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Above:
Flogging at the grating
NAVAL
DISCIPLINE & ARTICLES OF WAR: The
Articles of War were Law aboard a Man-O-War they were written
and belonged to the British, Royal Navy and were also used in
the Royal Australian Navy up until the mid 1980's.
They were
dispensed with, along with the Naval Discipline Act in favour
of the more reasonable and up to date Defence Force Discipline
Act which now encompasses all three arms of Australia's Defence
Forces. It was widely known and accepted that discipline and
punishment in the Navy was more severe than in other arms of
military service.
The Articles
were read publicly at the commissioning of new ships, when an
offenders punishment warrant was read to the ship's company
and at timely intervals by the Captain to the Ship's Company.
The Articles
of War were posted prominently on a dedicated, permanent notice
board in every naval ship and establishment and were required
reading by all members of a ship's company.
The Articles
were originally established in the 1650s, amended in 1749 (by
an act of Parliament) and again in 1757. It is an amazing document
to ponder, especially the number and degree of offenses which
were punishable by death.
Where a
disciplinary offence committed by a sailor was serious enough
to warrrant more severe punishment than a Commanding Officer
was authorised to award the details of that offence would be
forwarded to The Admiralty or Navy Office where a 'Warrant Punishment'
would be initiated and then sent back to the offenders ship
or establishment for reading and sentencing.
Warrant
punishments were 'read' publicly with the offender stood to
attention in front of the formally mustered and fallen in ship's
company, or if received on board at an unusual hour, as often
was the case, in front of the fallen in Duty Watch and/or Men
Under (summary) Punishment.
It was as
a humiliating experience for many as it was severe. Many times
I have had occasion to witness an offender trembling, sobbing
and almost breaking down in front of his assembled shipmates
whilst his offence, plus The Articles pertaining to his offence
were read aloud. Upon completion of the reading the sailor would
be ordered to 'Off Caps' (formally, in the prescribed manner)
whereupon the details of his punishment would also be read aloud.
Punishments
for 'Warrant Offences' in my time in the RAN ranged in severity,
starting with Discharged, Services No Longer Required
(SNLR) - colloquially referred to as a 'Snarler',
Confinement to Cells or Military Prison, colloquially
referred to as 'Slot' or 'Slot time' , or, Reduced
to 2nd Class for Conduct. Naturally capital punishment
or flogging did not apply to the RAN.
THE
ARTICLES OF WAR 1757
- All
commanders, captains, and officers, in or belonging to any
of His Majesty's ships or vessels of war, shall cause the
public worship of Almighty God, according to the liturgy
of the Church of England established by law, to be solemnly,
orderly and reverently performed in their respective ships;
and shall take care that prayers and preaching, by the chaplains
in holy orders of the respective ships, be performed diligently;
and that the Lord's day be observed according to law.
- All
flag officers, and all persons in or belonging to His Majesty's
ships or vessels of war, being guilty of profane oaths,
cursings, execrations, drunkenness, uncleanness, or other
scandalous actions, in derogation of God's honour, and corruption
of good manners, shall incur such punishment as a court
martial shall think fit to impose, and as the nature and
degree of their offence shall deserve.
- If
any officer, mariner, soldier, or other person of the fleet,
shall give, hold, or entertain intelligence to or with any
enemy or rebel, without leave from the king's majesty, or
the lord high admiral, or the commissioners for executing
the office of lord high admiral, commander in chief, or
his commanding officer, every such person so offending,
and being thereof convicted by the sentence of a court martial,
shall be punished with death.
- If
any letter of message from any enemy or rebel, be conveyed
to any officer, mariner, or soldier or other in the fleet,
and the said officer, mariner, or soldier, or other as aforesaid,
shall not, within twelve hours, having opportunity so to
do, acquaint his superior or a commanding officer, or if
any superior officer being acquainted therewith, shall not
in convenient time reveal the same to the commander in chief
of the squadron, every such person so offending, and being
convicted thereof by the sentence of the court martial,
shall be punished with death, or such other punishment as
the nature and degree of the offense shall deserve, and
the court martial shall impose.
