Women, Crime and the Courts in Early Modern EnglandRecent years have witnessed a considerable body of published research on both crime and women in the early modern period. There have been few attempts, however, to synthesize such studies and to examine in detail the relationship between the law and women's lives. This collection of seven original essays explores that relationship by examining the nature and extent of women's criminal activity and surveying the connections between women, their legal position, and their involvement in legal processes. The words, actions, and treatment of women who came before the courts as plaintiffs, defendants, and witnesses are examined here in a variety of contexts, ranging from the assertion of a variety of rights to scolding, thieving, and witchcraft. The contributors demonstrate that women were far from passive victims in a male-dominated legal system. As both breakers of the law and important agents of its enforcement, women were far more assertive than their formal legal positions would suggest. The contributors are Garthine Walker, Jenny Kermode, Laura Gowing, Martin Ingram, Jim Sharpe, Malcolm Gaskill, Geoffrey L. Hudson, and Tim Stretton. |
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Contents
womens slander litigation | 26 |
a crisis in gender | 48 |
Women theft and the world of stolen goods | 81 |
Copyright | |
5 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Women, Crime and the Courts in Early Modern England Jennifer Kermode,Garthine Walker No preview available - 1994 |
Women, Crime and the Courts in Early Modern England Jennifer Kermode,Garthine Walker No preview available - 1994 |
Women, Crime and the Courts in Early Modern England Jennifer Kermode,Lecturer in Modern History Garthine Walker No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
accused acting actions activity Anne appear applied authority behaviour called Cambridge cent century Chesh RO Cheshire church courts claimed clothes common concerned confessions context court crime criminal custom customary defamation described early modern England Easter economic Elizabeth Elizabethan English evidence examination example experience female gender given historians household husband important indictments insult interest involved justice land late less litigation lives London male manor Margaret mark Mary means Michaelmas named neighbours noted offence official Oxford parish pension period petition popular position practice presented prosecuted punishment quarter received records referred relations relief Requests scolds sessions seventeenth seventeenth-century sexual Sharpe slander social society suggests Thomas tion trials University war widows whore widows wife witch witchcraft witnesses woman women