首页> 外文OA文献 >The Execution and Burial of Criminals in Early Medieval England, c. 850-1150: an examination of changes in judicial punishment across the Norman Conquest
【2h】

The Execution and Burial of Criminals in Early Medieval England, c. 850-1150: an examination of changes in judicial punishment across the Norman Conquest

机译:中世纪早期英格兰对罪犯的处决和埋葬c。 850-1150年:对整个诺曼征服期间司法处罚变化的考察

摘要

In later Anglo-Saxon England, executed offenders and, probably also, other social deviants were separated from the rest of the community in death. They were buried in cemeteries far from settlements but in raised landscapes which would have been visible from frequented areas – so-called ‘execution cemeteries’. However, from the second half of the eleventh century, these deviant cemeteries appear to have fallen out of use. This thesis seeks to discover where criminals where buried after the Norman Conquest and examines the influences behind the changes in funerary treatment of judicial offenders. Numerous published excavation reports and databases were analysed for evidence of funerary deviance – i.e. any trait unusual for normative Christian burial – but with particular focus on evidence for decapitation or for individuals remaining bound at the wrists at the time of interment, both of which are the most direct indicators of potential execution. While 343 individuals were buried in Anglo-Saxon execution cemeteries – sixty-two of these decapitated and seventy-three potentially bound – only three such deviants could be identified from the Anglo-Norman period. To inform on this transformation in burial tradition, historical evidence, particularly legislation and historical chronicles, were used to aid in an examination of capital punishment from c.850 to c.1150 to better understand the treatment of judicial offenders from conviction to execution. Using both the written and funerary evidence, it is argued that that capital punishment was modified but did not cease to be used after the Conquest and that offenders executed under Norman rule were buried among and in the same manner as other members of the Christian community. The influences behind these changes in the treatment of criminals around the event of the Norman Conquest were not simply a result of the transition to Norman rule but were also a reaction to theological developments occurring in European Christianity.
机译:在后来的盎格鲁撒克逊英格兰,处死了罪犯,也许还有其他社会变态者在死后与社区其他人分开。他们被埋葬在远离定居点的墓地中,但在人们经常可以看到的高架景观中,即所谓的“执行墓地”。但是,从11世纪下半叶开始,这些异常的墓地似乎已不使用。本论文旨在发现诺曼征服后将罪犯埋葬在何处,并研究对司法罪犯的丧葬待遇变化产生的影响。对大量已发表的挖掘报告和数据库进行了分析,以发现丧葬偏差的证据(即规范的基督教葬礼不常见的任何特征),但特别侧重于斩首的证据或被刺穿时仍束缚在腕部的人,这两个都是潜在执行力的最直接指标。虽然有343个人被埋葬在盎格鲁-撒克逊执行公墓中,其中有62个人被斩首,而其中73个人可能被绑架,但从盎格鲁-诺曼时代可以辨认出三个这样的人。为了说明这种tradition葬传统的转变,历史证据,特别是立法和历史编年史,被用于辅助研究从850年到1150年的死刑,以更好地理解从定罪到死刑的司法罪犯待遇。有人使用书面证据和丧葬证据,都认为死刑已被修改,但在征服之后并未停止使用,死于诺曼统治下的罪犯被埋葬在基督教徒的其他成员之中,并以同样的方式被埋葬。发生诺曼​​征服事件后,对罪犯待遇的这些变化背后的影响不仅是向诺曼统治过渡的结果,而且是对欧洲基督教神学发展的反应。

著录项

  • 作者

    Mattison Alyxandra;

  • 作者单位
  • 年度 2016
  • 总页数
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种
  • 中图分类

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号