
- •Москва зерцало м
- •Об авторах
- •Отзывы о серии just english
- •Предисловие
- •Brainstokm
- •Discussion
- •Just for Fun
- •1) Юридический
- •2) Правовой
- •3) Судебный
- •B rainstorm
- •Laws of Babylon
- •Unit 3. The first laws: ancient greece and rome
- •Creative writing
- •Brainstorm
- •1) Государственная власть
- •4) Правительство, правительственный аппарат
- •"Let the Body Be Brought.."
- •Хабеас Корпус
- •Let the Body Be Brought!
- •Of rights
- •The Petition of Right
- •It's Interesting to Know Napoleon's Words of Wisdom
- •Criminology
- •Criminality — Inborn or Acquired?
- •Brainstorm
- •Just for Fun
- •From the History of Punishment
- •It's Interesting to Know Joseph Ignace Guillotin
- •Discussion
- •9 Greater public understanding of the crime problem is important for the apprehension and conviction of criminals, their rehabilitation» and the prevention of crime.
- •In recent years public has demanded longer and hasher sentences for offenders.
- •Manslaughter
- •Crime of Passion
- •Discussion
- •Unit 8. Capital punishment: for and against
- •From the History of Police Forces
- •Пх разыскивает мплгшпя
- •Just for Fun
- •Identify the Suspect!
- •It's Interesting to Know!
- •Creative writing
- •Us Public Manifesto
- •Role-pla y
- •Unit 5. Scotland yard The History of Scotland Yard
- •Unit 6- police techniques
- •Police Technology in the usa
- •It's Interesting to Know Alphonse Bertillion
- •It's Interesting to Know
- •A View From Behind Bars
- •Unit 5- kinds of cases
- •Verdict
- •Unit 7. The value of juries
- •Words of Wisdom About Jury Service
- •It's Interesting to Know
- •The Tower of London
- •It's Interesting to Know
- •Elizabeth Fry, 1780—1845
- •Unit 2. Prison population
- •A Lifer Keen on Canaries
- •Unit 3. Prison life
- •Incentive to good conduct
- •Unit 4. Alternatives to prison
- •John Locke, 1632—1704
- •Voltaire, 1694—1778
- •Caligula, a.D. 12—41
- •Captain William Kidd, 1645—1701
- •Lizzie Borden, 1860—1927
- •George Blake, b. 1922
- •Hercules Poirot
- •Inspector Jules Maigret
- •Perry Mason
- •1. Bank Robbers
- •2. Muggers
- •3. Thieves
- •5. Shop-Lifters
- •6. Robbers
- •7. Burglars
- •8. 'Miscellaneous' Crooks
- •9. Outrageous Lawsuits
- •List of reference books
- •Just English Английский для юристов
- •Isbn 5-94373-029-х
The Tower of London
Founded nearly a millennium ago and expanded upon over the centuries since, the Tower of London has protected, housed, imprisoned and been for many the last sight they saw on Earth.
It has been the seat of British government and the living quarters of monarchs, the site of renowned political intrigue, and the repository of the Crown Jewels, It has housed lions, bears, and (to this day) flightless ravens, not to mention notorious traitors and framed members of court, lords and ministers, clergymen and knights,
In the Middle Ages the Tower of London became a prison and place of execution for politically related crimes, with most captives being put to death (murdered or executed). Among those killed there were the humanist Sir Thomas More (1535); the second wife of Henry VIII, Anne Boleyn (1536). Other notable inmates included Princess Elizabeth (later Elizabeth I), who was briefly imprisoned by Mary I for suspicion of conspiracy; the infamous conspirator Guy Fawkes (1606) and the adventurer Sir Walter Raleigh (1618). Even in the 20ch century during World War I several spies were executed there by firing squad.
TASK 7. Explain the meaning of the following words and expressions:
a framed member of court
a notable inmate
a notorious traitor
a politically related crime
an infamous conspirator
the repository
of the Crown Jewels
the seat of British government
the site of renowned
political intrigue
TASK 8. Complete the following table with the appropriate verb or noun forms:
Verb |
Noun |
to plot |
|
|
execution |
to capture |
|
|
conspiracy |
to imprison |
|
|
protection |
|
traitor |
to suspect |
|
Chapter V. Imprisonment: Retribution or Rehabilitation? 157
TASK 9. Match the names of the renowned -prisoners from the boa-with the stories given below;
Catherine Howard; Sir Walter Raleigh; Anne Boleyn; Guy Fawkes; Sir Thomas More
v —— /
Here are some of the unfortunates held within the Tower walls.
