Treason Act 1397 Explained

Short Title:Treason Act 1397
Type:Act
Parliament:Parliament of England
Long Title:For approving the Opinions of certain Judges concerning the Statute and Commission 10 Ric. 2: and for repealing all Proceedings in the Parliament 11 Ric. 2.
Year:1397
Statute Book Chapter:21 Ric. 2. c. 12
Original Text:https://archive.org/details/statutesatlarge01raitgoog/page/n232/

The Treason Act 1397 (21 Ric. 2. c. 12) was an act of the Parliament of England. It was supplemented by six other acts (21 Ric. 2. cc. 2, 3, 4, 6, 7 and 20). The seven Acts together dealt with high treason.

This legislation was passed during the final years of King Richard II's turbulent reign. The main act (c. 12) was a lengthy document setting out several new crimes which were to be treason. Another act (c. 3) confirmed that to "compasseth or purpose the death of the king, or to depose him", as well as the making of war against him in his realm, were treasonous acts. This act went further than the Treason Act 1351, which required that the offence be proved "of open deed".[1] [2] [3] A third act (c. 4) also made it treason "to attempt to repeal any Judgments made by Parliament against certain traitors" (i.e. acts of attainder). A fourth act (c. 6) disqualified the sons of traitors from sitting in Parliament or the King's Council. A fifth act (c. 7) voided all "Annuities, Fees, Corodies, and all other Charges made or granted" by traitors after the date of the treason they were convicted of. A sixth act (c. 2) made it treason to set up any commission which was prejudicial to the king (this was in response to a commission of Lords Appellant which had been set up by Parliament in 1386, against Richard's will (10 Ric. 2. c. 1, 1386)). The last act (c. 20) made it treason to "pursue to repeal any of these statutes".

The new treasons created by Richard were abolished by another act passed in the first year of his successor, Henry IV (1399), which returned the law of treason to what it had been under the Treason Act 1351 (1 Hen. 4. c. 10) This act explained the reason for the repeal:

The jurist Sir William Blackstone wrote in his Commentaries on the Laws of England:

Detail of provisions

Chapter 3

21 Ric. 2. c. 3 created four kinds of treason:

  1. "[to] compass[] or purpose[] the Death of the King"
  2. "or to depose him"
  3. "or to render up his Homage or Liege"
  4. "or [to] ... raise[] People and ride[] against the King to make War within his Realm"

The Act declared that the procedure for prosecuting someone for any of these was by attainder in Parliament.

Chapter 12

21 Ric. 2 c. 12 repealed everything done by the parliament of 1387 (11 Ric. 2) and declared that the people who had been responsible for it were traitors. Moreover, it was declared to be treason for Parliament to impeach any of the king's officers without his consent, or for Parliament to continue to deliberate after the king dissolved it.

See also

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://books.google.com/books?id=ZbkuAAAAIAAJ&q=fitz&pg=PA184 Complete original Norman French text as enacted, with translation
  2. [William Blackstone]
  3. Samuel Rezneck, "Constructive Treason by Words in the Fifteenth Century", American Historical Review 33 (1927), pp. 544–552. "Before 1352 as after, the essence of treason is to be found in the intent to compass the death of the king; everything else, words included, was to be regarded as the outward manifestation and as the proof of that intent." Rezneck added that the fifteenth-century indictment for treason "was a narrative tending toward exhaustive comprehensiveness", and that when spoken words were changed they were part of a "manifold narrative" designed to establish the compassing and imagining of the king's death. See also J. G. Bellamy, The Law of Treason in England in the Later Middle Ages, Cambridge University Press, Appendix I (2004 ed.), especially pp. 120–123