JAMES GIVEN has produced the first systematic book-length treatment of the sociology of medieval English crime. His work does not pretend to be comprehensive: it deals only with homicide. Nor does it cover more than a century, the thirteenth; the author has wisely left the earlier system of criminal law, based on private compensation, to other scholars, and he says just enough about late thirteenth- and early fourteenth- century social and legal change to suggest he believes that that period, too, must await its own interpretation. Still, the social history of homicide in the thirteenth century proves itself fascinating terrain, and we shall better understand what came before and after in the light of Given\u27s account
This thesis aims to establish, by scrutiny and discussion of the records of the coroners themselves,...
This thesis is an examination of gentry perceptions of violence in fourteenth-century England. It is...
Fourteenth century England experienced social changes which influenced the attitude to crown law an...
JAMES GIVEN has produced the first systematic book-length treatment of the sociology of medieval Eng...
A Review of Society and Homicide in Thirteenth-Century England by James Buchanan Given, and Crime an...
Genet Jean-Philippe. James B. Given, Society and homicide in thirteenth century England. In: Annales...
Slowly but surely the history of English criminal law is being rewritten. Abundant monographs, artic...
THE early history of English criminal law lies hidden behind the laconic formulas of the rolls and l...
Crime in England, 1550-1800, is the second collection of essays on the social history of crime and t...
The early English jury was self-informing and composed of persons supposed to have first-hand knowle...
256 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1983.The goals of the study were t...
The materials for studying the nature, incidence, and distribution of crime in later medieval Englan...
At all times in the history of medieval English law, homicides were divided into two classes. There ...
Schmitt Jean-Claude. James Buchanan Given. — Society and Homicide in Thirteenth Century England. Sta...
Malcolm Gaskill is one of a number of young British historians who have studied crime and related ma...
This thesis aims to establish, by scrutiny and discussion of the records of the coroners themselves,...
This thesis is an examination of gentry perceptions of violence in fourteenth-century England. It is...
Fourteenth century England experienced social changes which influenced the attitude to crown law an...
JAMES GIVEN has produced the first systematic book-length treatment of the sociology of medieval Eng...
A Review of Society and Homicide in Thirteenth-Century England by James Buchanan Given, and Crime an...
Genet Jean-Philippe. James B. Given, Society and homicide in thirteenth century England. In: Annales...
Slowly but surely the history of English criminal law is being rewritten. Abundant monographs, artic...
THE early history of English criminal law lies hidden behind the laconic formulas of the rolls and l...
Crime in England, 1550-1800, is the second collection of essays on the social history of crime and t...
The early English jury was self-informing and composed of persons supposed to have first-hand knowle...
256 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1983.The goals of the study were t...
The materials for studying the nature, incidence, and distribution of crime in later medieval Englan...
At all times in the history of medieval English law, homicides were divided into two classes. There ...
Schmitt Jean-Claude. James Buchanan Given. — Society and Homicide in Thirteenth Century England. Sta...
Malcolm Gaskill is one of a number of young British historians who have studied crime and related ma...
This thesis aims to establish, by scrutiny and discussion of the records of the coroners themselves,...
This thesis is an examination of gentry perceptions of violence in fourteenth-century England. It is...
Fourteenth century England experienced social changes which influenced the attitude to crown law an...