ABSTRACT

This four volume collection looks at the essential issues concerning crime and punishment in the long nineteenth-century. Through the presentation of primary source documents, it explores the development of a modern pattern of crime and a modern system of penal policy and practice, illustrating the shift from eighteenth century patterns of crime (including the clash between rural custom and law) and punishment (unsystematic, selective, public, and body-centred) to nineteenth century patterns of crime (urban, increasing, and a metaphor for social instability and moral decay, before a remarkable late-century crime decline) and punishment (reform-minded, soul-centred, penetrative, uniform and private in application).

The first two volumes focus on crime itself and illustrate the role of the criminal courts, the rise and fall of crime, the causes of crime as understood by contemporary investigators, the police ways of ‘knowing the criminal,’ the role of ‘moral panics,’ and the definition of the ‘criminal classes’ and ‘habitual offenders’. The final two volumes explore means of punishment and look at the shift from public and bodily punishments to transportation, the rise of the penitentiary, the convict prison system, and the late-century decline in the prison population and loss of faith in the prison.

chapter |19 pages

General Introduction

chapter |2 pages

Images

part 1|33 pages

Magistrates and the Sessions' Courts

part 2|29 pages

Judges and the Assize Courts

part 3|43 pages

Prerogative of Mercy

chapter 10|2 pages

Sir James Eyre, Mercy, Death Penalty, 1787

chapter 13|2 pages

Baron Hotham to Lord Auckland, 1800

part 5|40 pages

Public Punishments

part 7|18 pages

Resisting Abolition

part 8|72 pages

Sentencing

chapter 39|3 pages

Theft

Grand larceny, 1820, Joseph Howell; pickpocketing, 1820, William Harwood