{"id":2789,"date":"2013-06-30T12:19:32","date_gmt":"2013-06-30T12:19:32","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blog.soton.ac.uk\/digitalhumanities\/?p=2789"},"modified":"2013-10-09T10:42:30","modified_gmt":"2013-10-09T10:42:30","slug":"sotondh-small-grants-introducing-mapping-libel-performance-in-early-modern-devon","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/digitalhumanities.soton.ac.uk\/small-grants\/2789","title":{"rendered":"sotonDH Small Grants: Introducing \u2018Mapping Libel Performance in Early Modern Devon\u2019"},"content":{"rendered":"
Accounts of early modern libel survive in the Star Chamber records, from which I have transcribed the Devon cases; these libels, I argue, should be seen as public performances and analysed in light of this. Having received a SotonDH grant, work has begun on a digital mapping resource which aims to present instances of performance-based libel from the county of Devon alongside key features of the contemporary landscape in order to demonstrate their performance nature.<\/p>\n
This first blog post will introduce my research and outline the project\u2019s aims and initial stages.<\/p>\n
Libel \u2013 the creation and spreading of a message in order to defame somebody \u2013 was an offence on the rise throughout England at the end of the sixteenth and beginning of the seventeenth centuries. The increase in the number of libel offences at this period is said to be due to a series of high profile cases which set a precedent and a change in the definition of libel in the late sixteenth century from a moral offence tried in the church courts to a criminal one tried in the national court of Star Chamber (W. S. Holdsworth, A History of English Law<\/em>, 7 Vols., Vol. V, (London: Methuen & Co. Ltd., 1903-24, 1924). Once tried in Star Chamber, libellers were punished for the ability of their libels to cause breaches of the common peace. Commonly, provincial libels of the early modern period contained a public confrontation or humiliation carried out in a communal space within the town or village followed by some attempt to disseminate abroad, either by written text or symbolic object, or by singing or reading aloud, the contents of a libel. Examples of libel content from Devon include verses, letters, playing cards with writing on them, cuckold\u2019s horns with various embellishments and mock-royal proclamations. Our knowledge of these communal events comes from the court records of their subsequent trials in the Star Chamber. These records normally include a bill of complaint, submitted to the court by the victim, outlining what was done by whom. They also include lists of interrogation questions to be ministered to witnesses and defendants (see figure 1) and accounts of the examinations that followed.<\/p>\n