Thirty years ago, the ‘Agenda’ identified an ambitious programme for Irish women's history and great strides have been made in many areas of research identified by its authors. Other topics which it raised, however, remain relatively unexplored and the importance of the ‘Agenda’ importance as a guide to promising avenues of enquiry continues. At the same time, there is a need to re-examine aspects of the ‘Agenda’, including its treatment of women as a group in a relatively unproblematised way.Footnote 1 It frequently acknowledges the importance of class, culture, and religion in shaping women's lives but does not see these differences between women as serious barriers to the creation of a ‘history of women’. Scholars exploring topics suggested by the authors of the ‘Agenda’ must take account of the ways in which the landscape of women's history has shifted in the intervening years and engage with the challenges associated with the use of ‘women’ as a category of historical analysis. This paper responds in two ways to the ‘Agenda’. It is, first, a discussion of women's experience of the law using the types of legal sources identified in the ‘Agenda’ as being underutilised for the history of women in Ireland.Footnote 2 In using this legal material it follows in the tradition of one of the authors of the ‘Agenda’, Mary O'Dowd, and her work on women in the records of the Irish court of chancery in the later sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. It also builds on important research in the legal history of women in medieval and early modern Britain and Europe completed in the last few decades.Footnote 3 Secondly, it engages with major shifts in women's history in the decades since the ‘Agenda’ was published that complicate and call into question the validity of writing histories of women, using the specific case of legal history in late medieval Ireland.
When we define ourselves as historians of women and conduct research on the experiences of women in a given time, place and context, we are implicitly arguing for the importance of gender as a determinative factor in shaping the lives of the people we study. Furthermore, we imply that women, as a group, have something significant in common with one another by virtue of their gender. This may seem obvious, and it is clear that in the medieval period, as in most historical periods, the impact of societal expectations about how women or men should behave was powerful. Set against this awareness of the power of medieval society's gender expectations to shape people's lives, however, is the recognition that class, wealth, religion, ethnicity and many other factors could be equally or more influential. Lessons learned from third-wave feminism, and highlighted particularly by Kimberle Crenshaw and other scholars of colour, have brought a greater understanding of the importance of examining women in an intersectional manner.Footnote 4 This means we must recognise the ways in which individual women's different circumstances, and often disadvantages — by virtue of, for example, class, race and ethnicity — can amplify one another, and make the experiences of one woman vastly different from another. As Mary Spongberg observed in 2002:
while second-wave feminism had generated the need for a ‘history of women’, the emergence of a more diffuse and divergent feminism rendered such a project problematic. Historians of women were forced to recognise that they had adopted the essentialist and universalising tendencies they had critiqued in masculinist history. This recognition marked the beginning of a new type of women's history, focused not only on issues of gender but also differences among women produced by race, class and sexuality.Footnote 5
To apply this intersectional thinking to the specific context of legal history in later medieval Ireland, is it reasonable to argue that the legal actions and opportunities of a wealthy and influential English widow like Agnes de Valence (d. c.1310) were similar in some significant way to those of Joan Brennan, an anglicised and likely unmarried Irish woman who was a glover's apprentice in Dublin in 1490?Footnote 6 How much did either have in common with, say, a married Irish woman living as an unfree labourer on the lands of Elizabeth de Burgh in Lisronagh, County Tipperary, when they were surveyed in 1333?Footnote 7 Each woman's ability to afford legal advice, the courts they could access, the legal problems they were likely to encounter and their cultural and social background differed immensely.
