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Evidence of Public Voice and Fame in the London Consistory Court, c. 1486-1494

Citation

Pendegraft, Amy. (2017). Evidence of Public Voice and Fame in the London Consistory Court, c. 1486-1494. Theses and Dissertations Collection, University of Idaho Library Digital Collections. https://www.lib.uidaho.edu/digital/etd/items/pendegraft_idaho_0089n_11135.html

Title:
Evidence of Public Voice and Fame in the London Consistory Court, c. 1486-1494
Author:
Pendegraft, Amy
Date:
2017
Keywords:
canon law litigation london marriage public voice and fame reputation
Program:
History
Subject Category:
Medieval history; European history; History
Abstract:

Witness depositions from marriage litigation cases in the medieval London Consistory Court frequently reference public voice and fame, by which witnesses asserted that the facts to which they testified—usually the existence of a marriage—were public knowledge in their parish. Witnesses also referred to the ill fame of opposing witnesses, using their poor reputations to discredit their testimony. Fame has been discussed only briefly in previous studies, and scholars differ on whether it had legal value. I argue that it did. Although the London Consistory was an ecclesiastical court, marriage was a social as well as a religious event and the public knowledge of the community was legitimate evidence. Fame was also a recognized legal concept frequently used in other situations. Finally, fame was presented as evidence in a substantial majority of London Consistory cases, often carefully and in detail, which indicates that it had legal value.

Description:
masters, M.A., History -- University of Idaho - College of Graduate Studies, 2017
Major Professor:
Kittell, Ellen E
Committee:
Scofield, Rebecca; Smith, Rochelle
Defense Date:
2017
Identifier:
Pendegraft_idaho_0089N_11135
Type:
Text
Format Original:
PDF
Format:
application/pdf

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