Annotated
Bibliography
Blackstone, William. Commentaries on the Laws of England:
A Facsimile of the First
Edition of 1765-1769. London and Chicago: The
University of Chicago Press,
1979. This primary text was extremely helpful
to our project. It was interesting
and beneficial to read the various punishments and crimes from a book written
in the 1700s. We used this book as
background information on the various crimes we allude to in our project.
Emsley, Clive. Crime and Society in England,
1750-1900. New York: Longman, 1996.
This
book provided us with general information on the people and society from
1750-1900. We obviously focused
our research solely on the Eighteenth Century.
This book
gave us some insight into the ways in which people dealt with arrests and
crimes in general.
Goldsmith, Netta Murray. The Worst Crimes. Vermont: Ashgate Publishing Company,
1989. We used this site mostly for background
information. From this text, we
learned a great deal about law during the Eighteenth Century. This text also discussed much about
people and their responses to punishments.
Hagerty, James Edward. Twentieth Century Crime: Eighteenth Century Methods of
Control. Boston, MA: Stratford Company, c1934. This text was used predominantly for the research we did on
arrests. It also helped us with
some background information about pardons and reprieves.
King, Gregory. “…the officers of the
court, their assistants and attendants, on the
arraignment
and trial of some peer…”
Woodbridge: CT Research
Publications,
Inc.,
1986. This article was very
beneficial because it was a first hand account of the judicial process in the
Eighteenth Century. By reading
this article, we had a better understanding of what offenders went through in
the judicial process.
King, Peter. Crime, Justice, and Discretion in
England, 1740-1820. New
York: Oxford
University
Press, c2000. This text was mostly
used as a reference to specific crimes (specifically high treason) we included
in our project. It also provided
us with general information on the pardons and reprieves.
Megivern, James, J. The Death Penalty: An Historical and Theological Survey.
Mahwah: Paulist Press, 1997. This text was an excellent source for
our section on the death penalty in the Eighteenth Century. It provided us with general information
regarding the death penalty, and the transformation it underwent.
Rule, John and Wells,
Roger. Crime, Protest, and Popular
Politics in Southern England.
London:
Hambledon Press, 1997. This text
provided us with information on specific crimes and background information
about pardons and reprieves.
Sistare, Christine T. Punishment: Social Control and
Coercion. Paris: Peter Lang
Publishing,
1996. This book provided us with
information background information on different types of punishments. We used this book as a reference for
punishments.
Sharpe, J.A. Crime in Early Modern England,
1550-1750. New York: Longman, 1999.
This
text was used predominantly for specific crimes we included in our
project.
In
addition, this text was helpful with information on the death penalty.
Wasserman, Earl, R. Aspects of the Eighteenth Century. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins
Press,
1965. This text provided us with
an overview of many of the major
important
events that took place in the Eighteenth Century. It is important to
understand
events in the time period in order to write about the crimes one
may
have committed.
Woloch, Isser.
Eighteenth-Century Europe: Tradition and Progress, 1715-1789. New
York:
W.W. Norton and Company, 1982.
This text was extremely helpful with
the
research we conducted on various crimes including poaching, infanticide,
smuggling,
vagrancy and rioting.