The fracturing force of intersectional analysis on women as a group is exacerbated for historians of medieval women and the law by the fact that, in many medieval legal systems, and in the English system of law operating in the English colony in Ireland, women had different legal entitlements depending on their marital status. Under English law the principle known as coverture ensured that (in theory at least) married women were rarely able to plead in common law courts without their husbands; marriage, thus, constrained their legal independence, though it often gave them other advantages.Footnote 8 Although coverture was not uniformly implemented in English courts in medieval Ireland, even in those courts where it was the usual practice, it did ensure that many married women's experiences at law differed from those of their widowed or unmarried counterparts. Because of the differences in legal entitlements depending on marital state, many historians of women and the law choose to analyse married women separately from widows or singlewomen.Footnote 9
Without essentialising or relying on a biological understanding of women, that is to say focusing on social constructions of what it meant to be a man or a woman and what behaviours and roles were considered appropriate for each — in other words, looking at gender rather than sex — can we make a case for studying ‘women and the law’? How do we justify our focus on this disparate group as an analytical category? This article will argue that, despite our recognition of individual women's differences from each other and the legal theory that stipulated different entitlements for women depending on their marital status, there is still a strong case to be made for writing histories of women and the law in the English colony in medieval Ireland. This argument will be made through an examination of case law from the courts of the colony, spanning from the late thirteenth to the late fifteenth century and exploration of the influence of gender on the implementation of the law in practice. It will focus on the ways in which gendered ideas of acceptable female behaviour affected female litigants, regardless of their class, ethnicity or marital status. It will also argue that the more we accept that law is both created by and mediated through the society which it governs, the more we can see the misogynistic assumptions of medieval society expressed in the legal sphere. The pleading strategies, the ways in which litigants were perceived by jurors and judges, and their ultimate success, or otherwise, at law, were all influenced by underlying gendered assumptions that shaped the experiences of married women, singlewomen and widows alike. Thus, one outgrowth of the (not so new) ‘new legal history’, which sees law as societally embedded and enacted, is that gender has much a greater role to play than is apparent from just the theory of how the law should operate.Footnote 10
I
The secular legal system in place in the English colony in Ireland was created in the decades following the English invasion of Ireland (1167–72) and was based on English models.Footnote 11 The area over which this system was in place was not static, as the boundaries of the colony (here also called ‘English Ireland’) shifted, first expanding and then, in some areas, being pushed back in the centuries after the invasion.Footnote 12 The rest of the island was controlled by Irish lords and, though not politically centralised in a stable and enduring way, had a cultural and social coherence that maintained its separateness in the minds of both the Irish and the English of Ireland despite extensive assimilation and cooperation across ethnic lines.Footnote 13 The island of Ireland held, therefore, two socio-political regions for the entire period discussed here, and in Irish areas Irish law (sometimes called Brehon law) was in place, while the extensive and shifting borderlands saw a mix of legal systems and practices.
At its greatest extent in the later thirteenth century the colony stretched across most of the island, apart from large sections in western Ulster, but the most intensively settled parts of the colony lay along the eastern seaboard and in the south/south-east of the island.Footnote 14 These areas never fell out of colonial control and it is where the English legal system was most firmly and enduringly implanted. It is from the east/southeast that the legal cases discussed in this article come. As in England, the secular legal system co-existed alongside an ecclesiastical one, in which church courts operated using the shared canon law that governed ecclesiastical courts across western Christendom.Footnote 15 Different types of jurisdiction were also in place within the English secular legal system itself and the interlocking web of local and central courts operational in the colony. These included, at the local level, manorial courts that operated according to customary law as well as urban hundred courts and courts of the liberties. The judgments of these local courts could be appealed in the central common law courts of the colonial administration including the travelling general eyre, the Dublin bench and the justiciar's court, as well as the highest court of appeal in the colony, the Irish parliament.Footnote 16 The judicial role of the parliament is increasingly evident on the parliament rolls from the mid-fifteenth century onwards and until the sixteenth century, when an Irish court of chancery was fully established. In the later middle ages the Irish parliament was the primary legal venue in the medieval colony that operated according to equity principles (like the court of chancery in England) and was, therefore, more flexible in terms of its procedure and judgements than common law courts.Footnote 17 These various secular, English-style courts, therefore, differed in procedure and remit and sometimes jostled with one another for jurisdiction, but, as in England, more often cooperated.Footnote 18
The legal system in the English colony in Ireland continued to evolve through the high and later middle ages, with some regional differences, but largely in step with England; innovations from England were communicated to the colony through royal directives, legislation of the English parliament, the education of lawyers from the colony in England and the deployment of English justices to the colony.Footnote 19 As subjects of the crown, English colonists in Ireland also had the right to resort to royal courts in England, and there to appeal cases that had been determined in colonial courts. As Ellis noted, this right to appeal ensured that practice in Irish courts could not drift too far from that in English ones.Footnote 20 This article, therefore, while acknowledging that the systems were not identical, uses comparisons and insights gained from the study of English law in England to reflect on the material from the colony.
