An Awful and Impressive Spectacle: Crime Scene Executions in Scotland, 1801-1841.

Rachel Bennett
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Abstract

Early nineteenth-century Britain witnessed rising numbers of offenders facing capital punishment and a plethora of legal and public discourse debating the criminal justice system. This article will examine a distinct Scottish response to the problem in the form of crime scene executions. By the turn of the nineteenth century it had long been the established practice of the Scottish courts to order that capitally convicted offenders would be executed at an established 'common place'. However, between 1801 and 1841, the decision was taken to execute 37 offenders at the scene of their crimes. This article argues that in the face of an unprecedented number of offenders facing the hangman's noose the Scottish judges chose to exercise this penal option which had not been used to a similar extent since the mid-eighteenth century. In turn these events had a multiplicity of impact and provoked responses ranging from a morbid curiosity to witness the spectacle to anxiety and outright disdain at its intrusion into areas previously unsullied by the last punishment of the law.

可怕而令人印象深刻的场面:1801-1841 年苏格兰的犯罪现场处决。
十九世纪早期的英国,面临死刑的罪犯人数不断增加,法律和公众对刑事司法制度的讨论也层出不穷。本文将研究苏格兰以犯罪现场处决的形式对这一问题做出的独特回应。在十九世纪之交,苏格兰法院长期以来的既定做法是下令在既定的 "公共场所 "处决被判处死刑的罪犯。然而,在 1801 年至 1841 年期间,有 37 名罪犯被决定在犯罪现场执行死刑。本文认为,面对数量空前的罪犯面临绞刑,苏格兰法官选择了这一自 18 世纪中期以来从未在类似程度上使用过的刑罚选择。反过来,这些事件也产生了多重影响,并激起了人们的反应,从对目睹这一奇观的病态好奇,到对其闯入以前未曾受到法律最后惩罚的领域的焦虑和彻底蔑视。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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