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Crime, Courts and Community in Mid-Victorian Wales

Crime, Courts and Community in Mid-Victorian Wales

Rachael Jones

(2018)

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Book Details

Abstract

This book explores the relationship between the justice system and local society at a time when the Industrial Revolution was changing the characteristics of mid Wales. Crime, Courts and Community in Mid-Victorian Wales investigates the Welsh nineteenth-century experiences of both the high-born and the low within the context of law enforcement, and considers major issues affecting Welsh and wider criminal historiography: the nature of class in the Welsh countryside and small towns, the role of women, the ways in which the justice system functioned for communities at that time, the questions of how people related to the criminal courts system, and how integrated and accepting of it they were. We read the accounts of defendants, witnesses and law- enforcers through transcription of courtroom testimonies and other records, and the experiences of all sections of the public are studied. Life stories – of both offenders and prosecutors of crime – are followed, providing a unique picture of this Welsh county community, its offences and legal practices.


Table of Contents

Section Title Page Action Price
Cover i
Title Page iv
Copyright v
Dedication vi
Contents viii
Acknowledgements x
List of Figures xii
List of Tables xiv
Abbreviations xvi
Introduction 1
1: Montgomeryshire 10
2: The Legal System 31
3: Montgomeryshire Constabulary 52
4: Petty Sessions 76
5: Quarter Sessions 100
6: Assizes 126
7: Theft Offences 150
8: Vice 169
Conclusion 188
Notes 199
Bibliography 260
Index 289