London's Bastille

Mutineers, Radicals and Murder in Coldbath Fields House of Correction

Stephen Haddelsey

EPUB
18,49 (Lieferbar ab 09. Oktober 2025)

The History Press img Link Publisher

Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Geschichte

Beschreibung

In 1860, Fyodor Dostoevsky wrote that 'The degree of civilisation in a society can be judged by entering its prisons'. He meant not only that a society can be judged by how it treats its prisoners, but by who it chooses to incarcerate. 66 years earlier, Britain's newest prison had opened its gates in Clerkenwell, north London. Built on the principles of John Howard, the most vocal and committed prison reformer of the eighteenth century, the new Coldbath Fields House of Correction was intended to be a flagship for the humane improvements that Howard championed. Instead, within just a few years, it would become notorious for its cruelty and injustice. The history of the prison and the stories of its inmates, including not only thieves, vagabonds and prostitutes, but political reformers, mutineers, writers and clergymen, provides an extraordinary new insight into the forces of radical change shaking Georgian England to its core.

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Schlagwörter

clerkenwell, clerkenwell gaol, georgian crime, historic prisons, north london, the steel, vagabonds, georgian prisons, john howard, criminal justice, georgian london, inmates, Coldbath Fields House of Correction, middlesex house of correction, victorian prisons, georgian england, victorian london, thieves, william pitt, victorian crime, prison reform