Difference between revisions of "Sodomy law: Massachusetts Bay, 1648"

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The publication of the whole Massachusetts Body of Laws and Liberties, passed
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== "severely punished"==
in [[Sodomy law: Massachusetts Bay, November, 1641|1641]] but not before printed, constituted the first collection of statutes published in the American colonies.<ref> 1648: Massachusetts Bay "sodomy" law; Max Farrand, ed., Book of the General Lawes and Liberties of Massachusetts (San Marino, Calif.: Huntington Library, 1929), p. 5. The list of capital crimes is the same as that printed on the 1643 London broadside; the
 
sodomy provision cites Gen. 19:5 in the margin. </ref>
 
  
  
The origins of these Massachusetts statutes were partly Mosaic, partly English
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The Massachusetts Body of Laws and Liberties, passed in [[Sodomy law: Massachusetts Bay, November, 1641|1641]] but not before printed, constituted the first collection of statutes published in the American colonies.<ref>Adapted from {{GLA}}, p. 92, which cites Max Farrand, ed., ''Book of the General Lawes and Liberties of Massachusetts'' (San Marino, Calif.: Huntington Library, 1929), p. 5. The list of capital crimes is the same as that printed on the 1643 London broadside; the sodomy provision cites Genesis 19:5 in the margin.</ref>
common law, and partly an original colonial invention. The sodomy provision
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was identical to the [[Sodomy law: Massachusetts Bay, November, 1641|Massachusetts law of 1641]], except for the addition that
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boys under fourteen, or the party who was forced, were to be "severely punished,"
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The origins of these Massachusetts statutes were partly Mosaic, partly English common law, and partly an original colonial invention. The sodomy provision was identical to the [[Sodomy law: Massachusetts Bay, November, 1641|Massachusetts law of 1641]], except for the addition that boys under fourteen, or the party who was forced, were to be "severely punished," but not put to death.
but not put to death.
 
  
  
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== References ==
 
== References ==
  
Article adapted from {{GLA}} p. 92.
 
 
<references/>
 
<references/>
  
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Revision as of 10:53, 20 May 2008

"severely punished"

The Massachusetts Body of Laws and Liberties, passed in 1641 but not before printed, constituted the first collection of statutes published in the American colonies.[1]


The origins of these Massachusetts statutes were partly Mosaic, partly English common law, and partly an original colonial invention. The sodomy provision was identical to the Massachusetts law of 1641, except for the addition that boys under fourteen, or the party who was forced, were to be "severely punished," but not put to death.


This Massachusetts law was next revised in 1697.


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References

  1. Adapted from Jonathan Ned Katz, Gay/Lesbian Almanac (NY: Harper & Row, 1983), p. 92, which cites Max Farrand, ed., Book of the General Lawes and Liberties of Massachusetts (San Marino, Calif.: Huntington Library, 1929), p. 5. The list of capital crimes is the same as that printed on the 1643 London broadside; the sodomy provision cites Genesis 19:5 in the margin.


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