The British Execution: 15001964
By (Author) Dr Stephen Banks
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Shire Publications
10th September 2013
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
European history
Penology and punishment
364.660941
56
Width 142mm, Height 201mm, Spine 5mm
146g
An illustrated introduction to the death penalty and the means of capital punishment in England since Tudor times.
Executions have played a crucial if grisly and controversial part in British history and provided the bloody climax to many a life, from Mary, Queen of Scots, Charles I and Dick Turpin to untold thousands of anonymous wretches whose names are now forgotten. With the help of numerous illustrations, Stephen Banks details the history of formal execution in Britain, examining the fates of the grandest monarchs, the highest-profile gentlemen, the most learned heretics and the most petty of criminals. He looks also at the crowds, spectacle and grim pageantry that surrounded these events, helping us to understand their morbid but undeniable fascination and detailing the process that led to capital punishments abolition in Britain.
Stephen Banks is a university lecturer and director of the Forum for Legal and Historical Research at the University of Reading and his main research interests are in law, anthropology and cultural history, with a particular focus on violence and the relationship between law and honour culture. He also wrote Duels and Duelling for Shire.