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Articles

The myth of lesbian impunity: capital laws from 1270 to 1791

by Medievalists.net
July 1, 2011

The myth of lesbian impunity: capital laws from 1270 to 1791

By Louis Crompton

Journal of Homosexuality, Vol.6 No.1-2 (1980-81)

Abstract: The standard history of antihomosexual legislation states that lesbian acts were not punished by medieval or later laws. This essay challenges this view by documenting capital laws since 1270 in Europe and America. A major influence was Paul’s condemnation in Romans I, 26. By 1400, the lex foedissimam, an edict of the Emperors Diocletian and Maximianus, issued in 287, was interpreted to justify the death penalty. Executions took place in Germany, France, Italy, Switzerland, and Spain. A brief survey of presently known male deaths in Europe and the Americas, which number about 400, also is included. This study draws on canon law and the commentaries of such jurists as Cino da Pistoia, Saliceto, López, Gómez, Farinacio, Cotton, Carpzow, Sinistrari, de Vouglans, and Jousse. It also discusses the records of a German trial of 1721, published elsewhere in this issue, that also led to the execution of a woman.

Click here to read this article from the University of Nebraska

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TagsCrime in the Middle Ages • LGBTQ studies and the Middle Ages • Medieval Law • Medieval Sexuality • Medieval Social History • Medieval Women

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