Focusing particularly on the period 1752-1832, this book provides a summary of the historical evidence, the factual history of gibbetting which explores the locations of gibbets, the material technologies involved in hanging in chains, and the actual process from erection to eventual collapse.
Sarah Tarlow is Professor of Historical Archaeology at the University of Leicester, UK. Before coming to Leicester in 2000 she taught at the University of Wales Lampeter, UK, and has published extensively on the archaeology of death and burial, archaeological theory and on post-medieval archaeology.
Chapter 1: Some Further Terror and Peculiar Mark of Infamy.- Chapter 2: How to Hang in Chains: how, where and when eighteenth-century sheriffs organised a gibbeting.- Chapter 3: The Afterlife of the Gibbet.- Chapter 4: Conclusions: Why Gibbet Anyone?.- Appendix 1: All Cases of Hanging in Chains 1700-1832.- Appendix 2: Maps, 1752-1834.- Index.