Les crimes et châtiments emblématiques à travers l’exemple du drapeau médiéval

Medieval sources often mentioned violence against flags, in a military context or not: these practices can be explained by the importance attached by medieval justice to visual elements in the exercise of punishment. Flags bore emblems, that is, signs that stated the identity of a person, so they co...

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Main Author: Julien De Palma
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Criminocorpus 2020-12-01
Series:Criminocorpus
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/criminocorpus/7933
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author Julien De Palma
author_facet Julien De Palma
author_sort Julien De Palma
collection DOAJ
description Medieval sources often mentioned violence against flags, in a military context or not: these practices can be explained by the importance attached by medieval justice to visual elements in the exercise of punishment. Flags bore emblems, that is, signs that stated the identity of a person, so they could be regarded as a projection, a substitute, of their owners. This special status is evidenced by practice and official documentation: for example, the dukes of Burgundy of House Valois insisted, in their military orders, on the importance, and the obligation, for soldiers, of respecting and obeying flags. As a consequence, violence against flags could be regarded as a form of punishment in absentia: the exhibition of flags seemed very much like a pillorying of their owner, and their destruction a killing.
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spelling doaj-art-d0aef07b5cb8418abd2632fd4b0a87392025-01-06T09:14:48ZengCriminocorpusCriminocorpus2108-69072020-12-011610.4000/criminocorpus.7933Les crimes et châtiments emblématiques à travers l’exemple du drapeau médiévalJulien De PalmaMedieval sources often mentioned violence against flags, in a military context or not: these practices can be explained by the importance attached by medieval justice to visual elements in the exercise of punishment. Flags bore emblems, that is, signs that stated the identity of a person, so they could be regarded as a projection, a substitute, of their owners. This special status is evidenced by practice and official documentation: for example, the dukes of Burgundy of House Valois insisted, in their military orders, on the importance, and the obligation, for soldiers, of respecting and obeying flags. As a consequence, violence against flags could be regarded as a form of punishment in absentia: the exhibition of flags seemed very much like a pillorying of their owner, and their destruction a killing.https://journals.openedition.org/criminocorpus/7933flagcoat of armsemblemsemblematic punishmentsymbolic justice
spellingShingle Julien De Palma
Les crimes et châtiments emblématiques à travers l’exemple du drapeau médiéval
Criminocorpus
flag
coat of arms
emblems
emblematic punishment
symbolic justice
title Les crimes et châtiments emblématiques à travers l’exemple du drapeau médiéval
title_full Les crimes et châtiments emblématiques à travers l’exemple du drapeau médiéval
title_fullStr Les crimes et châtiments emblématiques à travers l’exemple du drapeau médiéval
title_full_unstemmed Les crimes et châtiments emblématiques à travers l’exemple du drapeau médiéval
title_short Les crimes et châtiments emblématiques à travers l’exemple du drapeau médiéval
title_sort les crimes et chatiments emblematiques a travers l exemple du drapeau medieval
topic flag
coat of arms
emblems
emblematic punishment
symbolic justice
url https://journals.openedition.org/criminocorpus/7933
work_keys_str_mv AT juliendepalma lescrimesetchatimentsemblematiquesatraverslexempledudrapeaumedieval