II
As noted above, a woman's marital status dictated a great deal about her legal entitlements and capabilities under English law. From a purely theoretical standpoint, which focuses on how the law should operate according to legal treatises, widows and singlewomen who were of age had little in common with married women. Indeed, some medieval discussions of married women's position in English law compares them not to other women, but to monks, to minors and to other persons with limited legal capabilities.Footnote 21 Coverture is the term usually used to describe the limitations on married women's legal activities and property ownership. It is described by Baker thusly:
According to law as stated in Bracton, the married woman was ‘under the rod’ of her husband, who was both her sovereign and her guardian. In the law French of the next generation, she was said to be feme covert, as opposed to a feme sole (single woman), and her husband was her baron (lord). If she killed him it was not simply murder, but petty treason. He looked after her and her property during the ‘coverture’, whereas she lost the capacity to own separate property or make contracts. She could not sue or be sued at common law without her baron, and this prevented her from suing him for any wrong done to her.Footnote 22
In contrast, widows had full legal capabilities and could plead in common law and equity courts and make contracts, as could singlewomen who were of age.Footnote 23 Because of this legal independence, many historians have seen widowhood as a desirable state for women, particularly wealthy ones. Rhoda Friedrichs summarised this view in 2006, stating that ‘widowhood has been regarded as a uniquely advantageous state for women of property in the late Middle Ages. It was a commonplace in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries that women longed to be widows because of the freedom of action and of choice which widowhood brought them.’Footnote 24 The idea that widowhood was an advantageous state has been influential, though not unquestioned, in the historiography of medieval Ireland. Gillian Kenny explained why widows ever chose to remarry, given the legal disabilities they would then encounter: ‘there are many reasons why widows remarried; loneliness, fear, and inability to administer land’.Footnote 25 This rosy view of medieval widowhood, however, has been challenged in important contributions by Friedrichs and Judith Bennett among others. The more precarious economic circumstances of many widows and singlewomen has been identified as a key way in which they may have often occupied a less favourable position than married women.Footnote 26 Examples from medieval Ireland suggest that some women, instead of taking advantage of their legal independence while widowed, in fact waited until they remarried to pursue legal cases.Footnote 27 This may have been one reason that many widows of property remarried quickly.Footnote 28
Women gained practical legal advantages when they married; their husbands might offer financial support, access to their legal networks and connections and, especially by the later fourteenth and fifteenth centuries and for high-status women, often some experience or training in the legal system.Footnote 29 As Matthew Stevens has shown for women pleading at the court of common pleas in medieval London, and likewise Mary O'Dowd for women in the Irish court of chancery in the early modern period, the support of a husband, financial and otherwise, was sometimes key to legal success.Footnote 30 Thus, the negative impact of marriage on a woman's experience of the law may have been overestimated, perhaps in part because many modern historians, informed by the second-wave feminism that underlay so much of the history of women in the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s, perceived independence of action as inherently beneficial. Given how many female (and indeed male) litigants in medieval Ireland drew on their male personal and familial connections to ensure success at law, it is likely that many medieval women did not perceive the legal independence afforded to widows in the same positive light.
The negative assessment of married women's position under the law is, therefore, due in part to the descriptions of coverture in treatises on English law, particularly the highly influential twelfth and thirteenth-century legal treatises known as Glanville and Bracton, rather than legal practice as assessed through analysis of case law.Footnote 31 This, however, is changing, as social historians of the law in pre-modern England turn increasingly towards case law. It is important to note that throughout the history of coverture, which persisted into the modern period, there were many instances in which secular English courts treated wives as their own legal entities, distinct from their husband. This partial application led Baker to term coverture a ‘legal fiction’: useful and sometimes relevant, but never resulting in the wife's legal identity being subsumed into the husband's.Footnote 32 Thus, even when coverture was adopted, it was, in practice, not monolithic and recent work on medieval coverture has highlighted its porousness and inconsistency of application.Footnote 33 This research on the flexibility of coverture has tended to focus on equity courts, manorial and other local courts, while the basic assumption that coverture operated in central common law courts has been subject to less scrutiny.Footnote 34 Much of the existing work on women in medieval Ireland has assumed that coverture was in force in the colony from its inception, but recent work by Matthew Stevens on coverture in England suggests that, although Bracton treated coverture as approved practice in the mid-thirteenth century, it was only gaining in strength in the late thirteenth-century and took some time to be disseminated from central to regional courts.Footnote 35 As examined below, there is evidence of this incomplete application of coverture in the royal courts of the colony in Ireland in the later thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries.Footnote 36
The dominance of coverture as a frame through which to view married women's experiences of the law has also obscured the importance in the medieval legal landscape of local and ecclesiastical jurisdictions in which coverture was not the rule. To comprehend women's experiences of the law in the round, the full legal picture, including ecclesiastical courts which ruled on cases relating to marriage, must be taken into account and the interplay between ecclesiastical and secular law will be noted in relation to cases discussed below. Additionally, the focus on the differences in legal entitlements between single women, married women and widows has not adequately taken into account the fact that legal disputes often spanned different phases of women's lives. That is to say, women often had to pursue cases that arose while they were widowed after they remarried or deal with their husband's estates when they were widowed. There was, as such, a continuity in women's legal concerns and aims as they shifted from one marital state to another. Each of these complicating factors necessitates a more flexible understanding of coverture and its impact on female litigants. This impact will be discussed further below using examples from cases heard before the secular courts of the English colony in Ireland.
