Preview

Lex Russica

Advanced search

Crime and Punishment in Medieval Wales

https://doi.org/10.17803/1729-5920.2016.121.12.184-192

Abstract

The article is devoted to the analysis of the provisions of the Welsh Laws of Hywel the Good, related to the criminal law. The law remained the main source of law in Wales until the conquest of the Principality of English by King Edward I in 1284, and the introduction of Statute of Rhuddlan in 1284. The creation of the Act is attributed to the Welsh King Hywel the Good (X century), although the earliest surviving manuscripts of the Act are dated back to the 13th century. Particular attention is given to the substance of the third part of the Act "Justices' Test Book", original manuals, knowledge of which was mandatory for the administration of the duties of a judge. This part of the Law distinguishes the contemporary medieval vaults from the Laws of Hywel the Good. "Justices' Test Book", which is a set of rules of criminal and procedural law, consists of subsections, dealing with murder, theft, fire, compensation for damage caused to property, personal injury. The main part of the "Justices' Test Book" is dedicated to order payment of all sorts of compensation and fines associated with the commission of an offence. The author emphasizes the role of the clan in Welsh society: all fines and compensation payments were laid on the shoulders of the perpetrator and his relatives. A major issue addressed in the article is the evidence of the commission of the offence by the accused. The author draws the attention to the process of announcement and the process of finding an acquirer in bad faith of assets recognized as stolen. It is interesting that such a rule is found in the Russian Justice and Swedish Vestgjotalage. The author finds the ascendancy of compensation payments for damage caused prevailing over the above penalties in Welsh law, explaining this relative weakness of public authorities on the one hand and the other by legal tradition, as even the increased power of Welsh Princes in the XII-XIII centuries. has not led to significant changes in the rules.

About the Author

M. E. Loshkareva
National Research University "Higher School of Economics»
Russian Federation


References

1. Вестгёталаг. Старшая редакция // Из ранней истории шведского народа и государства: первые описания и законы / сост. А. А. Сванидзе. - М., 1999.

2. Минеева Т. Г., Романовская В. Б. Конфликт обычного права Уэльса и английского common law в XIII- XV вв. // История государства и права. - 2010. - № 2.

3. Правда русская / под ред. Б.Д. Грекова. - Т. 2. - М.-Л., 1947.

4. Ancient Laws and Institutes of England. MDCCCXL. - L., 1840.

5. Brut Y Tywysogyon or The Chronicle of the Princes. Peniarth MS. 20 Version. - Cardiff : University of Wales Press, 1952.

6. Cichon M. Insult and Redress in «Cyfraith Hywel Dda» and Welsh Arthurian Romance // Arthuriana.- Vol. 10. - № 3. - Welsh Arthurian Literature (FALL 2000). - P. 27-43.

7. Codex Diplomaticus aevi Saxonici, opera Johannes / ed. by M. Kemble. II. - L.,1840.

8. Maitland F. W. The Laws of Wales. - The Kindred and the Blood Feud. P. 5 // Online Library of Liberty. URL: http://oll.libertyfund.org.

9. Pryce H. The Context and Purpose of the Earliest Welsh Lawbooks // Cambrian Medieval Celtic Studies. - 39. - Summer 2000.

10. The Law of Hywel Dda / ed. by D. Jenkins. - Ceredigion : Gomer Press, 2000.

11. The Mabinogion / trans. J. Gantz. - L.-N. Y. : Penguin Books, 1976.

12. The Statutes of Wales / coll. and arr. by I. Bowen. - L., 1908.


Review

For citations:


Loshkareva M.E. Crime and Punishment in Medieval Wales. Lex Russica. 2016;(12):184-192. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.17803/1729-5920.2016.121.12.184-192

Views: 885


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.


ISSN 1729-5920 (Print)
ISSN 2686-7869 (Online)