Benjamin Eskola

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By 1815 the death penalty was restricted almost exclusively to first-degree murder and high treason almost everywhere in Europe except Great Britain. Here, exceptionally, it applied to theft as well as homicide – three-quarters of those hanged in England and Wales in the 1820s had been convicted for property crimes, and only one-fifth for murder.
The Pursuit of Power: Europe, 1815-1914
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