Medieval crime and punishment (c.1250–c.1500)
OCR J410 Paper 1 tests the full thematic sweep from medieval to modern. The medieval period is commonly targeted with a 4-mark "describe" question and a 12-mark "explain the significance" or "how far do you agree" essay. Knowing the distinct features of this period — particularly trial by ordeal and the origins of capital punishment — is essential.
What counted as a crime?
In medieval England the line between sin and crime was blurred: anything that offended God or the Church could be prosecuted. Key categories:
- Petty crimes: theft, drunkenness, poaching, breaking market rules (weights and measures).
- Felonies: murder, serious theft, arson — punishable by death.
- Heresy: denying Church teaching — also punishable by death (burning at the stake).
- Treason: acting against the king — the most serious of all.
The concept of law and order was maintained locally: there was no professional police force. The hue and cry system required everyone to pursue and detain a suspected criminal.
Courts and jurisdiction
- Manor courts: handled minor offences on lords' estates. The lord or his steward presided.
- Church courts (ecclesiastical): covered clergy and moral offences. Clergy could claim benefit of the clergy to be tried in Church courts, which gave lighter penalties.
- Royal courts: serious felonies; trial by jury began to develop from the 12th century.
Trial by ordeal
Before the Fourth Lateran Council (1215) abolished it, God was called upon to prove innocence or guilt:
| Ordeal | Method | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Ordeal by hot iron | Carry a red-hot iron 3 paces; wound examined 3 days later | Clean wound = innocent; festering = guilty |
| Ordeal by hot water | Plunge hand into boiling water to retrieve a stone | As above |
| Ordeal by cold water | Bound suspect thrown into water | Float = guilty (pure water rejects); sink = innocent |
| Ordeal by combat | Two parties fight | Winner proved innocent by God |
After 1215, trial by jury gradually replaced ordeal for secular courts, though juries often just confirmed community belief.
Punishments: the principle of deterrence
Medieval punishment aimed primarily at deterrence (preventing others), not rehabilitation. The king and Church wanted visible, public punishments:
- Capital punishment: hanging for felonies; beheading for nobility; burning for heresy.
- Mutilation: cutting off a hand for theft, branding on the forehead.
- The pillory and stocks: public humiliation for minor offences.
- Fines: for lesser offences, particularly in manor courts.
- Outlawry: declared outside the law — anyone could kill you without penalty.
Prisons existed mainly to hold people awaiting trial, not as punishment in themselves.
The roots of the "bloody code"
By the later medieval period, capital punishment extended to over 50 offences. This escalation of hanging laid the foundation for what later became the Bloody Code of the 18th century (when over 200 offences carried the death penalty). The logic was simple: no professional police, so the threat of death had to deter crime.
Common OCR exam mistakes
- Confusing trial by ordeal with trial by combat — ordeal was God testing one person; combat was two people fighting.
- Saying the Church always gave harsher penalties — Church courts were actually often lighter (penance rather than death).
- Failing to explain why public and brutal punishments were used (no police, deterrence logic).
- Mixing up the dates for abolition of ordeal (1215 — Fourth Lateran Council) with later reforms.
✦Worked example— Worked example: 12-mark question
"The main purpose of punishment in medieval England was to deter crime." How far do you agree?
Plan: AO1 (facts), AO2 (cause/consequence analysis). Agree: public hangings, mutilation, pillory — all visible deterrents. Disagree: the Church also used punishment for retribution (God's justice), vengeance and moral reform (penance). The king used punishment to reinforce royal authority. Therefore: deterrence was one purpose but not the only or main one.
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