A duel is an arranged engagement in combat between two
individuals, with matched weapons, in accordance with agreed-upon rules. Duels
in this form were chiefly practiced in early modern Europe with precedents in
the medieval code of chivalry, and continued into the modern period (19th to
early 20th centuries) especially among military officers.
During the 17th and 18th centuries (and earlier), duels were
mostly fought with swords (the rapier, and later the smallsword), but beginning
in the late 18th century in England, duels were more commonly fought using
pistols. Fencing and pistol duels continued to co-exist throughout the 19th
century.
The duel was based on a code of honor. Duels were fought not
so much to kill the opponent as to gain "satisfaction", that is, to
restore one's honor by demonstrating a willingness to risk one's life for it,
and as such the tradition of dueling was originally reserved for the male
members of nobility; however, in the modern era it extended to those of the
upper classes generally. On rare occasions, duels with pistols or swords were
fought between women; these were sometimes known as petticoat duels.
Legislation against dueling goes back to the medieval
period. The Fourth Council of the Lateran (1215) outlawed duels, and civil
legislation in the Holy Roman Empire against dueling was passed in the wake of
the Thirty Years' War. From the early 17th century, duels became illegal in the
countries where they were practiced. Dueling largely fell out of favor in
England by the mid-19th century and in Continental Europe by the turn of the
20th century. Dueling declined in the Eastern United States in the 19th century
and by the time the American Civil War broke out, dueling had begun to decline,
even in the South. Public opinion, not legislation, caused the change.
In Western society, the formal concept of a duel developed
out of the medieval judicial duel and older pre-Christian practices such as the
Viking Age holmgang. In Medieval society, judicial duels were fought by knights
and squires to end various disputes. Countries like Germany, United Kingdom,
and Ireland practiced this tradition. Judicial combat took two forms in
medieval society, the feat of arms and chivalric combat. The feat of arms
was used to settle hostilities between two large parties and supervised by a
judge. The battle was fought as a result of a slight or challenge to one
party's honor which could not be resolved by a court. Weapons were standardized
and typical of a knight's armoury, for example longswords, polearms etc.,
however, weapon quality and augmentations were at the discretion of the knight,
for example, a spiked hand guard for or an extra grip for half-swording. The
parties involved would wear their own armour, one knight may choose to wear
full plate armour, whilst another wears chain mail. The duel lasted until the
other party was too weak to fight back. In early cases, the defeated party was
then executed. These type of duels soon evolved into the more chivalric pas
d'armes, or "passage of arms", a type of chivalric hastilude that
evolved in the late 14th century and remained popular through the 15th century.
A knight or group of knights (tenans or "holders") would stake out a
travelled spot, such as a bridge or city gate, and let it be known that any
other knight who wished to pass (venans or "comers") must first
fight, or be disgraced.. If a traveling venans did not have weapons or horse
to meet the challenge, one might be provided, and if the venans chose not to
fight, he would leave his spurs behind as a sign of humiliation. If a lady
passed unescorted, she would leave behind a glove or scarf, to be rescued and
returned to her by a future knight who passed that way.
The Roman Catholic Church was critical of dueling throughout
medieval history, frowning both on the traditions of judicial combat and on the
duel on points of honor among the nobility. Judicial duels were deprecated by
the Lateran Council of 1215, but the judicial duel persisted in the Holy Roman
Empire into the 15th century. The word duel comes from the Latin 'duellum',
cognate with 'bellum', meaning 'war'.
During the early Renaissance, dueling established the status
of a respectable gentleman, and was an accepted manner to resolve disputes.
Dueling remained highly popular in European society, despite
various attempts at banning the practice.
According to Ariel Roth, during the reign of Henry IV, over
4,000 French aristocrats were killed in duels "in an eighteen-year
period" while a twenty-year period of Louis XIII's reign saw some eight
thousand pardons for "murders associated with duels". Roth also notes
that thousands of men in the Southern United States "died protecting what
they believed to be their honor."
The first published code duello, or "code of
dueling", appeared in Renaissance Italy. The first formalized national
code was France's, during the Renaissance. In 1777, a code of practice was
drawn up for the regulation of duels, at the Summer assizes in the town of Clonmel,
County Tipperary, Ireland. A copy of the code, known as 'The twenty-six
commandments', was to be kept in a gentleman's pistol case for reference should
a dispute arise regarding procedure. During the Early Modern period, there
were also various attempts by secular legislators to curb the practice. Queen
Elizabeth I officially condemned and outlawed dueling in 1571, shortly after
the practice had been introduced to England.