III
What can we tell from case law about how married women behaved and were treated in English secular courts in Ireland? As we know, they retained their own, distinct legal personality, as demonstrated by common practices like the employment by married women of different legal professionals (both essoiners and attorneys) than their husbands.Footnote 37 The treatment of husband and wife as separate legal entities in civil suits sometimes resulted in split verdicts, in which one member of a married couple was found guilty while the other was not. In English Ireland examples of these split verdicts survive from a session of the justiciar's court held in Naas in 1302 and the hundred court of New Ross in 1376. In both cases wives, but not their husbands, were found to have disseised (wrongfully dispossessed of their property) the plaintiffs, and the plaintiffs in both cases were ordered to pay fines for false accusations against the husbands.Footnote 38 Furthermore, records from the justiciar's court, which is the central common law court for which we have most evidence, indicate that one of the most well-known tenets of coverture — that women could not plead in civil cases in royal courts without their husbands as co-plaintiffs — was not uniformly followed in the later thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries. This was decades after it had been theorised in Glanville and Bracton.
Married women pleaded without their husbands as plaintiffs and appeared singly as defendants before the justiciar's court. In 1297, for example, Nesta, wife of Adam de Burton, appeared on her own at a sitting of the justiciar's court at Limerick and with no mention of her husband's absence in relation to her case of novel disseisin (this was an action litigants could take in common law courts if they had been unlawfully dispossessed of lands they held). Nesta had won her case already but had to appear when her opponents — unsuccessfully — appealed the ruling.Footnote 39 A successful debt case taken in the justiciar's court at Limerick by Juliana, wife of Philip le Waleys, in 1297 made no mention of her husband as co-plaintiff. This is particularly interesting because her case relates to debt rather than a dispute over land.Footnote 40 Some interpretations of coverture held that, since ownership of a woman's movable goods, including money, passed to their husband upon marriage, married women could not sue for debt because any money owed to them was owed instead to their husbands. Stevens's examination, however, has shown that married women in the fourteenth century routinely appeared as co-plaintiffs in debt cases before the court of common pleas in London, though he does not cite any examples of them appearing without their husbands.Footnote 41 The theoretical inability of married women to own movables under English law was not universally accepted, and historians of medieval and early modern England have shown that many men and women perceived goods that women brought to marriage as theirs.Footnote 42 Moreover, the church upheld the rights of married women to dispose of goods in wills, a stance predicated on the idea that they owned those goods. The friction between secular and canon law concerning married women's goods was apparent in England and in Ireland, where the citizens of Dublin complained to the crown in 1347 that prelates (perhaps specifically the archbishop of Dublin) protected the rights of married women in the city to make bequests of moveable goods.Footnote 43 Cordelia Beattie has examined the gap between canon law and English law in their treatment of women's marital property and highlighted regional variations in how often married women made wills in different areas of England.Footnote 44 In English Ireland, just as Beattie found for some parts of England itself, the common law position on married women's moveable property was not fully enforced and many married women made wills.Footnote 45 This nuancing of our understanding of married women's disabilities at law — here relating to the right to own movables — lessens the gap in lived experience between women at different life cycle stages.
