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Christopher Little & Margaret Jameson

Crime of Fornication:

 

Christopher Little & Margaret Jameson, for  fornication, and theft, charged against them in one indictment.
Year 1653

After the abolition of Popery, and establishment of the Confession of Faith by authority of parliament, one of the first acts of the legislature was to annex a punishment to 'the filthie vice of fornication.'   The punishment was for the first offence, to pay a fine of L.40 Scots, (and upon failure of payment * to undergo eight days imprisonment, and to be fed upon bread and water), and to stand two hours upon the pillory.  For the second offence the fine was raised to 100 merks; and besides being put upon the pillory, the convict was to have his or her head shaved.  And for the third offence the pecuniary mulct was augmented to L.100 Scots, and the convict was ordained to be thrice ducked in the deepest and foulest pool in the parish, and then to be banished from the same for ever.  And this zealous act has been renewed so late as A.D. 1696.

On the 16th October 1652, a commission was produced in the Parliament house at Edinburgh, from the commissioners of the Parliament of the Commonwealth of England, and recorded in the books of Justiciary, appointing George Smith, John March, Andrew Owen, and Edward Mosley, Esquires, or any two of them, commissioners for the administration of justice to the people of Scotland in causes criminal.

On the 21st of June 1653, Henry Whallie, Advocate General **, prosecuted Jean Hamilton, Christopher Little, and Margaret Jameson, before the Honourable George Smith and Edward Mosely, two of those commissioners.  The prisoners were charged in the indictment with 'being all three accessory, art and part, of stealing shirts and sheets forth of the house of Elisabeth Potter widow in Newhaven, after the said Jean Hamilton her theftuous upbreaking thereof, committed on the 6th day of May last:  And the said Christopher Little and Margaret Jameson for the crime of fornication committed by them with each other.'

The prisoners, Little and Jameson, denied the theft, but acknowledged the fornication, and submitted themselves to the mercy of the Court.

The jury, after hearing evidence, unanimously found the prisoners Hamilton and Jamison, guilty of stealing the sheets and shirts, and aquitted the prisoner Little of the same.   They also unanimously found the prisoners Little and Jamison guilty of fornication.   The Court sentenced Jean Hamilton to be scourged for theft from the Castle hill to the Netherbow, and then to be put into the Correction house till farther orders; and ordained Little and Jamison for fornication instantly to pay L.40 Scots, and in case of refusal to be kept prisoners for eight days, and fed on bread and small drink, and next market day to stand an hour bare headed on the pillory;  the prisoner Little then to be set at liberty, but Jamison for the theft to be put in the Correction house.

*   James VI. parl. I. chap. 13.,   William, parl. I. sess. 6. chap. 31.

**  Records of Justiciary, October 16, 1652.   June 24, 1653.

 

 

 

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