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Superstition and Force / Essays on the Wager of Law, the Wager of Battle, the Ordeal, Torture

Chapter 2: SUPERSTITION AND FORCE.
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A historical survey of medieval procedures for proving guilt and resolving disputes, examining compurgation, judicial combat, ordeals, and torture. The essays trace these practices from kin-based liability and the wer-gild of early societies through the functions and safeguards of oaths and their guarantors, the Church’s adaptation and regulation of trial by battle, and the emergence and use of champions. The work details procedural forms, penalties, and selection methods, and follows the gradual decline of these methods as evidentiary standards and Roman law influences spread, using comparative material from various European and related legal traditions to show continuity and variation.

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Title: Superstition and Force

Author: Henry Charles Lea

Release date: January 22, 2019 [eBook #58750]

Language: English

Credits: E-text prepared by deaurider, Les Galloway, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made available by Internet Archive (https://archive.org)

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E-text prepared by deaurider, Les Galloway,
and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
(http://www.pgdp.net)
from page images generously made available by
Internet Archive
(https://archive.org)

 

Note: Images of the original pages are available through Internet Archive. See https://archive.org/details/superstitionfor00leah

 


 

 

 

SUPERSTITION AND FORCE.

ESSAYS ON
THE WAGER OF LAW—THE WAGER OF BATTLE—THE ORDEAL—TORTURE.

BY
HENRY CHARLES LEA, LL.D.

Plurima est et in omni jure civili, et in pontificum libris, et in XII. tabulis, antiquitatis effigies.—Cicero, de Oratore I. 43.

FOURTH EDITION, REVISED.

PHILADELPHIA:
LEA BROTHERS & CO.
1892.


Entered according to Act of Congress in the year 1892, by
HENRY C. LEA,
in the Office of the Librarian of Congress. All rights reserved.

COLLINS PRINTING HOUSE.


PREFACE.

The history of jurisprudence is the history of civilization. The labors of the lawgiver embody not only the manners and customs of his time, but also its innermost thoughts and beliefs, laid bare for our examination with a frankness that admits of no concealment. These afford the surest outlines for a trustworthy picture of the past, of which the details are supplied by the records of the chronicler.

It is from these sources that I have attempted, in the present work, a brief investigation into the group of laws and customs through which our forefathers sought to discover hidden truth when disputed between man and man. Not only do these throw light upon the progress of human development from primitive savagism to civilized enlightenment, but they bring into view some of the strangest mysteries of the human mind.

In this edition I have endeavored to indicate, more clearly than before, the source, in prehistoric antiquity, of some of the superstitions which are only even now slowly dying out among us, and which ever and anon reassert themselves under the thin varnish of our modern rationalism.

In a greatly condensed form the first three essays originally appeared in the North American Review.

June, 1878.


Although in the revision of this volume for a fourth edition there has not been found much to alter, considerable additions have been made which render the survey of the subject more complete. In revising the essays on the Wager of Battle and the Ordeal I have had the advantage of the labors of two recent writers, Dr. Patetta, whose “Le Ordalie” is an extended and philosophical investigation into the whole topic of the Judgments of God, and George Neilson, Esq., whose “Trial by Combat” is a complete account, from the original sources, of the history of the judicial duel in Great Britain. Mr. Neilson has also had the courtesy to communicate to me the results of his further studies of the subject. I therefore indulge the hope that the present edition will be found more worthy of the favor with which the work has been received.

Philadelphia, October, 1892.