Married women from the colony who appeared before the justiciar's court alone sometimes did so because their husbands were absent in England or elsewhere, often on royal service.Footnote 46 Indeed, in some cases and in the interest of avoiding delays in the provision of justice, married women were asked by the court to answer cases alone if their husband was repeatedly absent. A dispute lasting at least six years (from 1296 until 1302) in the central common law courts of the colony between Nicholas de Neterville, a landowner of County Meath, and the archbishop of Armagh involved the claims of two married women. These two sisters — Matilda (sometimes called la Botilere, which was presumably the name of her deceased husband) and Margaret — were daughters of Alexander de Notingham and they claimed the right to portions of land in Nobber, County Meath as an inheritance from him.Footnote 47 The record of the case noted that Margaret's husband, Richard de London, ‘without whom … [Margaret] … cannot answer’, repeatedly essioned himself (made excuses for his absence and failure to answer the archbishop's case).Footnote 48 Finally, the court decided that Margaret should answer alongside her sister Matilda and without her absent husband. The women countered with several objections, one being that Matilda should not appear without her husband, John de Boneville, who had not yet been mentioned in the record of the case and without whom Matilda already had been admitted to defend. The court found that, as she already had been admitted to defend without her husband, the case should progress; the archbishop, therefore, faced two married sisters in the case, both of whom appeared without their husbands. The court found against Matilda, but she appealed, claiming that she was named incorrectly in the record and that when she was told to answer alone without her husband, her husband John was in fact present in court; she thus argued that there were multiple errors in the court record. Matilda's initial willingness and subsequent contestation of her right to plead alone, as well as her failure to object to her supposedly incorrect name until after the verdict had gone against her, raises the possibility that she and her legal counsel allowed errors to occur and even played on the very flexibility of the application of coverture to provide excuses to contest the eventual verdict.
Another woman, Mabina, wife of Gerald Tyrel, may have used a similar legal strategy in a dispute about control of lands in west County Dublin that spanned the two years from 1297 to 1299 and included cases taken in three different central common law courts: the itinerant eyre, the Dublin bench and finally the justiciar's court. Emma, widow of Richard Tyrel, claimed the lands (a third of Tyrel's manor at Lyons) as her dower provision. The relationship between Emma and Mabina is not explained in the record of the case; that they were both married to men in the Tyrel family might suggest that they were in-laws of some kind and that Richard Tyrel was Gerald's father, brother, cousin or some other close relation that would explain his estate passing to Gerald on his death. However, the fact that Mabina was a co-plaintiff indicates that the claim was through her inheritance, not her husband's. Perhaps she too was a member of the Tyrel family (Richard's daughter?) and she had married a cousin or relation in Gerald.Footnote 49 The Tyrel family was a prominent office and landholding family of Kildare and west and south county Dublin, and Mabina's husband Gerald Tyrel was a particularly well-connected figure.Footnote 50
Gerald was excused for his absence from proceedings before the Dublin bench because he was abroad in the King's service, as he was several times in this period. Mabina, however, appeared in person and without her husband before the justices of the bench, to defend her right to the lands at Lyons. In the next stage of pleading, Gerald appeared in person and Mabina by her attorney, who objected that she should not have been allowed to plead alone in the previous stage. Mabina may have chosen to plead alone while her husband was absent, knowing that she could later interrupt the progress of the lawsuit on those grounds. It is all the more interesting that on the occasion that she pleaded alone, Mabina came in person, not by attorney. We can only speculate as to whether this was part of a legal strategy and, if so, whether it was her own, wholly or in part, or if she was advised to do this by her attorney. Either way, this highlights one way in which the flexible application of coverture could be harnessed by married women to their own ends. Mabina and her attorney raised a number of other objections about errors in procedure in the case before the bench. Her opponent Emma answered (by her attorney) that the case had proceeded in the presence of the chief justiciar and so, if anything occurred amiss, it did so under his oversight. Emma's attorney did not, therefore, respond specifically to the issue of Mabina pleading alone, nor did the justice's decision that there had been an error. As a result, we cannot know how that specific argument about the inappropriateness of a wife pleading without her husband was received, though Mabina did succeed in retaining control of the lands in the short term.Footnote 51
