Viking-Age England and Scandinavia. Using interdisciplinary methodologies, it considers legal, historical, literary, and archaeological evidence for judicially-prescribed maiming and execution. Using this evidence, it describes the English and Scandinavian systems of judicial violence in new detail, reflecting on important aspects of each in turn before turning to a more comparative approach to redirect debate and focus future work
THE early history of English criminal law lies hidden behind the laconic formulas of the rolls and l...
Nordic Homicide in Deep Time draws a unique and detailed picture of developments in human interperso...
abstract: Warriors, as all members of society in medieval Scandinavia, were bound by a course of rul...
This paper takes a fresh look at the use of judicial violence in the societies of Viking-Age England...
The Viking Age has long been understood to be a time of great violence. However, research in the las...
Anglo-Scandinavian literary and legal texts give evidence of two cultures which shared similar attit...
Violence and violent death in the pre-Christian Scandinavian Viking Age are both particular research...
This article discusses two acts of mutilation and torture during the struggles for royal power in th...
Anglo-Saxon authorities often punished lawbreakers with harsh corporal penalties, such as execution,...
The assembly was a place where legal cases were solved, but also where various issues with relevance...
This paper concerns the treatment of people at execution places and it is focusing on Gotland and th...
Most written evidence regarding warfare in Viking Age Scandinavia originates either fromcontemporane...
The thesis analyses the change in the way that violence was addressed in English law between the lat...
"The aim of this book is to investigate the taking and giving of hostages in peace processes during ...
Dianne Hall In 1312 the Justiciary court in Clonmel found that Adam, son of John de Midia, had dealt...
THE early history of English criminal law lies hidden behind the laconic formulas of the rolls and l...
Nordic Homicide in Deep Time draws a unique and detailed picture of developments in human interperso...
abstract: Warriors, as all members of society in medieval Scandinavia, were bound by a course of rul...
This paper takes a fresh look at the use of judicial violence in the societies of Viking-Age England...
The Viking Age has long been understood to be a time of great violence. However, research in the las...
Anglo-Scandinavian literary and legal texts give evidence of two cultures which shared similar attit...
Violence and violent death in the pre-Christian Scandinavian Viking Age are both particular research...
This article discusses two acts of mutilation and torture during the struggles for royal power in th...
Anglo-Saxon authorities often punished lawbreakers with harsh corporal penalties, such as execution,...
The assembly was a place where legal cases were solved, but also where various issues with relevance...
This paper concerns the treatment of people at execution places and it is focusing on Gotland and th...
Most written evidence regarding warfare in Viking Age Scandinavia originates either fromcontemporane...
The thesis analyses the change in the way that violence was addressed in English law between the lat...
"The aim of this book is to investigate the taking and giving of hostages in peace processes during ...
Dianne Hall In 1312 the Justiciary court in Clonmel found that Adam, son of John de Midia, had dealt...
THE early history of English criminal law lies hidden behind the laconic formulas of the rolls and l...
Nordic Homicide in Deep Time draws a unique and detailed picture of developments in human interperso...
abstract: Warriors, as all members of society in medieval Scandinavia, were bound by a course of rul...