Suicide in the Middle Ages

Author:   Alexander Murray
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
ISBN:  

9780198205395


Pages:   510
Publication Date:   01 October 1997
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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Suicide in the Middle Ages


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Full Product Details

Author:   Alexander Murray
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 3.30cm , Length: 23.40cm
Weight:   0.940kg
ISBN:  

9780198205395


ISBN 10:   0198205392
Pages:   510
Publication Date:   01 October 1997
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

Preface; 1. Introduction; 2. The Secrecy of the Act; How to Find Out. I: Chronicles; 3. The Reticence of Chronicles; 4. The Probing of Disgrace; 5. The Reticence Broken. The Preoccupations of Local and House Chronicles; How to Find Out. II: Legal Sources; 6. Suicide and Judicial Records; 7. Portraits from English Courts: Criminals, Debtors, and the Sick; 8. Portraits from English Courts: 'Insanity' and Some Optical Illusions; 9. Portraits from French Courts; 10. Portraits from Lettres de Remission; 11. Portraits from Courts in the Empire; How to Find Out. III: Religious Sources; 12. Man, Woman, and Child; 13. The Enemy of Society; 14. The Sick and Melancholy; Towards Statistics; 15. Towards Statistics: Absolute Numbers; 16. Towards Statistics: The Person and the Act; Appendix: A Register of Recorded Suicidal Incidents - I. Chronicles; II. Legal Sources; III. Religious Sources; A Bibliography of Legal Sources Used in the Register; Select Bibliography to Part I

Reviews

One of the most unusual features of this book is its expansiveness. I cannot think of another academic history monograph that gives so much space to the stories themselves Social History of Medicine Murray tells his stories with great verve and then mulls them over, bringing to bear all the tools of source analysis, but he is never afraid to offer a final opinion of his own. The result is immensely readable Social History of Medicine The years of effort that went into this task have paid rich dividends ... This volume provides us with by far the most detailed record of medieval suicide to date Medical History This is the very model of scrupulous scholarship Medical History Alexander Murray is the author of Reason and Society in the Middle Ages (1978), an exemplary new history, which reinterprets medieval mentalities on a European scale. Suicide in the Middle Ages is a magnum opus which has been long awaited. It is projected as a trilogy, of which the volume reviewed here is the first ... compelling reading ... Searching for suicides has made Murray a pioneer in the comparative study of the legal records of medieval Europe. M. T. Clanchy, Times Literary Supplement His cull of medieval sources aims to be as inclusive as possible, and this is surely to err in the right direction. The reader is given enough information to consider the evidence and decide whether this or that case is credible or really a suicide. I cannot think of any type of medieval document which Murray has overlooked in his search for suicides. Now that he has opened up the subject in this lucid and meticulous way, more individual cases will no doubt come to light and be added to his dossier ... he argues convincingly that religious sources can give us credible evidence ... The material from religious sources extends Murray's chronological and geographical range, and this is particularly valuable for Italy, where legal records are so sparse. M. T. Clanchy, Times Literary Supplement Murray's method is deliberately personal without being idiosyncratic. He defined his own limits, and he shows future researchers what to look for ... Despite the patchiness of the available information, this volume concludes with a series of graphs and statistical tables. These are an essential way of summarizing the data ... Historical research may help to show that suicide is an invariable part of being human. The variables are other people's reactions to it and how they express them. The history of such reactions in medieval culture is the subject of Murray's next two volumes, which promise to be as firmly rooted as this one in clarity of exposition, thoroughness of erudition and imaginative sympathy. M. T. Clanchy, Times Literary Supplement


This is the firist of a projected three volume survey of suicide in medieval Europe. Given the church's unwillingness to countenance this offence it is remarkable that any evidence of its survives. Yet, in a remarkable feat of detective work, Murray uncovers scores of biographies of individual suicides buried in the records of coroner's inquests, judicial proceedings and chronicles drawn from England, France, Germany and Italy between 1000 and 1500. It turns out that medieval people decided to end it all for many of the same reasons as moderns do: mental or physical illness, poverty and desperation, disgrace or rejection, unrequited love or sexual abuse. This is at once a work of deep learning and vivid historical imagination and a sombre commentary upon the human condition. (Kirkus UK)


Author Information

Alexander Murray is Lecturer in Modern History at the University of Oxford and Fellow and Praelector in Modern History at University College, Oxford.

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