
Contents
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Attempted Suicide in Ecclesiastical Law: Theory Attempted Suicide in Ecclesiastical Law: Theory
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The Same in Practice: Cases from Ecclesiastical Records The Same in Practice: Cases from Ecclesiastical Records
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Attempted Suicide in Civil Law: Theory Attempted Suicide in Civil Law: Theory
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Criminal attempt in general Criminal attempt in general
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Suicide Suicide
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The Same in Practice: Cases from Secular Records The Same in Practice: Cases from Secular Records
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter examines how medieval customary and written law reacted, not to completed suicide but to mere attempts at it. The enquiry focuses on three questions. First, how far did reactions to attempted suicide differ from those to the completed act? Second, was this difference greater or less than the equivalent difference in respect of other crimes? Third, did the answer to these questions differ from one juridical milieu to another, for instance, as between ecclesiastical and secular courts? In respect of attempt, the odd status of suicide arose from two peculiarities that marked suicide off from other crimes. One was the unique degree of moral heinousness attached to the completed act; the other, that the failure of an attempt at suicide eliminated, at a stroke, most of the legal anomalies innate in suicide as such.
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