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Originally in
Scotland, imprisonment for debt was enforceable only in certain cases, but a custom gradually grew up of taking the debtor's oath to pay. If the debtor broke his oath, he became liable to the discipline of the Church. The civil power could step in to aid the ecclesiastical, denouncing
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Historically, the documents would be announced by three blasts of a horn, and the documents themselves came to be known as "letters of horning". A person who was denounced in these documents was described as having been "put to the horn".
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to charge the debtor to pay or perform in terms of the letters, was called letters of horning. This system of execution was simplified by the
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was by giving three blasts on a horn and publicly proclaiming the fact; hence the expression "put to the horn".
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25:: a document (i.e., letters) issued by civil authorities that publicly denounce a person as an
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This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
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The granting of letters of horning, letters of horning and
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http://opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts1987/pdf/ukpga_19870018_en.pdf
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119:(11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
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