This thesis explores the crowds that attended London's executions, pillories and public whippings during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. It aims to reappraise a literature describing the carnivalesque and voyeuristic nature of popular behaviour, and to trace a continuum in the public's active engagement with the criminal justice system between 1783 and 1868. By employing a range of little used sources to examine the biographical, geographical and social texture of punishment audiences, it details the lives and motivations of the men, women and children who assembled to watch these often brutal events. In the process, this thesis significantly revises our received understanding of the troublesome punishment 'mob', the unruliness and...
Hanging High for Entertainment; A Popular Performance in Tyburn, London This project delves into the...
The changing presentation of punishment, in particular execution, has been at the heart of much crim...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis examines changing English penal practices within...
This dissertation takes a journey into the underworld of public execution in eighteenth and nineteen...
A mid-eighteenth-century traveller noted with surprise that parents in London regularly took their c...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation provides a broad historical survey of atti...
From 1830 to the abolition of public executions in 1868, there was a growing critique of the executi...
From 1830 to the abolition of public executions in 1868, there was a growing critique of the executi...
Between 1700 and 1900 the British government stopped punishing the bodies of London’s convicts and i...
This dissertation looks at the development of criminal imprisonment and the evolution of prison syst...
Between 1700 and 1900 the British government stopped punishing the bodies of London’s convicts and i...
Violence in the penal system and the changing attitudes to it as a spectacle in the eighteenth and ...
This short essay explains the various methods of punishment that existed in early modern Europe, and...
Hanging High for Entertainment; A Popular Performance in Tyburn, London This project delves into the...
Hanging High for Entertainment; A Popular Performance in Tyburn, London This project delves into the...
Hanging High for Entertainment; A Popular Performance in Tyburn, London This project delves into the...
The changing presentation of punishment, in particular execution, has been at the heart of much crim...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis examines changing English penal practices within...
This dissertation takes a journey into the underworld of public execution in eighteenth and nineteen...
A mid-eighteenth-century traveller noted with surprise that parents in London regularly took their c...
grantor: University of TorontoThis dissertation provides a broad historical survey of atti...
From 1830 to the abolition of public executions in 1868, there was a growing critique of the executi...
From 1830 to the abolition of public executions in 1868, there was a growing critique of the executi...
Between 1700 and 1900 the British government stopped punishing the bodies of London’s convicts and i...
This dissertation looks at the development of criminal imprisonment and the evolution of prison syst...
Between 1700 and 1900 the British government stopped punishing the bodies of London’s convicts and i...
Violence in the penal system and the changing attitudes to it as a spectacle in the eighteenth and ...
This short essay explains the various methods of punishment that existed in early modern Europe, and...
Hanging High for Entertainment; A Popular Performance in Tyburn, London This project delves into the...
Hanging High for Entertainment; A Popular Performance in Tyburn, London This project delves into the...
Hanging High for Entertainment; A Popular Performance in Tyburn, London This project delves into the...
The changing presentation of punishment, in particular execution, has been at the heart of much crim...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis examines changing English penal practices within...