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4. Communities
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About this Lecture
Lecture
In this module, we explore the role of communities in the perpetration of and responses to crime. We also have a look at the different types of law courts in this period. In an age with no police force, these courts were often reliant on local communities in dealing with crime.
Course
In this course, Dr Hannah Skoda (University of Oxford) explores crime and punishment in the later Middle Ages. In the first module, we look at the types of crime in this period and explore the common responses to it. We then turn to look at the general decline of violence and the various explanations that have been used to explain it. After this we explore the rise of the state and the expanding legal system that went with this. We then turn to look at the role of communities in the enforcement of the law in this period. In the final module, we look at the fundamental question of whether society in the later Middle Ages was inured to violence.
Lecturer
Dr Hannah Skoda is a fellow and tutor of Medieval History at St John’s College, Oxford. Her past research has focused on popular violence in later medieval northern France: exploring the interconnections between different forms of violence, the legal and cultural constructions of 'deviance', and the role of emotions in provoking outbursts of brutality. Her recent research, funded by a Leverhulme prize, looks at nostalgia in the later Middle Ages.
Cite this Lecture
APA style
Skoda, H. (2021, May 17). Crime and Punishment – Later Middle Ages, c. 1250-1500 - Communities [Video]. MASSOLIT. https://www.massolit.io/courses/crime-and-punishment-crime-and-punishment-in-the-later-middle-ages-c-1250-1500/communities
MLA style
Skoda, H. "Crime and Punishment – Later Middle Ages, c. 1250-1500 – Communities." MASSOLIT, uploaded by MASSOLIT, 17 May 2021, https://www.massolit.io/courses/crime-and-punishment-crime-and-punishment-in-the-later-middle-ages-c-1250-1500/communities