This paper uses one particular case study of homicide to suggest that our historical understanding analysis of the use of discretion and the pardoning process in the criminal justice system is in need of revision. In 1769 a murder was committed on Westminster Bridge that would eventually involve some of the highest persons in the land in a long drawn out campaign to spare the lives of those responsible. In this paper I examine the process of pardoning much more deeply than has previously been the case. Here there was an attempt to subvert the discretionary power of the elite by the use of an ancient right to private redress, which exposed the appeal process to public debate. As a result every twist and turn was reported in the pages of th...
A mid-eighteenth-century traveller noted with surprise that parents in London regularly took their c...
On January 14, 1767 Samuel Orton, London entrepreneur was driven to be hanged by a mourning coach. M...
[From the introduction]. Rosalind Crone’s chapter also considers popular crime and justice literat...
In 1760, Laurence Shirley, the Fourth Earl Ferrers, killed his steward in cold blood. He was found g...
This dissertation examines the role of the Royal Prerogative of Mercy--the pardoning and mitigating ...
Historians of early-modern England and British colonies have productively applied Douglas Hay’s germ...
Almost half of those receiving the death sentence in late-Victorian and Edwardian England were repri...
The study of the royal power of pardon illuminates the English criminal justice system, particularly...
In late medieval Europe, the legal power to pardon criminals was one of the most important manifesta...
The exercise of the death penalty in England in the 19th century has long been a subject of academic...
The criminal law has often been seen as central to the rule of the eighteenth-century landed élite i...
Over the past 30 years, few sources have been the subject of more scholarly attention than medieval ...
Abstract: In 1752, the English Parliament enacted <i>An Act for the Better Preventing the Horrid Cri...
This thesis explores the crowds that attended London's executions, pillories and public whippings du...
Basing themselves on the French model, the Dukes of Burgundy developed the practice of pardon for cr...
A mid-eighteenth-century traveller noted with surprise that parents in London regularly took their c...
On January 14, 1767 Samuel Orton, London entrepreneur was driven to be hanged by a mourning coach. M...
[From the introduction]. Rosalind Crone’s chapter also considers popular crime and justice literat...
In 1760, Laurence Shirley, the Fourth Earl Ferrers, killed his steward in cold blood. He was found g...
This dissertation examines the role of the Royal Prerogative of Mercy--the pardoning and mitigating ...
Historians of early-modern England and British colonies have productively applied Douglas Hay’s germ...
Almost half of those receiving the death sentence in late-Victorian and Edwardian England were repri...
The study of the royal power of pardon illuminates the English criminal justice system, particularly...
In late medieval Europe, the legal power to pardon criminals was one of the most important manifesta...
The exercise of the death penalty in England in the 19th century has long been a subject of academic...
The criminal law has often been seen as central to the rule of the eighteenth-century landed élite i...
Over the past 30 years, few sources have been the subject of more scholarly attention than medieval ...
Abstract: In 1752, the English Parliament enacted <i>An Act for the Better Preventing the Horrid Cri...
This thesis explores the crowds that attended London's executions, pillories and public whippings du...
Basing themselves on the French model, the Dukes of Burgundy developed the practice of pardon for cr...
A mid-eighteenth-century traveller noted with surprise that parents in London regularly took their c...
On January 14, 1767 Samuel Orton, London entrepreneur was driven to be hanged by a mourning coach. M...
[From the introduction]. Rosalind Crone’s chapter also considers popular crime and justice literat...