360:
tumbrel, in your shift, barefoot, a rope round your neck, before the great door of Notre Dame, there to do penance with a wax candle of two pounds' weight in your hands; and from there you shall be taken to the Place-de-Grève, where you will be hanged and strangled on the town gibbet, and your goat likewise; and shall pay to the Office three lion-pieces of gold in reparation of the crimes, by you committed and confessed, of sorcery, magic, prostitution, and murder against the person of the Sieur Phœbus de Châteaupers. And God have mercy on your soul!"
215:
confess, publicly and loudly, that, maliciously and by ambush, he had murdered the Duke of
Orleans out of hatred, envy, covetousness and not for any other cause, notwithstanding the things he had claimed on the subject. For each and every one of his offenses, he repented and asked Madame d'Orléans and her children to forgive him, humbly begging them to forgive him; that he knew of nothing ill against the good and honor of the Duke d'Orléans.
439:
251:: it is said that they had to hold a burning torch in their fist, and to put a rope around their necks, escorted by sergeants and criers, who loudly and clearly announced the identity of the accused and his crimes. The undignified appearance comes to reinforce the public statement in two parts: confession and request for forgiveness for one's faults.
699:
320:
222:
where, on the scaffolding erected for this purpose, he would repeat the same words; he would remain there on his knees until the priests present had recited the seven psalms of penance, the litanies, and prayers for the repose of the soul of the Duke d'Orléans. Then, he would kiss the ground and ask
23:
By acknowledging their guilt, the offender made it clear, implicitly or explicitly, that they would refrain from future misconduct and would not seek revenge. Often used as a political punishment, and sometimes as an alternative to execution, it would sometimes serve as an acknowledgement of defeat
151:
is addressed to those who have suffered the insult or damage, it takes place on the "place of wrongdoing" as specified in the style of the
Parliament. But such a ceremony, which puts the convicted person's self-esteem to the test, since it makes no mystery of the indignity of the crime, is rarely
214:
There, in the presence of the king, or of the Duke of
Aquitaine, of all those of royal blood, and of the council, before the people, the said Duke of Burgundy, without hood or belt, kneeling before Madame d'Orléans and her children, accompanied by as many people as they would like, was to say and
359:
The clerk then began to write, and presently handed a long scroll of parchment to the
President; after which the poor girl heard the people stirring, and an icy voice say: "Bohemian girl, on such a day as it shall please our lord the King to appoint, at the hour of noon, you shall be taken in a
19:
was originally a mode of punishment in France which required the offender, barefoot and stripped to his shirt, and led into a church or auditory with a torch in his hand and a rope round his neck held by the public executioner, to beg pardon on his knees of his God, his king, and his country.
152:
sufficient in itself. To punish the misdeed, once the culprit has publicly confessed their darkness and acknowledged their guilt, another penalty feels needed. In the best of cases it is only a banishment, usually a corporal punishment, or even a death sentence. Thus, the
675:
548:
Beaulande-Barraud, Véronique (October 2009). "Les sanctions prononcées par l'official de
Cambrai au XVe siècle : Punir, réparer, amender". In Bourguignon, Marie-Amélie; Dauven, Bernard; Rousseaux, Xavier (eds.).
713:
126:
seems a rather common form of punishment administered by ecclesiastical courts. Studying the forms of punishment pronounced by the judicial vicar of
Cambray, VĂ©ronique Beaulande-Barraud finds the
81:
in French), consisting in carrying a dog or a saddle, was used to punish members of the nobility who had outraged the monarch or the church. Such a punishment was imposed, for example, in 1155 by
204:
141:
rarely constitutes the full sanction, but generally a complement to other forms of punishment, such as banishment, pilgrimages, jail or even death sentences. Nicole
Gothier notes:
223:
for forgiveness. An account of this Amend would be made in the royal letters addressed to all the good cities, in order to be shouted and published to the sound of the trumpets.
197:
110:
594:
196:: in the presence of the entire royal court, he had to confess his crime publicly and ask forgiveness from the victims, that is the
452:
280:
448:
345:
132:
to be among the most common of sentences, rarer than fines in wax but as common as prison terms and excommunications.
457:
183:
114:
722:
302:
262:
106:
474:"Harmiscara – Harmschar – Hachee : Le dossier des rituels d'humiliation et de soumission au Moyen Âge"
89:
293:
93:
751:
650:
82:
370:
333:
276:
552:
Amender, sanctionner et punir. Recherches sur l'histoire de la peine, du Moyen Âge au XXe siècle
219:
550:
611:
590:
412:
373:; it depicts an imaginary scene, taking place in the 16th century in the Palace of Justice in
179:
442: One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the
105:
seems to spread during the 14th and 15th centuries – historian Jean-Marie
Moeglin notes that
96:, offended by the city's refusal to submit to him – a ritual that may have biblical origins.
708:
582:
523:
485:
377:, in which a monk is dragged before the Bishop of Madrid for rebelling against his orders.
