The Spectacle of Suffering: Executions and the Evolution of Repression: From a Preindustrial Metropolis to the European ExperienceCambridge University Press, 18 oct. 1984 - 274 pages Present-day unease about the treatment of lawbreakers has deep historical roots. Pieter Spierenburg traces the long period of evolution that gave rise to the modern debate about punishment, and relates it to the development of Western European society. He argues that two elements, the public character of punishment and its infliction of physical suffering, were originally at the heart of the penal system. From the sixteenth century onwards, however, these elements began to decline. Spierenburg explains that this development reflected a wider change of attitudes which, in turn, was related to changes in society at large. The book deals successively with each of the parties involved in public executions: the hangman, the magistrates, the crowd, and the victim. Among the themes dicussed are the infamous reputation of the excutioner, the functions of ceremonial, and the social background of those about to suffer. |
Table des matières
CHAPTER | 13 |
CHAPTER THREE | 43 |
CHAPTER FOUR | 81 |
CHAPTER FIVE | 110 |
CHAPTER | 183 |
CONCLUSION | 200 |
Archival series used for the quantitative investigation | 237 |
| 260 | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
Absolute numbers Amsterdam ancien régime attitudes authorities beheading Bicker Raye Bontemantel branding burglary burgomasters Burning sword capital execution capital punishment ceremony chapter condemned confessed Confinement convict corporal penalty corpse court crime criminal justice Dam Square death penalty decade delinquents discussed domestic theft Dutch Republic early modern period eighteenth century Europe executioner Exposure and whipping gallows gallows field garrotted guilders gypsies Haarlem hanged hangman Holland Huberts Ibid Immink imposed infamy infraction of banishment Jews judges justice day Keurboek later Linebaugh magistrates Minor punishment mounted the scaffold Netherlands offenses Oppelt penal system percentage persons physical punishment placard practice preindustrial prisoner private vengeance prosecution prostitutes public executions public justice public punishment qualified thefts Quanter referred relatively repression sample scaffold punishment scaffold series schepenen schout sentence servant seventeenth century severity simple theft sixteenth century spectators stadholder thieves torture town hall trial usually violence Volewijk wheel whipping indoors