However, the tradition had become deeply rooted in European
culture as a prerogative of the aristocracy, and these attempts largely failed.
For example, King Louis XIII of France outlawed dueling in 1626, a law which
remained in force for ever afterwards, and his successor Louis XIV intensified
efforts to wipe out the duel. Despite these efforts, dueling continued
unabated, and it is estimated that between 1685 and 1716, French officers
fought 10,000 duels, leading to over 400 deaths.
By the late 18th century, Enlightenment era values began to
influence society with new self-conscious ideas about politeness, civil
behaviour and new attitudes towards violence. The cultivated art of politeness
demanded that there should be no outward displays of anger or violence, and the
concept of honour became more personalized.
By the 1770s the practice of dueling was increasingly coming
under attack from many sections of enlightened society, as a violent relic of
Europe's medieval past unsuited for modern life. As England began to
industrialize and benefit from urban planning and more effective police forces,
the culture of street violence in general began to slowly wane. The growing
middle class maintained their reputation with recourse to either bringing
charges of libel, or to the fast-growing print media of the early nineteenth
century, where they could defend their honour and resolve conflicts through correspondence
in newspapers.
Influential new intellectual trends at the turn of the
nineteenth century bolstered the anti-dueling campaign; the utilitarian philosophy
of Jeremy Bentham stressed that praiseworthy actions were exclusively
restricted to those that maximize human welfare and happiness, and the
Evangelical notion of the "Christian conscience" began to actively
promote social activism. Individuals in the Clapham Sect and similar societies,
who had successfully campaigned for the abolition of slavery, condemned dueling
as ungodly violence and as an egocentric culture of honour.
Dueling became popular in the United States – the former
United States Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton was killed in a duel
against the sitting Vice President Aaron Burr in 1804. Between 1798 and the
Civil War, the US Navy lost two-thirds as many officers to dueling as it did in
combat at sea, including naval hero Stephen Decatur. Many of those killed or
wounded were midshipmen or junior officers. Despite prominent deaths, dueling
persisted because of contemporary ideals of chivalry, particularly in the
South, and because of the threat of ridicule if a challenge was rejected.
By about 1770, the duel underwent a number of important
changes in England. Firstly, unlike their counterparts in many continental
nations, English duelists enthusiastically adopted the pistol, and sword duels
dwindled. Special sets of dueling pistols were crafted for the wealthiest of
noblemen for this purpose. Also, the office of 'second' developed into
'seconds' or 'friends' being chosen by the aggrieved parties to conduct their
honour dispute. These friends would attempt to resolve a dispute upon terms
acceptable to both parties and, should this fail, they would arrange and
oversee the mechanics of the encounter.
In the United Kingdom, to kill in the course of a duel was
formally judged as murder, but generally the courts were very lax in applying
the law, as they were sympathetic to the culture of honour..This attitude
lingered on – Queen Victoria even expressed a hope that Lord Cardigan,
prosecuted for wounding another in a duel, "would get off easily".
The Anglican Church was generally hostile to dueling, but non-conformist sects
in particular began to actively campaign against it.
By 1840, dueling had declined dramatically; when the 7th
Earl of Cardigan was acquitted on a legal technicality for homicide in
connection with a duel with one of his former officers, outrage was expressed
in the media, with The Times alleging that there was deliberate, high level
complicity to leave the loop-hole in the prosecution case and reporting the
view that "in England there is one law for the rich and another for the
poor" and The Examiner describing the verdict as "a defeat of
justice".
The last fatal duel between Englishmen in England occurred
in 1845, when James Alexander Seton had an altercation with Henry Hawkey over
the affections of his wife, leading to a duel at Southsea. However, the last
fatal duel to occur in England was between two French political refugees,
Frederic Cournet and Emmanuel Barthélemy near Englefield Green in 1852; the
former was killed. In both cases, the winners of the duels, Hawkey and
Barthélemy, were tried for murder. But Hawkey was acquitted and Barthélemy was
convicted only of manslaughter; he served seven months in prison. However, in
1855, Barthélemy was hanged after shooting and killing his employer and another
man.
Dueling also began to be criticized in America in the late
18th century; Benjamin Franklin denounced the practice as uselessly violent,
and George Washington encouraged his officers to refuse challenges during the
American Revolutionary War because he believed that the death by dueling of
officers would have threatened the success of the war effort. However, the
practice actually gained in popularity in the first half of the nineteenth
century especially in the South and on the lawless Western Frontier. Dueling
began an irreversible decline in the aftermath of the Civil War. Even in the
South, public opinion increasingly came to regard the practice as little more
than bloodshed.
