(image source: ARC Humanities Press)
Abstract:
This book examines gendered punishments in medieval Nordic laws, ca. 1100–1300. By exploring legislation on violence, sorcery, sexual morality, and theft, it considers whether women were seen as independent legal subjects or as extensions of their families. It identifies various gendered punishments and discriminatory treatments, revealing regional differences and the influence of European legal ideologies. It also uncovers an emphasis on individual culpability for crimes, reflecting a shift from collective to individual responsibility and women’s increasing property rights. This comparative analysis offers a nuanced view of medieval Nordic law, highlighting the complex relationship between gender, law, and society during this transformative period. It explains how criminal law was influenced by canon law and German town law and offers new insights into the legal history of the Nordic region.
Table of contents:
List of Illustrations
Abbreviations
Introduction. Gender in the Medieval Nordic Laws
Chapter 1. The Nordic Medieval Laws
Chapter 2. Violence and Homicide
Chapter 3. Sorcery and Magic
Chapter 4. Violations of the Norms of Sexual Morality
Chapter 5. Theft
Chapter 6. Comparative Observations and Main Conclusions
Bibliography
Index
On the editors:
Helle Vogt is Professor in Legal History at University of Copenhagen, Denmark. Mia Korpiola (PhD 2004) is professor of legal history of the University of Turku. She has published extensively on Swedish and Finnish legal history. Else Mundal is professor emerita in Old Norse philology at the University of Bergen. She has published extensively on gender in medieval Norway and Iceland. In 2017, she was appointed a knight of the Icelandic Order of the Falcon. Miriam Jensen Tveit (PhD 2017) is assistant professor of medieval history at Nord University, and has published extensively on Norwegian medieval legal history.
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