Inhoudsopgave:
A true story of crime and punishment in eighteenth-century England, and the first trial in recorded history to employ forensic evidence. Â In 1706, nineteen-year-old Mary Channing was convicted of poisoning her husband and became the last woman to be burned at the stake in Dorset. Despite the likely culpability of her lover, and her impressive attempts to defend herself, the jury took only half an hour to find her guilty, having accepted the groundbreaking toxicological evidence by prosecutors. When the day finally arrived, Maryâs execution was made into something of a county fair, with ten thousand spectators gathering to see the young mother consigned to the flames upon the floor of Dorchesterâs ancient Roman amphitheater, Maumbury Rings. Â More than three hundred years after her barbaric demise, Maryâs fate still holds a macabre fascination, as it did then for author Thomas Hardy, for whom it became an obsession. Hardy recorded the details of Maryâs execution in his notebooks, expressed doubt of her guilt, and used her as the inspiration for his poem, âThe Mock Wifeâ. Yet while Mary Channing has been granted a kind of grim celebrity, as well as an established place in the annals of female murderers, a measure of compelling sympathy for her case is another lasting aspect of her legacy is this âdramatic and fascinatingâ chronicle of a woman accused (Ripperologist Magazine). |