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				First published: February 1, 2024 - Last updated: February 1, 2024
			TITLE INFORMATION 
			
			Authors: Euan Roger and Sebastian Sobecki
			
 Title: On Raptus, Quitclaims, and Precedents in Staundon v. Chaucer-Chaumpaigne
 
 Subtitle: An Afterword
 
 Journal: The Chaucer Review: A Journal of Medieval Studies and Literary Criticism
 
 Volume: 59
 
 Issue: 1
 
 Year: January 2024
 
 Pages: 10-21
 
 ISSN: 1528-4204 - 
					Find a Library: WorldCat | 
				eISSN: 0009-2002 - 
					Find a Library: WorldCat
 
 Language: English
 
 Keywords: 
				Medieval History: 
					14th Century | 
				European History: 
					English History | 
				Cases: 
					Real Offenders / 
						Geoffrey Chaucer; 
				Cases: 
					Real Victims / 
						Cecilia Chaumpaigne; 
				Types: 
					Rape
 
 FULL TEXT
 
			
			Links:
			- Academia.edu (Free Access)
 
 - Project MUSE Restricted Access)
 
 - Scholarly Publishing Collective (Restricted Access)
 
 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
 
			
			Authors:
			- 
				Euan C. Roger, 
					The National Archives - 
					Academia.edu
 
 - 
				Sebastian Sobecki, 
					Department of Engish, 
					University of Toronto - 
					Academia.edu, 
					ORCID, 
					Wikipedia
 
 Abstract: 
					»The two documents we presented in The Chaucer Review 57.4 (2022) changed everything we knew about Chaucer's relationship with Cecily Chaumpaigne. We showed that in this case raptus does not refer to rape or violent crime but to procurement in the form of poaching a servant, an action made illegal by the Statute and Ordinance of Laborers (1349/51). The new records clarify that Chaucer and Chaumpaigne were co-defendants not opponents, being sued together by Thomas Staundon, Chaumpaigne's former employer. The present article explains in greater depth how Chaumpaigne's two quitclaims are concerned with procurement, not rape or abduction, and labor law. This article also introduces precedents and analogues, demonstrating that medieval lawyers might regard the procurement of an employee under the Statute of Laborers to amount to raptus custodie, or ravishment of ward. Finally, we suggest that the case of Staundon v. Chaucer-Chaumpaigne belongs to the long history of the noncompete clause.«  
				(Source: The Chaucer Review)
 
 Wikipedia: 
				History of Europe: 
					History of England / 
						England in the late Middle Ages | 
				Sex and the law: 
					Rape / 
				Geoffrey Chaucer, 
				Rape in England
 |