2019
DOI: 10.3366/shr.2019.0401
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Homicide in Scotland, 1800–1849: Numbers and Theories (2)

Abstract: This article challenges a series of orthodox propositions put forward by historians writing on the decline in homicide levels over the last three hundred years. Firstly, there was a decline in impulsive violence; secondly, there was a shift from stranger to intimate killing; and thirdly, there was a transition of the site of murder from the public to the private sphere. It will be argued that murder remained a mainly spontaneous action, a response to highly charged or impassioned insults and words, sometimes a… Show more

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