158:
is close to a confession and penance, made with the prospect of facing the tribunal of God.
117:. It appeared in the acts of Parliament at roughly the same time, in an agreement of 1401.
46:
is a ritual of public humiliation, which origins can be traced back to the Roman ritual of
735:
512:"Les six bourgeois de Calais accomplirent-ils en 1347 un rituel d'origine biblique ?"
380:
323:
298:
211:
The Duke of
Burgundy was to be brought to the Louvre or to whatever place the king liked.
745:
703:
443:
235:
After the failed Grande
Rebeyne revolt in Lyon, several rebels were sentenced to an
92:
presented themselves in shirt and rope around their necks to beg the forgiveness of
627:
340:
631:
438:
284:
190:
In order to make reparation for his crime, the Duke of Burgundy had to make
586:
389:(around 1868), depicting a religious court at the time of the Inquisition.
200:
and her son, while wearing a girdle or a chaperone, kneeling on the ground.
288:
49:
527:
577:
Gonthier, Nicole (1998). "Chapitre III. À tout crime, un châtiment".
489:
85:
to punish those who had troubled the peace in the Holy Roman Empire.
27:
The term is now used to denote a satisfactory apology or reparation.
319:
702: This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
511:
473:
374:
318:
218:
He was then to be taken to the courtyard of the palace and to the
581:(in French). Presses universitaires de Rennes. pp. 111–172.
613:
Histoire des ducs de Bourgogne de la maison de Valois, 1364-1477
714:
Cyclopædia, or an Universal Dictionary of Arts and Sciences
109:
used it in the context of the reparations requested by the
522:. Union Académique Internationale, Bruxelles, Belgique.
484:. Union Académique Internationale, Bruxelles, Belgique.
572:
570:
349:, the death sentence imposed on Esmeralda includes an
63:
From the 9th to the 14th century, a punishment called
676:"Musée d'Orsay: Alphonse Legros Une amende honorable"
639:. The Harvard Classics Shelf of Fiction. p. 207.
610:
Amable Guillaume Prosper Brugière de Barante (1839).
413:"PĂ©nitence publique et amende honorable au Moyen Age"
311:
before the main door of the Church of Paris in 1757.
275:was sometimes incorporated into a larger ritual of
205:
Amable Guillaume Prosper Brugière, baron de Barante
616:. N. J. Gregoir, V. Wouters et Cie. p. 213.
357:
243:
209:
188:
143:
717:(1st ed.). James and John Knapton, et al.
555:(in French). Presses universitaires de Louvain
406:
404:
402:
8:
384:
364:
350:
327:
306:
270:
256:
246:
236:
191:
173:
163:
153:
146:
136:
127:
121:
100:
76:
70:
41:
64:
55:
47:
281:French version of drawing and quartering
113:after the assassination of her husband,
461:. London and New York: Frederick Warne.
398:
731:
720:
516:ALMA (Archivum Latinitatis Medii Aevi)
478:ALMA (Archivum Latinitatis Medii Aevi)
291:; this is described in the 1975 book
7:
178:is the one made by Duke of Burgundy
24:and an instrument to restore peace.
369:is the name of an 1831 painting by
579:Le châtiment du crime au Moyen Âge
419:(in French). 1997/3 (604): 225–270
172:The first widely known example of
14:
697:
437:
88:In a similar fashion, In 1347,
305:who was condemned to make the
1:
510:Szerwiniack, Olivier (2000).
120:During the 15th century, the
472:Moeglin, Jean-Marie (1996).
411:Moeglin, Jean-Marie (1997).
