Crime and Punishment in the Royal Navy : Discipline on the Leeward Islands Station 1784-1812
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There is a long tradition of viewing discipline in the navy as being administered by tyrannical petty officers, eager to use the 'cat' for any minor transgression of the draconian naval laws. The actions of these officers, it was believed, prompted desertion and mutiny. Evidence for this persecution was often derived from contemporary accounts which had been designed for the purposes of political propaganda rather than for historical accuracy; the author shows that the laws enforced at sea were similar to those of the eighteenth-century English system of criminal justice and that the harsh laws were often administered moderately. This book therefore redresses the balance and places naval law and its administration in a wider context.
العنوانCrime and Punishment in the Royal Navy : Discipline on the Leeward Islands Station 1784-1812
مكان النشرAldershot
الناشرScolar
سنة النشر1989
18th and 19th centuries
التوريقx, 251 p.
إيضاحاتIllus., maps and graphs
الأبعاد15.7 x 23 cm
مادةbook
سلسلةStudies in Naval History; 2
VB845.G7 .B97 1989
ردمك0-85967-808-3
ملاحظاتDes Pawson Collection
كلمات مفتاحية جغرافيةWest Indies
كلمات مفتاحية في أسماء الأشخاصRoyal Navy