2025 Youard Annual Lecture in Legal History: Medieval law today: modern mayhem?

Event date
19 May 2025
Event time
17:15 - 18:30
Oxford week
TT 4
Audience
Anyone
Venue
Faculty of Law - The Cube
Speaker(s)

Prof Gwen Seabourne, University of Bristol Law School

Medieval law today: modern mayhem?

Mayhem (or ‘maim’) was an offence in medieval English common law, involving serious, but non-fatal, physical injury. Practically obsolete as a ‘cause of action’, mayhem has had an afterlife in considerations of consent to medical treatment or other physical injuries, especially, in and following the judgments in R v Brown [1994] 1 A.C. 212.  Commonly explained as an offence focused on injuries to a man’s ‘members’ which would diminish his capacity to defend the realm, and at times overlaid with assumptions about the brutality of medieval life, study of the records of the common law shows that mayhem was both wider in scope and more intellectually complex than has been supposed. This lecture will look at the history of mayhem as an end in itself, and also as part of a consideration of the modern tendency to over-simplify, caricature or misuse the doctrine and sources of the medieval common law. It will end by asking what (short of requiring all law students to study medieval legal history) can be done to improve lawyers’ use of historical evidence.

Gwen Seabourne is Professor of Legal History at the University of Bristol Law School, where she teaches Legal History and Land Law, and researches medieval legal topics. Trained in history and in law, she has written monographs on medieval economic regulation, the confinement of women and women in the common law more generally, as well as articles on medieval matters ranging from suicide, through ‘petty treason’, to the price of bread. Further details (and link to publications) can be found here. She is currently working on books on mayhem and ‘legal medievalism’.

Queries to: Prof Joshua Getzler, joshua.getzler@law.ox.ac.uk 

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