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Great Britain has for many centuries been one of the world's great
sea-faring nations. The Royal Navy has defended her territory and
the merchant fleet has been instrumental in creating the nation's
wealth. The courage, industry and exploits of many of her sailors
and the names of the ships in which they served have become
legendary. However, the sea has also provided the backdrop to great
crimes and for Murder on the High Seas, the author has selected
murders that have been committed in many parts of the globe on
board different types of vessels, over a period of more than one
hundred years. The motives behind these crimes have included
revenge, lust, greed and survival. Nevertheless, they share one
common feature as all of those accused of responsibility were
brought back to Great Britain to stand trial. Among these
fascinating accounts is a description of the trial of the survivors
of a shipwreck who killed and fed on a shipmate. Also included is
the murder by slavers of several Royal Navy seamen who were part of
the West Africa Squadron, formed to put an end to the slave trade
of the South Atlantic.
This book is part of the Images of England series, which uses old
photographs and archived images to show the history of various
local areas in England, through their streets, shops, pubs, and
people.
Drawing on a wide selection of sources and illustrated with more
than sixty photographs, this collection of grisly tales explores
the darker side of the Lake District's past. It features the tale
of the 'Keswick Imposter', who seduced and bigamously married a
young lady of Buttermere before being hanged at Castile for fraud,
a story which was the inspiration for Melvyn Bragg's The Maid of
Buttermere. Also included is the account of an eighteenth-century
gang who repeatedly tried to kidnap a wealthy (but alcoholic)
landowner and marry him to a prostitute in order to lay their hands
on his fortune. With murders, hangings, kidnap and violence, Murder
& Crime in the Lake District is sure to captivate and horrify
anyone interested in the criminal history of the area.
Derbyshire Murders brings together fifteen of the county's most
extraordinary and shocking cases. The crimes covered made not just
local but in some cases national headlines. For this fascinating,
illustrated collection, Martin Baggoley has returned to original
sources - including police interviews, trial transcripts and
contemporary newspaper reports - to rebuild each story from
scratch. Cases include a murder and robbery committed in 1842 in
Stanley, and the murder of a police constable in Derby in 1879.
Although the killer was sentenced to death, he was reprieved after
it was revealed how the jury had reached their decision: they drew
lots and tossed a coin. Also included are cases from Belper,
Chesterfield, Bonsall, Glossop and Ilkeston. This unique
re-examination of the darker side of Derbyshire's past is sure to
appeal to all those interested in the shady side of the county's
history.
This chilling collection of murderous tales brings together a
diverse range of cases spanning three centuries and all of which
were committed in Scotland. Featuring 52 cases that shocked the
country, the early chapters describe crimes which occurred against
the turbulent political backdrop of the 18th century, including the
infamous lynching of Captain John Porteous in Edinburgh in 1736 and
the assassination of Colin Roy Campbell of Glenure in the spring of
1752. Also included is the case of an Edinburgh baby farmer hanged
in 1889; the brutal murder of a wealthy spinster in Glasgow in
1908; the shooting of a Detective Inspector during a failed attempt
to rescue a convict from a prison van in Glasgow in 1921; and the
summary execution of a German POW at the hands of his fellow Nazi
prisoners in Comrie, Perthshire in 1944. This well-illustrated and
enthralling book will appeal to everyone interested in true crime
and the shadier side of Scotland's past.
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Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
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