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Author Gatrell, Vic, 1941-

Title The hanging tree : execution and the English people 1770-1868 / V.A.C. Gatrell
Published Oxford [England] ; New York [N.Y.] : Oxford University Press, 1994

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Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 W'PONDS  364.660941 Gat/Hte  AVAILABLE
Description xix, 634 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Summary Hanging people for small crimes as well as grave, the Bloody Penal Code was at its most active between 1770 and 1830. Some 7,000 men and women were executed on public scaffolds then, watched by crowds of thousands. Hanging was confined to murderers thereafter, but these were still killed in public until 1868. Clearly the gallows loomed over much of social life in this period. But how did those who watched, read about, or ordered these strangulations feel about the terror and suffering inflicted in the law's name? What kind of justice was delivered, and how did it change? This book is the first to explore what a wide range of people felt about these ceremonies (rather than what a few famous men thought and wrote about them). A history of mentalities, emotions, and attitudes rather than of policies and ideas, it analyses responses to the scaffold at all social levels: among the crowds which gathered to watch executions; among 'polite' commentators from Boswell and Byron on to Fry, Tha
ckeray, and Dickens; and among the judges, home secretary, and monarch who decided who should hang and who should be reprieved. Drawing on letters, diaries, ballads, broadsides, and images, as well as on poignant appeals for mercy which historians until now have barely explored, the book surveys changing attitudes to death and suffering, 'sensibility' and 'sympathy', and demonstrates that the long retreat from public hanging owed less to the growth of a humane sensibility than to the development of new methods of punishment and law enforcement, and to polite classes' deepening squeamishness and fear of the scaffold crowd. This gripping study is essential reading for anyone interested in the processes which have 'civilized' our social life. Challenging many conventional understandings of the period, V. A. C. Gatrell sets new agendas for all students of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century culture and society, while reflecting uncompromisingly on the origins and limits of our modern attitu
des to other people's misfortunes. Panoramic in range, scholarly in method, and compelling in argument, this is one of those rare histories which both shift our sense of the past and speak powerfully to the present
Analysis Capital punishment History
Great Britain
Capital punishment History
Great Britain
Notes Includes index
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and indexes
Notes The Royal Historical Society Whitfield Book Prize, 1994
Subject Capital punishment -- Great Britain -- History.
Executions and executioners -- Great Britain -- History.
Hanging -- Great Britain -- History.
LC no. 94004108
ISBN 0198204132