261:as part of the execution of
241:in the streets of the city:
346:The Hunchback of Notre-Dame
245:Several rebels had to make
207:thus describes the ordeal:
168:by John the Fearless (1408)
768:
301:, notably in reference to
458:The Nuttall Encyclopædia
107:Enguerrand de Monstrelet
682:(in French). 2009-02-04
303:Robert-François Damiens
263:Robert-François Damiens
587:10.4000/books.pur.8963
385:
365:
362:
351:
336:
328:
307:
271:
257:
253:
247:
237:
225:
202:
192:
182:, after the murder of
174:
164:
160:
154:
147:
137:
128:
122:
101:
90:the Burghers of Calais
77:
71:
65:
56:
48:
42:
40:Despite its name, the
322:
294:Discipline and Punish
184:Duke Louis of Orleans
115:Duke Louis of Orleans
651:"L'Amende honorable"
329:Une amende honorable
83:Frederick Barbarossa
655:Musée du Luxembourg
633:Notre-Dame de Paris
366:L'Amende Honorable
337:
279:(specifically the
277:capital punishment
198:Duchess of Orleans
111:Duchess of Orleans
730:Missing or empty
723:cite encyclopedia
709:Chambers, Ephraim
596:978-2-86847-307-3
180:John the Fearless
57:receptio in fidem
759:
739:
733:
728:
726:
718:
701:
700:
691:
690:
688:
687:
672:
666:
665:
663:
662:
647:
641:
640:
638:
624:
618:
617:
607:
601:
600:
574:
565:
564:
562:
560:
545:
539:
538:
536:
534:
507:
501:
500:
498:
496:
469:
463:
462:
453:Amende honorable
441:
435:
429:
428:
426:
424:
417:Revue historique
408:
388:
386:Amende Honorable
383:also painted an
371:Eugène Delacroix
368:
354:
352:amende honorable
331:
310:
308:amende honorable
274:
272:amende honorable
260:
258:Amende honorable
250:
248:Amende honorable
240:
238:Amende honorable
220:HĂ´tel Saint-Paul
195:
193:Amende honorable
177:
175:Amende honorable
167:
165:Amende honorable
157:
155:Amende honorable
150:
148:Amende honorable
140:
138:Amende honorable
131:
129:Amende honorable
125:
123:Amende honorable
104:
102:Amende honorable
80:
74:
68:
59:
53:
45:
43:Amende honorable
17:Amende honorable
767:
766:
762:
761:
760:
758:
757:
756:
742:
741:
729:
719:
707:
698:
695:
694:
685:
683:
674:
673:
669:
660:
658:
649:
648:
644:
636:
626:
625:
621:
609:
608:
604:
597:
576:
575:
568:
558:
556:
547:
546:
542:
532:
530:
509:
508:
504:
494:
492:
471:
470:
466:
451:, ed. (1907). "
447:
436:
432:
422:
420:
410:
409:
400:
395:
381:Alphonse Legros
324:Alphonse Legros
317:
299:Michel Foucault
267:
233:
170:
94:King Edward III
38:
33:
12:
11:
5:
765:
763:
755:
754:
744:
743:
711:, ed. (1728).
693:
692:
667:
642:
619:
602:
595:
566:
540:
502:
464:
430:
397:
396:
394:
391:
316:
313:
266:
254:
232:
229:Grande Rebeyne
226:
169:
161:
37:
34:
32:
29:
13:
10:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
764:
753:
750:
749:
747:
740:
737:
724:
716:
715:
710:
705:
704:public domain
681:
680:Musée d'Orsay
677:
671:
668:
656:
652:
646:
643:
635:
634:
629:
623:
620:
615:
614:
606:
603:
598:
592:
588:
584:
580:
573:
571:
567:
554:
553:
544:
541:
529:
525:
521:
517:
513:
506:
503:
491:
487:
483:
479:
475:
468:
465:
460:
459:
454:
450:
445:
444:public domain
440:
434:
431:
418:
414:
407:
405:
403:
399:
392:
390:
387:
382:
378:
376:
372:
367:
361:
356:
353:
348:
347:
342:
335:
334:Musée d'Orsay
330:
325:
321:
314:
312:
309:
304:
300:
296:
295:
290:
286:
282:
278:
273:
264:
259:
255:
252:
249:
242:
239:
231:revolt (1529)
230:
227:
224:
221:
216:
212:
208:
206:
201:
199:
194:
187:
185:
181:
176:
166:
162:
159:
156:
149:
142:
139:
135:However, the
133:
130:
124:
118:
116:
112:
108:
103:
97:
95:
91:
86:
84:
79:
73:
67:
61:
58:
52:
51:
44:
35:
30:
28:
25:
21:
18:
732:|title=
712:
696:
684:. Retrieved
679:
670:
659:. Retrieved
654:
645:
632:
628:Hugo, Victor
622:
612:
605:
578:
557:. Retrieved
551:
543:
531:. Retrieved
519:
515:
505:
493:. Retrieved
481:
477:
467:
456:
433:
421:. Retrieved
416:
379:
363:
358:
344:
338:
292:
268:
244:
234:
228:
217:
213:
210:
203:
189:
171:
144:
134:
119:
98:
87:
62:
39:
26:
22:
16:
15:
752:Punishments
657:(in French)
559:12 December
533:12 December
495:12 December
449:Wood, James
423:12 December
341:Victor Hugo
315:In the arts
75:in German,
686:2020-12-12
661:2020-12-12
528:2042/40405
393:References
285:parricides
69:in Latin (
66:Harmiscara
490:2042/8883
289:regicides
186:in 1408:
99:The term
72:Harmschar
746:Category
630:(1831).
78:Haschiée
706::
446::
50:deditio
36:Origins
31:History
593:
283:) for
265:(1757)
637:(PDF)
375:Rouen
736:help
591:ISBN
561:2020
535:2020
497:2020
425:2020
287:and
269:The
145:The
583:doi
524:hdl
486:hdl
455:".
343:'s
339:In
297:by
54:or
748::
727::
725:}}
721:{{
678:.
653:.
589:.
569:^
520:58
518:.
514:.
482:54
480:.
476:.
415:.
401:^
355::
332:,
326:,
60:.
738:)
734:(
689:.
664:.
599:.
585::
563:.
537:.
526::
499:.
488::
427:.
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.