PHOTOGRAPH of a Lithograph: Woman on ducking stool.
Items made by The National Museum of Wales in connection with an exhibition about crime and punishment in Beaumaris Gaol.
PHOTOGRAPH of a Lithograph: Woman on ducking stool.
Items made by The National Museum of Wales in connection with an exhibition about crime and punishment in Beaumaris Gaol.
Cucking stools or ducking stools were chairs formerly used for punishment of disorderly women, scolds (people accused of being troublesome and angry and who habitually chastised, argued and quarrelled with their neighbours). The cucking-stool was a form of wymen pine, or "women's punishment," as referred to in Langland's Piers Plowman (1378). They were both instruments of public humiliation and censure primarily for the offense of scolding or back biting.
Dim cyfyngiadau/ No Restrictions
Adnau preifat / Private deposit
Os gwelwch yn dda archebwch y dogfenau gan ddefnyddio y rhif cyfeirnod amgen (lle ddarperidd) / Please order documents using the alternative reference number (where provided)
Mae copiau clawr caled o`r catalogau ar gael yn Archifau Ynys Môn ac yn y Gofrestr Cenedlaethol Archifau. Polisi Archifau Ynys Môn yw catalogio yn iaith y ddogfen./Hard copies of the catalogue are available at Archifau Ynys Môn / Anglesey Archives and the National Register of Archives. It is the policy of Archifau Ynys Môn / Anglesey Archives to catalogue in the language of the document.
Cyflwr da /Good condition
Compiled by Amanda Sweet for Archifau Ynys Môn / Anglesey Archives
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cucking_stool
Mae'r holl gofnodiadau sy'n cydymffurfio â pholisi casglu Swyddfa Gofnodi Cyngor Sir Ynys Môn wedi eu cadw /All records which meet the collection policy of the Anglesey Archives have been retained.
Ni ddisgwylir croniadau/Accruals are not expected