, the Lord Chancellor and scholar who
served Henry VIII until the break with Rome, refused to acknowledge Henry VIII as supreme head of the English Church, and continued adamant when the king's subjects were required to subscribe to the oath imposed. He also protested against the divorce of Catherine of Aragon, who had given Henry only one living child» the Princess Mary.
, Henry VIIPs second wife, was taken to
the Tower on a charge of adultery. Before her crowning she had stayed in what is now called the "Queen's House", built below the Bell Tower in 1530. As a prisoner she returned there Her trial took place in the medieval great hall where she was sentenced to death,
was Henry VIIPs fifth wife and according
to him his "very jewel of womanhood". He adored her' and showered her with gifts and favours and pampered her in every way. She appointed a former admirer as her private secretary and soon rumours were being whispered at court about the Queen's misconduct Henry's immediate reaction was one of total disbelief. However, he ordered an investigation and found that she had really been flirting behind his back. For this he could show no mercy. She went the way of her cousin Anne Boleyn; she was tried, condemned
and beheaded at the Tower of London.
was a leading conspirator in the
Gunpowder Plot to blow up Parliament. He was a Catholic convert who had served in the Spanish army before becoming involved in the plot. He and his fellow conspirators were taken to the Tower and interrogated in the Queen's House, In January 1606 with three others, he was drawn on a hurdle from the Tower to the Houses of Parliament and there hanged^.beheaded and quartered.
was an explorer known for his expeditions
to the Americas, and for allegedly bringing tobacco and the potato from the New World to the British Isles. A favourite of Elizabeth I, he fell thoroughly out of favour and spent 12 years in the Tower
158
Just English. Английский для юристов
on a charge of platting against King James I. He was released in 16113, only to find himself back there in 1618 after his fruitless expedition to look for gold mines in Guyana- This time he was kept in one of the most cold and direful dungeons before being beheaded six weeks later. In his speech from the scaffold he thanked God that he died in the light, and not in the dark prison of the Tower.
TASK 10. Read the text and write dourn Russian equivalents for the words and expressions given in bold type;
The Bastille
The Bastille was a medieval fortress on the East side of Paris that became, in the 17lh and. 18*h centuries, a French state prison and a place of detention for important persons charged with miscellaneous offences. The Bastille, stormed by an armed mob of Parisians in the opening days of the French Revolution, was a symbol of the despotism of the Bourbons and held an important place in the ideology of the Revolution.
With its eight towers, 100 feet high, linked by walls of equal height and surrounded by a moat more than SO feet wide, the Bastille dominated Paris. The first stone was laid on April 22, 1370, on the orders of Charles V of France» who had it built as a bastide, or fortification (the name Bastille is a corruption of bastide), to protect this wall around Paris against English attack
The Cardinal de Richelieu was the first to use the Bastille as a state prison in the 17th century. Prisoners included political troublemakers and individuals held at the request of their families, often to coerce a young member into obedience or to prevent a disreputable member from marring the family's name. Under Louis XIV, the Bastille became a place of judicial detention; and later persons being tried by the Parliament were also detained there. It is noteworthy that prohibited books were also placed in the Bastille, The high cost, of maintaining the building prompted talk of demolition in 1784.
On July 14, 1789, when only seven prisoners were confined in the building, a mob advanced on the Bastille with the intention of asking the prison governor to release the arms and munitions stored there. Angered by the governor's refusal, the people stormed and captured the place. This dramatic action came to symbolise the end of the ancient regime. The Bastille was subsequently demolished by order of the Revolutionary government.
Chapter V. Imprisonment: Retribution or Rehabilitation? 159
TASK 11* Answer the following questions:
When and why was the Bastille built?
Who was the first to use the Bastille as a state prison?
What was the Bastille Шее in the 17lh and 18th centuries? Who was confined there?
4* How was the Bastille demolished?
TASK 12. Read the text in the section "It's Interesting to Know". Find more information about the research into the treatment of criminals carried out by the 18lU century humanists: