Summaries of the True Bills: Edward VI

Middlesex County Records: Volume 2, 1603-25. Originally published by Middlesex County Record Society, London, 1887.

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Citation:

'Summaries of the True Bills: Edward VI', in Middlesex County Records: Volume 2, 1603-25, ed. John Cordy Jeaffreson( London, 1887), British History Online https://prod.british-history.ac.uk/middx-county-records/vol2/p245 [accessed 28 November 2024].

'Summaries of the True Bills: Edward VI', in Middlesex County Records: Volume 2, 1603-25. Edited by John Cordy Jeaffreson( London, 1887), British History Online, accessed November 28, 2024, https://prod.british-history.ac.uk/middx-county-records/vol2/p245.

"Summaries of the True Bills: Edward VI". Middlesex County Records: Volume 2, 1603-25. Ed. John Cordy Jeaffreson(London, 1887), , British History Online. Web. 28 November 2024. https://prod.british-history.ac.uk/middx-county-records/vol2/p245.

Edward VI

(1.) SUMMARY OF THE TRUE BILLS

From 3 Edward VI. to the End of his Reign.

Number of Persons.
Persons indicted for burglary 3
" " " horse-stealing 40
" " " larceny 53
" " " larceny with housebreaking 12
" " " larcenies from the person (done with secrecy or violence), including highway robberies 18
" " " manslaughter 4
" " " murder 7
" " " ox (cow &c.) stealing 3
" " " sheep-stealing 5
Persons indicted for capital felonies 145
" " " adultery and unclean living 2
" " " assault and battery 2
Person " " assault &c. with sword 1
" " " cheating and extortion 1
" " " defiling the water of a neighbour's well by putting dung &c. into it 1
Persons " " disorderly living 3
" " " forcible entry and disseisin 17
" " " harbouring ill-disposed and suspected persons 3
" " " keeping brothels 10
Person " " keeping disorderly house 1
Persons " " quarrelling, or causing and fomenting quarrels &c. 7
Person " " refusing to aid a constable &c. 1
" " " stopping a public way 1
Persons convicted of capital felonies 117
" acquitted of " " 18
Culprits 'standing mute' and sentenced to the 'peine forte et dure' 2
Felons pleading and having benefit of clergy 10
" sentenced to be hung,—males 62, female 1 63
" reprieved 15
Culprits (with indictments for capital felonies found against them) at large 7

N.B.—That the number of the convictions for capital felonies in this account so greatly exceeds the combined number of the felons who were sentenced to be hung, had benefit of clergy, or were reprieved, is chiefly due to the largeness of the proportion of the bills that exhibit no memorandum of sentence. In the numerous cases where nothing more than Po se cul ca nul appears over a culprit's name, I have not thought right to assume as a matter of course that he was sentenced to be hung, as he might have been pardoned, or have escaped from or died in gaol before sentence.