This article examines the English law of petit treason (murder of a husband by his wife or a master by a servant or a religious superior by a religious inferior) and its implications for married women charged with murdering their husbands. From 1351-1828, a woman accused of killing her husband was liable to be indicted not for willful murder but for the aggravated offense of petit treason and, until 1790, she faced public execution by burning if convicted. Relying on eighteenth century legal treatises, reported cases, press accounts of women\u27s trials, and second my sources, the author discusses the cases of several women tried for petit treason. The general legal position of married women in eighteenth century England is also examined, a...
Women in the medieval English law courts have too often been regarded as passive objects of legal re...
In this Article, Professor Pruitt discusses conceptions of the injury associated with defamation law...
The societies in the Arden of Faversham (1592) and The Tragedy of Mariam (1613) reflect the patriarc...
This article examines the English law of petit treason (murder of a husband by his wife or a master ...
Servant theft against their masters during the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries was c...
This dissertation relates to treason and sodomy crimes that were fundamental in all pre-modern socie...
Women played a surprisingly large role in the prosecution of crime in medieval England. Although law...
With regard to English common law, medieval women were able to participate in the curial process in ...
This article examines the involvement of the Marquise de Brinvilliers, Catherine La Voisin, and the ...
Abstract: Until the late nineteenth century, the activities of English women were curtailed by the c...
Single Women in Early Modern England were treated as outcasts in society unlike their married counte...
Already in Anglo-Saxon times, England condemned polygamy as a serious moral offense. But until 1604,...
Cet article abordera les procès des femmes accusées du meurtre de leur mari, « petty treason », un c...
In the eighteenth century, the condition of English wives under ‘coverture’ was both defended as one...
In the eighteenth century, the condition of English wives under ‘coverture’ was both defended as one...
Women in the medieval English law courts have too often been regarded as passive objects of legal re...
In this Article, Professor Pruitt discusses conceptions of the injury associated with defamation law...
The societies in the Arden of Faversham (1592) and The Tragedy of Mariam (1613) reflect the patriarc...
This article examines the English law of petit treason (murder of a husband by his wife or a master ...
Servant theft against their masters during the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries was c...
This dissertation relates to treason and sodomy crimes that were fundamental in all pre-modern socie...
Women played a surprisingly large role in the prosecution of crime in medieval England. Although law...
With regard to English common law, medieval women were able to participate in the curial process in ...
This article examines the involvement of the Marquise de Brinvilliers, Catherine La Voisin, and the ...
Abstract: Until the late nineteenth century, the activities of English women were curtailed by the c...
Single Women in Early Modern England were treated as outcasts in society unlike their married counte...
Already in Anglo-Saxon times, England condemned polygamy as a serious moral offense. But until 1604,...
Cet article abordera les procès des femmes accusées du meurtre de leur mari, « petty treason », un c...
In the eighteenth century, the condition of English wives under ‘coverture’ was both defended as one...
In the eighteenth century, the condition of English wives under ‘coverture’ was both defended as one...
Women in the medieval English law courts have too often been regarded as passive objects of legal re...
In this Article, Professor Pruitt discusses conceptions of the injury associated with defamation law...
The societies in the Arden of Faversham (1592) and The Tragedy of Mariam (1613) reflect the patriarc...