This material from the central common law courts in the late thirteenth century demonstrates the flexibility in the application of coverture and also, perhaps, an awareness among married women and their legal counsel that this flexibility could be used to their advantage. In discussing the depth and nature of the divide between married and unmarried women at law, it is important to note also that there were situations in which wives remained, in terms of the legal theory, entirely legally independent from their husbands. This included criminal cases.Footnote 52 Yet, though married women were prosecuted individually (i.e. without their husbands as co-defendants) in criminal cases, there is evidence that wider societal assumptions about power dynamics within marriage or, indeed, within non-marital relationships between men and women, influenced the decisions of justices and juries in criminal contexts. For example, when in Cork in 1295 William Savage and his wife and Robert Derby and his wife (neither woman is named) were found guilty of counterfeiting, the men were drawn and hanged while the women went free.Footnote 53 The leniency shown to the woman was in consideration, apparently, of the fact that they ‘were their [Savage and Derby's] married wives’. This suggests that the jury took into account the marital relationship and assumed, in essence, that married women were under the control of their husbands and therefore not fully liable for their actions. Sentencing resulting from similar assumptions has been identified in medieval and early modern England: Sara Butler discusses a ruling in a Wiltshire eyre of 1249, when a woman named Christiana Sprot was acquitted of murder because she only took part in the act out of fear of her husband. As Butler notes, this limited liability of wives in some cases where they committed crimes with their husband ‘existed both in theory and in practice’, since it was described in Bracton.Footnote 54 Marisha Caswell has seen the ‘echoes of coverture’ in this type of judgement in the early modern period, despite the fact that coverture was not relevant, theoretically, in the criminal sphere. She states that married women sometimes used the defence of ‘marital coercion, which held that a married woman who committed a crime with her husband — with the exceptions of murder and treason — was presumed to be acting under his coercion and was therefore not liable for her offence’.Footnote 55
However, it may be more accurate to see these judgements not as ‘echoes of coverture’ or as arising from that legal practice but to see both coverture and these judgements as the natural consequence of the drafting and implementation of law by members of a society with shared conceptions of women's weakness and the appropriate power relationships between men and women. Furthermore, while the record of the acquittal of the counterfeiters’ wives in 1295 suggests that the existence of valid marriage was necessary to benefit from this limited liability for crimes, another verdict from the justiciar's court shows that women who were not in canonically recognised marriages could also benefit from assumptions made about their vulnerability to male influence. In 1302 Isabella Cadel and her maid Fynewell Seyuyn were accused of spying and consorting with felons in the Dublin mountains and admitted guilt for those offences. They were pardoned the serious charge of breaking the king's peace, though they were punished for their offences by loss of their chattels. The reasons given for their pardon were the service of Isabella's father to the crown, the advocacy of several influential magnates in the colony and the ‘simplicity of the women in this affair’. According to the court record, they were following the command of Dermot Odymsi (Diarmait Ó Diomasaigh),Footnote 56 Isabella's lover, but not husband.Footnote 57 This is a highly gendered way of thinking about the women's culpability and the assumed domination of the women by men in their lives.
This type of thinking may also have motivated justices in the case of the homicide of Walter Sewyn, a royal serjeant, in 1297, to look with leniency on two women who were involved in the attack that resulted in his death. These women, Agnes, widow of John Moyl, and Nevoc Inyn Oconoyl, were important figures in the account of the attack and its aftermath. The homicide occurred in Nevoc's home — her son was one of the attackers — and seems to have been prompted by Walter's attempts to seize her property. Agnes, after the attack, concealed Nevoc in a chest in the local church until she could escape. Nevoc's chattels were confiscated, but neither woman was outlawed, while all of the seven men who participated in the attack were.Footnote 58 Dianne Hall suggests that a lighter punishment may have been rendered because the women were ‘viewed as less dangerous than the men’ (itself a gendered perception), and also that if the women did not take up arms themselves, they may have not been considered guilty of murder.Footnote 59 That may be so, but in addition to these factors, the same gendered ideas of women's vulnerability to male coercion may have been at play in sentencing. It was not an automatic exemption — some women were outlawed or found fully liable for their actions even when they committed crimes alongside men — but there are sufficient examples to suggest that juries sometimes applied gendered understandings of power dynamics to their treatment of female defendants.Footnote 60 It seems, therefore, that it was not just marital status that influenced verdicts and sentencing, but gender overall. Women sometimes sheltered men in their family or household when they committed crimes, and it may be that there was some leniency shown for women like Isabella de Moorton, who was found not guilty of sheltering her brother, described in the court record as a felon, in 1298.Footnote 61 De Moorton was fulfilling an accepted female role of supporting male family members and this may have led jurors to look on her case sympathetically.Footnote 62 The source does not reveal the jury's reasons for finding as they did in de Moorton's case, but the bare facts of a case were not all that medieval juries considered and the wider gendered context here may have influenced them as it did in the case of Isabella Cadel. Studies of jury nullification in English secular courts in this period (notably in homicide and rape cases where juries were often reluctant to find defendants guilty and so trigger capital punishment) show that juries could return not guilty verdicts because they sympathised with a litigant and found their behaviour understandable rather than because they thought they were innocent of the charges against them.Footnote 63