- All
spies, and all persons whatsoever, who shall come, or be
found, in the nature of spies, to bring or deliver any seducing
letters or messages from any enemy or rebel, or endeavor
to corrupt any captain, officer, mariner, or other in the
fleet, to betray his trust, being convicted of any such
offense by the sentence of the court martial, shall be punished
with death, or such other punishment, as the nature and
degree of the offence shall deserve, and the court martial
shall impose.
- No
person in the fleet shall receive an enemy or rebel with
money, victuals, powder, shot, arms, ammunition, or any
other supplies whatsoever, directly or indirectly, upon
pain of death, or such other punishment as the court martial
shall think fit to impose, and as the nature and degree
of the crime shall deserve.
- All
the papers, charter parties, bills of lading, passports,
and other writings whatsoever, that shall be taken, seized,
or found aboard any ship or ships which shall be surprised
or taken as prize, shall be duly preserved, and the very
originals shall by the commanding officer of the ship which
shall take such prize, be sent entirely, and without fraud,
to the court of the admiralty, or such other court of commissioners,
as shall be authorized to determine whether such prize be
lawful capture, there to be viewed, made use of, and proceeded
upon according to law, upon pain that every person offending
herein, shall forfeit and lose his share of the capture,
and shall suffer such further punishment, as the nature
and degree of his offense shall be found to deserve, and
the court martial shall impose.
- No
person in or belonging to the fleet shall take out of any
prize, or ship seized for prize, any money, plate, or goods,
unless it shall be necessary for the better securing thereof,
or for the necessary use and service of any of His Majesty's
ships or vessels of war, before the same be adjudged lawful
prize in some admiralty court; but the full and entire account
of the whole, without embezzlement, shall be brought in,
and judgment passed entirely upon the whole without fraud,
upon pain that every person offending him shall forfeit
and lose his share of the capture, and suffer such further
punishment as shall be imposed by a court martial, or such
court of admiralty, according to the nature and degree of
the offense.
- If
any ship or vessel be taken as prize, none of the officers,
mariners, or other persons on board her, shall be stripped
of their clothes, or in any sort pillaged, beaten, or evil-intreated,
upon the pain that the person or persons so offending, shall
be liable to such punishment as a court martial shall think
fit to inflict.
- Every
flag officer, captain and commander in the fleet, who, upon
signal or order of fight, or sight of any ship or ships
which it may be his duty to engage, or who, upon likelihood
of engagement, shall not make the necessary preparations
for fight, and shall not in his own person, and according
to his place, encourage the inferior officers and men to
fight courageously, shall suffer death, or such other punishment,
as from the nature and degree of the offence a court martial
shall deem him to deserve; and if any person in the fleet
shall treacherously or cowardly yield or cry for quarter,
every person so offending, and being convicted thereof by
the sentence of a court martial, shall suffer death.
- Every
person in the fleet, who shall not duly observe the orders
of the admiral, flag officer, commander of any squadron
or division, or other his superior officer, for assailing,
joining battle with, or making defense against any fleet,
squadron, or ship, or shall not obey the orders of his superior
officer as aforesaid in the time of action, to the best
of his power, or shall not use all possible endeavours to
put the same effectually into execution, every person so
offending, and being convicted thereof by the sentence of
the court martial, shall suffer death, or such other punishment,
as from the nature and degree of the offence a court martial
shall deem him to deserve.
- Every
person in the fleet, who through cowardice, negligence,
or disaffection, shall in time of action withdraw or keep
back, or not come into the fight or engagement, or shall
not do his utmost to take or destroy every ship which it
shall be his duty to engage, and to assist and relieve all
and every of His Majesty's ships, or those of his allies,
which it shall be his duty to assist and relieve, every
such person so offending, and being convicted thereof by
the sentence of a court martial, shall suffer death.
- Every
person in the fleet, who though cowardice, negligence, or
disaffection, shall forbear to pursue the chase of any enemy,
pirate or rebel, beaten or flying; or shall not relieve
or assist a known friend in view to the utmost of his power;
being convicted of any such offense by the sentence of a
court martial, shall suffer death.