The most notorious American duel was the Burr–Hamilton duel,
in which notable Federalist and former Secretary of the Treasury Alexander
Hamilton was fatally wounded by his political rival, the sitting Vice President
of the United States Aaron Burr. This duel was reenacted in the musical
Hamilton to the song "The World Was Wide Enough".
Another American politician, Andrew Jackson, later to serve
as a General Officer in the U.S. Army and to become the seventh president,
fought two duels, though some legends claim he fought many more. On May 30,
1806, he killed prominent duellist Charles Dickinson, suffering himself from a
chest wound which caused him a lifetime of pain. Jackson also reportedly
engaged in a bloodless duel with a lawyer and in 1803 came very near dueling
with John Sevier. Jackson also engaged in a frontier brawl (not a duel) with
Thomas Hart Benton in 1813.
On September 22, 1842, future President Abraham Lincoln, at
the time an Illinois state legislator, met to duel with state auditor James
Shields, but their seconds intervened and persuaded them against it.
On 30 May 1832, French mathematician Évariste Galois was
mortally wounded in a duel at the age of twenty, the day after he had written
his seminal mathematical results.
Irish political leader Daniel O'Connell killed John
D'Esterre in a duel in February 1815. O'Connel offered D'Esterre's widow a
pension equal to the amount her husband had been earning at the time, but the
Corporation of Dublin, of which D'Esterre was a member, rejected O'Connell's
offer and voted the promised sum to D'Esterre's wife themselves. However,
D'Esterre's wife consented to accept an allowance for her daughter, which
O'Connell regularly paid for more than thirty years until his death. The memory
of the duel haunted him for the remainder of his life.
In 1808, two Frenchmen are said to have fought in balloons
over Paris, each attempting to shoot and puncture the other's balloon. One
duellist is said to have been shot down and killed with his second.
In 1843, two other Frenchmen are said to have fought a duel
by means of throwing billiard balls at each other.
The Russian poet Alexander Pushkin prophetically described a
number of duels in his works, notably Onegin's duel with Lensky in Eugene
Onegin. The poet was mortally wounded in a controversial duel with Georges
d'Anthès, a French officer rumoured to be his wife's lover. D'Anthès, who was
accused of cheating in this duel, married Pushkin's sister-in-law and went on
to become a French minister and senator.
In 1864, American writer Mark Twain, then a contributor to
the New York Sunday Mercury, narrowly avoided fighting a duel with a rival
newspaper editor, apparently through the intervention of his second, who
exaggerated Twain's prowess with a pistol.
In the 1860s, Otto von Bismarck was reported to have
challenged Rudolf Virchow to a duel. Virchow, being entitled to choose the
weapons, chose two pork sausages, one infected with the roundworm Trichinella;
the two would each choose and eat a sausage. Bismarck reportedly declined. The
story could be apocryphal, however.
Duels had mostly ceased to be fought to the death by the
late 19th century. The last known fatal duel in Ontario was in Perth, in 1833,
when Robert Lyon challenged John Wilson to a pistol duel after a quarrel over
remarks made about a local school teacher, whom Wilson married after Lyon was
killed in the duel. Victoria, BC was known to have been the centre of at least
two duels near the time of the gold rush. One involved a British arrival by the
name of George Sloane, and an American, John Liverpool, both arriving via San
Francisco in 1858. Duel by pistols, Sloane was fatally injured and Liverpool
shortly returned to the US. The fight originally started on board the ship over
a young woman, Miss Bradford, and then carried on later in Victoria's tent
city.[36] Another duel, involving a Mr. Muir, took place around 1861, but was
moved to an American island near Victoria.
The last fatal duel in England took place on Priest Hill,
between Englefield Green and Old Windsor, on 19 October 1852, between two
French political exiles, Frederic Cournet and Emmanuel Barthélemy, the former
being killed.
By the outbreak of World War I, dueling had not only been
made illegal almost everywhere in the Western world, but was also widely seen
as an anachronism. Military establishments in most countries frowned on dueling
because officers were the main contestants. Officers were often trained at
military academies at government's expense; when officers killed or disabled
one another it imposed an unnecessary financial and leadership strain on a
military organization, making dueling unpopular with high-ranking officers.
With the end of the duel, the dress sword also lost its
position as an indispensable part of a gentleman's wardrobe, a development
described as an "archaeological terminus" by Ewart Oakeshott,
concluding the long period during which the sword had been a visible attribute
of the free man, beginning as early as three millennia ago with the Bronze Age
sword.
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