Women's presumed vulnerability to male violence may have sometimes been taken into account when women facilitated illegal activities while they were without male protection. John de Lyvet's account of the theft of his horse in 1302 near Ballyloughan, County Kildare alleged that his sister, named only as ‘the wife of Rys Beket’, was holding the horse for him, but that William de Lyvet (who appears to have been a relative of John's) went to her when her husband was away, intimidated her and threatened her with ‘great danger’. Out of fear, she turned the horse over to William and John demanded its return. John crafted his plea with the assumption that this story about a threatened, fearful woman without a male protector would be both believable and sympathetic and his sister's fear is mentioned several times in the court record.Footnote 64 Again, like the assumption that women might not be fully culpable for their actions if they committed them under the influence of men in their lives, not all women benefited from the fact that a jury might feel sympathy for a woman without male protection. Some, like Isabella, wife of John Wolf in Kildare in 1298, paid a fine for the offence of sheltering serving-men of her husband and their stolen goods even though her husband was absent at the time.Footnote 65 Conversely, it was most often but not only women who could benefit from societal ideas about their vulnerability or susceptibility to the influence of those more powerful than them. Minors like Adam, son of Christina Obrey, might also be treated with leniency. He was found guilty of larceny alongside his mother in 1295 but although she was hanged, he was not because he was underage.Footnote 66
The account given in the court records of two women in a case of cattle rustling in 1306 is particularly interesting. The account includes the reported speech of one of the women which, although fascinating, cannot be taken at face value. Her words as they appear in the record were mediated through attorneys and court officials as well as the process of translation, but they do represent a version of female speech and behaviour that was believable to the jury. The account of events related in the case stated that the wife of a hibernicus (here meaning both Irish and an unfree labourer attached to the lands of their lord) named Geoffrey McWhither was instructed by her husband to help steal the cattle of Geoffrey de Brandewode, his lord. McWhither had, according to the record of the case, become frustrated with what he must have seen as his lord's excessive demands for his labour, and decided to depart to an enemy of de Brandewode with his cattle. This unnamed wife of McWhither, adopting an intercessory role often ascribed to women in medieval accounts, pleaded with Geoffrey Savage for protection and housing for the stolen livestock when she arrived on his land. When de Brandewode tracked down his cattle and arrived at Savage's household, he found Savage's wife there alone. When he demanded to know why she impounded his cattle, she claimed she had no idea and that it was nothing to do with her. She did not object when he began to drive the cattle back to his land, stating, in the words of the translation, ‘Take them for me for I do not meddle in such things’.Footnote 67 This case, therefore, includes two characteristics seen in other legal narratives discussed here. First, women were often described as acting under the direction of men in their lives. Following from this, women could claim, believably, to have had no part in the decisions of these men — to adopt a passive position — and, thereby, distance themselves from their actions in a way that was, in some cases as least, exculpatory.
In 1460, over 150 years after the cattle rustling case of 1306, and in a different secular jurisdiction in the colony, the Irish parliament, we again see legal arguments that relied on the acceptance of women's passivity in the face of their husband's actions. Margaret Nugent, widow of William Butler, a Lancastrian who was attainted in the Yorkist-controlled Irish parliaments of the late 1450s, pleaded that she should nevertheless receive her dower from Butler's lands, since his rebellious actions were not her fault. They were, she claimed, ‘very much against her will’, and she implied that she could not be expected to influence him.Footnote 68 Her defence was accepted and dower awarded. This position of female passivity was, apparently, as acceptable to audiences in the fifteenth century as it had been to those in the late thirteenth and early fourteenth. Butler's success also related to the fact that, like Isabella Cadel who had been pardoned for spying in 1302, she was able to draw on the ‘service’ to the crown or colony of influential male members of her family — in Butler's case her father — to garner favour with the court. Women secured not just favourable treatment in legal disputes, but also sometimes forgiveness of fines for infractions like remarrying without the king's permission, through the service of their male family members in the colonial administration or on military campaigns.Footnote 69 Taking two representative examples from a multitude surviving in administrative records from English Ireland, Joan the widow of Thomas Vernoill, married Robert Hemyngburgh and her fine for doing so without the king's permission was forgiven in 1389 because of Robert's service to the crown in Ireland. As ‘the king's attorney in the exchequer and common bench’, this particular husband would also have brought a good deal of legal expertise to the marriage.Footnote 70 Margaret, widow of Milo Mandeville, was also forgiven a fine in 1389 because of her new husband, Richard Russel's ‘good service in Ulster’ against the Irish (perhaps relating to the taking of Niall Óg Ó Néill in 1389).Footnote 71 Neither the military nor the administrative avenues of garnering the favour of the colonial administration were available to women themselves, so they had to avail of the benefits such favour could bring by relying on their male familial networks.Footnote 72
