Punishing the dead?


Book Description

What can we learn from suicide, that most personal and often inscrutable of acts? This strikingly original work shows how, from treatment of suicides in historic Britain, unique insights can be gained into the development of both social and political relationships and cultural attitudes in a period of profound change. Drawing ideas from a range of disciplines including law, philosophy, the social sciences, and literary studies as well as history, the book comprehensively analyses how successful and attempted suicide was viewed by the living and how they dealt with its aftermath, using a wide variety of legal, fiscal, and literary sources. By investigating the distinctive institutional environments and mental worlds of early modern England and Scotland, it explains why suicide was treated as a crime subject to financial and corporal punishments, and it questions modern assumptions about the apparent 'enlightenment' of attitudes in the eighteenth century. The book is divided into two parts. Part one examines the role of lordship in managing social and economic relationships following suicide and illuminates the importance of distinctive punishments inflicted on suicides' bodies for understanding historic communities. The second part of the book places suicide in its cultural context, analysing the attitudes of early modern people to those who killed themselves. It explores religious beliefs and the place of the devil as well as secular and medical understandings of suicide's causes in sources that include provincial newspapers. Informed by continental as well as British research, Punishing the Dead? explicitly compares England and Scotland, making this a completely British history. It also offers intriguing evidence for the importance of cultural regions and local vernaculars that transcend national boundaries.




Local Customs and Common Laws


Book Description

Lawyers in Scotland in the later sixteenth century took a disproportionate interest in the law governing maritime commerce. Some essays in this collection consider their handling of the subject in treatises they wrote. Other essays, however, show that disputes relating to maritime trade were handled in a different way in the courts of the towns at which ships arrived. Further essays examine the relationship between these contrasting perspectives. Although the essays focus on the law governing maritime commerce in Scotland, they also contribute to a wider debate about the nature of maritime law in early-modern Europe.




Bulletin


Book Description







The House of Gordon: Bibliography of Gordon genealogy (cont'd.) Index to lands owned by Lesmoir Gordons. Historiae compendium de origine et incremento Gordoniae familiae, Johanne Ferrerio, auctore ... Ed. by Rev. Stephen Ree. Origo et progressus familiae Gordoniorum de Huntley ... auctore Roberto Gordonio ... Ed. by Rev. Stephen Ree. Tables compyled and collected together by ... Sir Robert Gordon, knight ... continued by Maister Robert Gordon his sone, 1659. Ed. by the Rev. J.M. Joass. Lesmoir, By Captain Douglas Wimberley. Cadets of Lesmoir. By Captain Wimberley and the editor. Gordon ballads. Ed. by the Rev. Stephen Ree


Book Description