The first overview of the history of criminal law in the area that is currently within the territory of Belgium. Jos Monballyu treats both the sources of criminal law, the different judicial bodies that dealt with criminal issues, the general characteristics of the offences, the manifestations of the offences, the different punishments and their functions, the administration of criminal justice and, finally, some offences and their punishments in particular, namely suicide, witchcraft and press offences. All of these subjects are treated in such a manner that they can immediately be compared with the contents of similar standard works concerning the history of criminal justice in other countries.
Jos Monballyu is Professor of Legal History at the Law Faculty of the University of Leuven (Belgium). He has published several books and articles on the history of criminal law in the Southern Netherlands, Belgium and the north of France.
Translation by Line Leys
List of Tables ... ix
1 Introduction ... 1
1 A History of Criminal Law ... 1
2 The âGrandâ Theories Explaining the History of Criminal Law ... 3
2.1 The Importance and Basic Principles of the Different Theories ... 3
2.2 The Rationalistic Theories ... 4
2.3 The Germanic School ... 6
2.4 The Theories of Force or Power ... 6
2.5 The Civilisation Theories ... 12
3 Criminal Justice ... 37
1 From Private to Public Criminal Law ... 37
1.1 Right of Revenge and Family Solidarity before the Eleventh Century ... 37
1.2 Developing a Public Criminal Law from the Eleventh Century Onwards ... 39
1.3 A Fully Fledged Public Criminal Law from 1500 Onwards ... 41
2 Criminal Judges (Un)restrained by Criminal Law ... 42
2.1 A Formulation of the Problem ... 42
2.2 The Ascendancy of the Judge ... 42
2.3 The Ascendancy of the Legislator ... 45
2.4 Towards a Balance between Legislator and Judge ... 48
3 The Apparatus of Criminal Law in the Southern Netherlands ... 50
3.1 Introduction ... 50
3.2 The Ordinary Courts ... 51
3.3 The Extraordinary Courts ... 55
3.4 Ecclesiastical Administration of Criminal Justice ... 57
4 The Apparatus of Criminal Law after the French Revolution ... 60
4.1 Judicial Reforms Until 1795 ... 60
4.2 Judicial Reforms under the Directory, the Consulate and the Empire (1796â1815) ... 62
4.3 The Apparatus of Criminal Law under Dutch and Belgian Rule ... 63
4 The Offences in General ... 64
1 Punishable Behaviour ... 64
1.1 Human Behaviour? ... 64
1.2 Acts of Commission, Acts of Omission and Acts of Commission by Omission ... 67
2 Criminal Guilt ... 70
2.1 The Concept of Criminal Guilt ... 70
2.2 Criminal Accountability ... 70
2.3 Criminal Culpability ... 70
3 The Punishable Attempt ... 75
3.1 The Concept and Introduction of the Punishable Attempt ... 75
3.2 The Incomplete Attempt ... 77
3.3 The Completed Attempt ... 82
4 Punishable Participation ... 86
4.1 The Concept and Types of Punishable Participation ... 86
4.2 Participation by Giving Permission ... 87
4.3 Participation by Giving Advice ... 88
4.4 Participation by Giving a Mandate ... 93
4.5 Participation by Giving an Order ... 94
4.6 Participation by Giving Help ... 94
5 Grounds for Exemption from Punishment ... 97
5.1 The Concept of Exemption and the Classification of the Grounds for Exemption from Punishment ... 97
5.2 Order of Law and Command of Authority .. 98
5.3 Self-defence and Defence of Someone Else ... 99
5.4 Necessity ... 102
5.5 Insanity and Related Circumstances ... 103
5.6 Duress or Force Majeure ... 105
5.7 Mistake of Law and Mistake of Fact ... 106
5.8 Minority ... 108
5 The Punishments ... 109
1 The Functions of Punishment ... 109
1.1 Retribution ... 109
1.2 Deterrence ... 115
1.3 The Reformation of the Offender ... 117
1.4 Societal Protection or Incapacitation ... 122
2 The Different Punishments ... 123
2.1 Punishments in the Late Middle Ages and the Modern Era ... 123
2.2. Punishments since the French Revolution ... 125
3 The Ultimate Sanction: The Death Penalty Through Six Centuries ... 128
3.1 In the Name of God ... 129
3.2 The Death Penalty Questioned ... 133
3.3 Off with Their Heads ... 137
3.4 Pro and Contra the Death Penalty in the Middle of the Nineteenth Century ... 146
3.5 The Tempered Death Penalty ... 158
3.6 The Death Penalty in the Belgian Parliament between 1830 and 1867 ... 161
3.7 The Caged Death Penalty (1867â1914) ... 185
3.8 Bullets for Traitors (1914â1950) ... 198
3.9 Towards a Legal, Constitutional Abolition of the Death Penalty ... 213
3.10 Concluding Summary ... 225
6 Some Offences and Their Punishments in Particular ... 231
1 âDragged, Hung and Buried Like an Animalâ: The Punishment for Suicide between the Fourteenth and Eighteenth Centuries ... 231
1.1 The Criminalisation of Suicide between the Fourteenth and the Eighteenth Centuries 231
1.2 The Jurisprudential Turn in the Eighteenth Century ... 234
1.3 The Duermael Case and the Legal Decriminalisation of Suicide ... 235
1.4 The Influence of the Enlightened Thinkers ... 242
1.5 The Secularisation of Insanity ... 245
1.6 The Concealment of Death ... 246
1.7 The âPrivatisationâ of the Legal Punishment ... 247
2 On the Razzle with the Devil: Witch Trials in Europe and Flanders ... 251
2.1 The Definition of a Witch Trial ... 251
2.2 The Chronology and Geography of the Witch Trials ... 257
2.3 Witch Trials: Womenâs Trials? ... 261
2.4 Looking for an Explanation ... 263
2.5 The Witch Trials in Olsene-Dentergem ... 266
3 The Press on Trial: Press Offences in the Young Belgian State ... 312
3.1 Measures Controlling the Press Before 1830 ... 312
3.2 The Belgian Press Legislation in a Nutshell ... 320
3.3 Long Live Belgium! ... 326
3.4 Democracy, Preferably with a Small âdâ ... 333
3.5 Do Not Speak (or Write) Ill of the Church ... 338
3.6 Concerning Vulgar Pictures and Salacious Texts ... 342
3.7 Personal Revenge and Other Dirty Linen ... 350
3.8 Monarchs Were Quick to Take Offence ... 354
4 A State in Transition: The Punishment of Collaboration with the Enemy during and After the First World War ... 362
4.1 The Notion of Collaboration with the Enemy and Its Legal Bases ... 362
4.2 The Authority to Make Judgements on Collaboration ... 365
4.3 Transitional Justice? ... 371
7 The Administration of Criminal Justice ... 409
1 The Administration of Criminal Justice between the Sixteenth and the Eighteenth Centuries ... 409
1.1 The Civil Claim Issuing from an Offence ... 409
1.2 The Civil and Criminal Procedures in Criminal Cases ... 410
1.3 The Course of a Criminal Trial ... 414
2 Criminal Procedure since the French Revolution ... 428
Selective Bibliography 435
Index of Persons 438
Index of Places 453
Subject Index 457
All of those who are interested in the history of criminal law between 1400 and 2000, and anyone who wants to know how societal norms are constructed and sanctioned.