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High-Status Execution in Fourteenth-Century Ireland

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 May 2022

Paul Dryburgh
Affiliation:
King's College, London
Andy King
Affiliation:
University od Southampton
David Robinson
Affiliation:
Retired county archivist of Surrey
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Summary

Justice in the late medieval period was always swift, and often brutal. The court records for fourteenth-century Ireland provide us with a sense of how unmerciful the courts could be, particularly to those of low social status. In England, those who could not afford to pay fines were more likely to be executed than their wealthier contemporaries, and these trends are broadly reflected in Ireland. Social status was not the only deciding factor in terms of who faced execution, because those of Gaelic Irish ethnicity were more likely to be executed than their English counterparts. There was some truth in the saying ‘poor man be hanged by the neck, rich man by the purse’, but as this chapter will demonstrate, being of high social status, with good connections, did not always save someone from the gallows.

In England during the late thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries, there was a sharp increase in the number of high-status, politically motivated executions. This period marked a significant growth in political violence across the Plantagenet empire, which included the increasingly barbaric executions of high-status individuals. Initially, most of those executed were Welsh and Scottish nobles, such as Dafydd ap Gruffydd, prince of Wales, who in 1283 is the earliest example of a noble being hanged, drawn and quartered, and William Wallace who met the same fate in 1305. These harsh methods employed by the English administration may have been influenced by the kind of punishments meted out in the Gaelic periphery, where physical mutilation was relatively common.

In England, the vast majority of felons were hanged, but members of the knightly class were rarely executed for committing felonies. Hanging as a method of execution appears to have been reserved for those of low social status, while members of the gentry and nobility were despatched by other means, normally decapitation. When Roger Mortimer, first earl of March and lord of Trim, was hanged in 1330, this method may have been employed to symbolically strip him of his nobility. Most of those of high social status who were executed had committed treason or had antagonised someone more powerful.

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Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2016

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