Early nineteenth-century Britain witnessed rising numbers of offenders facing capital punishment and a plethora of legal and public discourse debating the criminal justice system. This article will examine a distinct Scottish response to the problem in the form of crime scene executions. By the turn of the nineteenth century, it had long been the established practice of the Scottish courts to order that capitally convicted offenders would be executed at an established “common place”. However, between 1801 and 1841, the decision was taken to execute thirty-seven offenders at the scene of their crimes. This article argues that, in the face of an unprecedented number of offenders facing the hangman’s noose, the Scottish judges chose to exercis...
Those convicted of homicide were hanged on the public gallows before being dissected under the Murde...
From 1830 to the abolition of public executions in 1868, there was a growing critique of the executi...
A mid-eighteenth-century traveller noted with surprise that parents in London regularly took their c...
Capital punishment occupies a central area of investigation within the annals of Western European pe...
The first third of the nineteenth century was a period of debate over the infliction of the death pe...
La Grande-Bretagne du début du 19e siècle connut un nombre croissant de condamnés à mort et un débat...
This book provides the most in-depth study of capital punishment in Scotland between the mid-eightee...
The changing presentation of punishment, in particular execution, has been at the heart of much crim...
The Murder Act (1752) decreed that homicide perpetrators should be hanged and sent for post-executio...
The most celebrated and influential history of execution in England, V.A.C. Gatrell’s The Hanging Tr...
[From introduction] This chapter will explore the history of execution and its aftermath across the ...
From 1830 to the abolition of public executions in 1868, there was a growing critique of the executi...
Dennis Doolan, of King’s County, and Patrick Redding, from Tipperary, were hung at the scene of thei...
This project is a qualitative examination of homicide in Scotland during the period 1836-1869, putti...
Copyright © 2008 Cambridge University PressCapital punishment in British colonial Africa was not jus...
Those convicted of homicide were hanged on the public gallows before being dissected under the Murde...
From 1830 to the abolition of public executions in 1868, there was a growing critique of the executi...
A mid-eighteenth-century traveller noted with surprise that parents in London regularly took their c...
Capital punishment occupies a central area of investigation within the annals of Western European pe...
The first third of the nineteenth century was a period of debate over the infliction of the death pe...
La Grande-Bretagne du début du 19e siècle connut un nombre croissant de condamnés à mort et un débat...
This book provides the most in-depth study of capital punishment in Scotland between the mid-eightee...
The changing presentation of punishment, in particular execution, has been at the heart of much crim...
The Murder Act (1752) decreed that homicide perpetrators should be hanged and sent for post-executio...
The most celebrated and influential history of execution in England, V.A.C. Gatrell’s The Hanging Tr...
[From introduction] This chapter will explore the history of execution and its aftermath across the ...
From 1830 to the abolition of public executions in 1868, there was a growing critique of the executi...
Dennis Doolan, of King’s County, and Patrick Redding, from Tipperary, were hung at the scene of thei...
This project is a qualitative examination of homicide in Scotland during the period 1836-1869, putti...
Copyright © 2008 Cambridge University PressCapital punishment in British colonial Africa was not jus...
Those convicted of homicide were hanged on the public gallows before being dissected under the Murde...
From 1830 to the abolition of public executions in 1868, there was a growing critique of the executi...
A mid-eighteenth-century traveller noted with surprise that parents in London regularly took their c...