This is a study of the venomous act of poisoning as it was conceived, executed, and prosecuted in the Middle Ages.This book examines the perception of the crime of poisoning in the West in medieval times. The primary sources of information are chronicles that cover the entire medieval period and legal texts that are limited to the late medieval centuries. In order to portray the 'culture' of murder by poisoning in the West, it was necessary to take into account Byzantine and Islamic documents as well as ancient texts such as the Scriptures and the writings of Roman historians, both of which were widely known in the Middle Ages. This book covers the period 500 to 1500 A.D.This volume is concerned with the criminal actions that involve poison and not poison as such. Poisonous substances as such are described only when necessary for an understanding of a crime. What is important here is an examination of the ways that the alleged crime was perceived in contemporary minds. This crime avoids the use of violence, committed without a drawn weapon or bloodshed in a world in which wounds, swords, knives, and clubs represented aggression and in which the flow of blood determined the gravity of the crime. Necessarily involving preparation and secrecy, it was often perpetrated treacherously during a meal, in a universe that was united by the companionship of a meal and the sociability of drinking. The horror associated with poisoning results from the treachery of those close to the victim and a sudden death that prevents a final confession of sins.
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