Ideas of female vulnerability, and perhaps also the notion that royal justice was responsible for protecting vulnerable women, were also employed by male plaintiffs in their pleas.Footnote 73 Peter Bermingham complained in the justiciar's court in 1305 that his pregnant companion, Ele, was so frightened by an attack on Peter and his associates in Drogheda, that she went into labour with a premature male infant, who died, and that she never recovered her health.Footnote 74 Similarly, John, son of Simon, argued that his opponent in a trespass suit of 1306 so frightened his wife that she fell into long-term illness. He claimed that his opponent riding into his home while his wife and a female companion were entirely alone, without male protection, and chased them into town, brandishing a staff at them.Footnote 75 In both of these suits, the damage done to women was tangential to the case, legally, but these supporting details demonstrated how grievously the defendants acted. The ways in which litigants and petitioners played on shared assumptions about female vulnerability is apparent in the petition to the Irish council in 1374 of Joan, widow of James de la Hyde, who sought restoration of the goods and chattels of her husband which had been taken into the king's hands for his debts. Joan cited James's service to the crown militarily as one reason her petition should be granted — so, like other women, whether married or single, she relied in part on male networks in securing favour. Even in the terse language of directives from the Irish chancery, one can see glimpses of this widow's petition, and the arguments she used — perhaps, in person before the governor and council at Naas — highlighting her poverty, vulnerability and her need to support her children. The trope of the vulnerable widow, in special need of royal protection, was often employed in the pleas of widows to equity courts in later medieval England, but the way in which it draws upon wider ideas about female vulnerability in general is clear.Footnote 76 In Joan's case, the petition was successful, and the council ruled that she should be given back her husband's livestock and grain that had been seized into the hands of the king.Footnote 77 By the following year Joan was married to Maurice fitz Eustace, and the couple petitioned for the custody of lands in Dundaghlyn and Roweston in addition to Joan's dower lands.Footnote 78 It is interesting that Joan seems to have waited until she was married to sue this dower writ, even though she petitioned the council while newly widowed and unmarried in 1374 for the return of movable goods of her husband.
IV
It is not surprising that both male and female litigants exploited tropes of female vulnerability to suit their purposes in any given lawsuit. It is, nevertheless, an important reminder of the societally embedded nature of law and its implementation. Law was a reflection of, and practiced according to, societal norms and expectations. Juries and judges, then as they are now, were swayed by emotive arguments, as well as strictly legal ones, and litigants shaped the law in a very direct way by presenting challenges to suits according to their legal knowledge. Female litigants, regardless of their wealth, status or ethnicity, had a shared range of acceptable positions they could take and use to their advantage.Footnote 79 In particular the assumption of women's vulnerability and subordinate position vis-à-vis men could be used to exculpate them from blame in some situations or make an opposing litigant's actions seem more heinous.
Additionally, the more we see law as socially created, embedded and operated, the clearer it is that we cannot see coverture as a monolithic legal invention, but rather as an expression of wider sexist norms and assumptions about the relationships between men and women.Footnote 80 Husbandly domination of a couple's legal life was common across the medieval world and was the norm before coverture was formally theorised in the twelfth century and in regions and jurisdictions where it was not in place. Patriarchal structures and assumptions were not limited to coverture, and they permeated courts and legal practice in many other ways: all women might encounter similar difficulties and opportunities related to their gender. This is most obvious in the fact that legal spaces were entirely dominated by male officials, justices, juries and attorneys, but societal expectations about women's supposed weakness, both physical and mental, also played out in the courtroom in ways that could be disadvantageous or materially advantageous to women, whether they were wives, singlewomen or widows. Broader societal ideas about women and femininity influenced both the formation of law and its implementation by judges and juries in late medieval secular courts in the English colony in Ireland. Examples from case law from Ireland show the ways in which women in different life stages were impacted by similar sets of assumptions about female weakness and vulnerability. Women in the English colony were, too, dependant on the support of male family members to a greater extent than their male counterparts since they could not offer military or administrative service in the same way. Thus, despite the very real differences between women based on their marital status at a given moment, to say nothing of differences causes by distinctions of class or ethnicity, gender was in itself a sufficiently relevant factor in women's experiences of the law to justify the writing of the history of women and the law in medieval English Ireland. That such a project remains incomplete, despite major advances, confirms the continuing relevance of the ‘Agenda’ in driving Irish women's history.Footnote 81 But as we continue to respond to its call we must also respond to the historiographical moves forward in women's history in the years since it was written. In particular, we must interrogate more robustly why ‘women’ is an appropriate analytical category for the specific historical questions we are asking. This paper is an offering in that direction.Footnote 82