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  1. Jun 19, 2014 · Introduction: The creation of prisons as punitive institutions is commonly dated to the late eighteenth century, and is attributed to the influence of Enlightenment ideas about man’s ability to reform his soul and the State’s prerogative in implementing this process. The accepted chronology denies the penal role of prisons at any time ...

  2. May 25, 2024 · The Torment of Confinement: Medieval Prisons. Though prisons were not the primary form of punishment in the Middle Ages, they were a dreaded fate nonetheless. Medieval prisons were often dank, cramped, and disease-ridden spaces where inmates were left to languish for months or even years while awaiting trial or the payment of debts.

  3. subject in the medieval prison literature. One important fee, agevolatura, was to ameliorate daily prison life and was the most substantial source of income. Although municipalities did not view prisons as source of profit, the income was lower than expected due to the growing number of poor prisoners. Like much legal

  4. 2 days ago · Income derived from fines and debt collection as well as fees, a common subject in the medieval prison literature. One important fee, agevolatura , was to ameliorate daily prison life and was the most substantial source of income.

  5. Feb 1, 2010 · The Medieval Prison: A Social History. ; pp. xviii + 197. £17.95). From archival research conducted principally in four Italian city-states—Florence, Venice, Bologna, and Siena—Guy Geltner, in The Medieval Prison, argues persuasively for a new chronology of penal systems in the West. Against the prevailing historiography—which argues ...

    • Samuel K. Cohn
    • 2010
  6. Mar 10, 2006 · Addressing such questions, this article brings together over a century of scholarship that undermines the traditional dating of the prison's “birth,” sheds light on the tolerable realities of medieval captivity, and identifies a range of contemporary interpretations of prison life and spaces.

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  8. Publication Details. Geltner, Guy, The Medieval Prison: A Social History (Princeton University / Princeton University Press, 2008). The SSRC makes available interdisciplinary research to inform policy, academic discourse, and the public. These publications are freely accessible and include policy working papers to essays for the general public.

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