- If
when action, or any service shall be commanded, any person
in the fleet shall presume or to delay or discourage the
said action or service, upon pretence of arrears of wages,
or upon any pretence whatsoever, every person so offending,
being convicted thereof by the sentence of the court martial,
shall suffer death, or such other punishment, as from the
nature and degree of the offense a court martial shall deem
him to deserve.
- Every
person in or belonging to the fleet, who shall desert or
entice others so to do, shall suffer death, or such other
punishment as the circumstances of the offense shall deserve,
and a court martial shall judge fit: and if any commanding
officer of any of His Majesty's ships or vessels of war
shall receive or entertain a deserter from any other of
His Majesty's ships or vessels, after discovering him to
be such deserter, and shall not with all convenient speed
give notice to the captain of the ship or vessel to which
such deserter belongs; or if the said ships or vessels are
at any considerable distance from each other, to the secretary
of the admiralty, or to the commander in chief; every person
so offending, and being convicted thereof by the sentence
of the court martial, shall be cashiered.
- Every
person in or belonging to the fleet, who shall desert or
entice others to do so, shall suffer death, or such other
punishment as the circumstances of the offense shall deserve,
and a court martial shall judge fit: and if any commanding
officer of any of His Majesty's ships or vessels of war
shall receive or entertain a deserter from any other of
His Majesty's ships or vessels, after discovering him to
be such deserter, and shall not with all convenient speed
give notice to the captain of the ship or vessel to which
such deserter belongs; or if the said ships or vessels are
at any considerable distance from each other, to the secretary
of the admiralty, or to the commander in chief; every person
so offending, and being convicted thereof by the sentence
of a court martial, shall be cashiered.
- The
officers and seamen of all ships appointed for convoy and
guard of merchant ships, or of any other, shall diligently
attend upon that charge, without delay, according to their
instructions in that behalf; and whosoever shall be faulty
therein, and shall not faithfully perform their duty, and
defend the ships and goods in their convoy, without either
diverting to other parts or occasions, or refusing or neglecting
to fight in their defence, if they be assailed, or running
away cowardly, and submitting the ships in their convoy
to peril and hazard; or shall demand or exact any money
or other reward from any merchant or master for convoying
any ships or vessels entrusted to their care, or shall misuse
the masters or mariners thereof; shall be condemned to make
reparation of the damage to the merchants, owners, and others,
as the court of admiralty shall adjudge, and also be punished
criminally according to the quality of their offences, be
it by pains of death, or other punishment, according as
shall be adjudged fit by the court martial.
- If
any captain, commander, or other officer of any of His Majesty's
ships or vessels, shall receive on board, or permit to be
received on board such ship or vessel, any goods or merchandises
whatsoever, other than for the sole use of the ship or vessel,
except gold, silver, or jewels, and except the goods and
merchandisers belonging to any merchant, or other ship or
vessel which may be shipwrecked, or in imminent danger of
being shipwrecked, either on the high seas, or in any port,
creek, or harbour, in order to the preserving them for their
proper owners, and except such goods or merchandisers as
he shall at any time be ordered to take or receive on board
by order of the lord high admiral of Great Britain, or the
commissioners for executing the office of lord high admiral
for the time being; every person so offending, being convicted
thereof by the sentence of the court martial shall be cashiered,
and be for ever afterwards rendered incapable to serve in
any place or office in the naval service of His Majesty,
his heirs and successors.
- If
any person in or belonging to the fleet shall make or endeavor
to make any mutinous assembly upon any pretence whatsoever,
every person offending herein, and being convicted thereof
by the sentence of the court martial, shall suffer death:
and if any person in or belonging to the fleet shall utter
any words of sedition or mutiny, he shall suffer death,
or such other punishment as a court martial shall deem him
to deserve: and if any officer, mariner, or soldier on or
belonging to the fleet, shall behave himself with contempt
to his superior officer, being in the execution of his office,
he shall be punished according to the nature of his offence
by the judgment of a court martial.
- If
any person in the fleet shall conceal any traitorous or
mutinous practice or design, being convicted thereof by
the sentence of a court martial, he shall suffer death,
or any other punishment as a court martial shall think fit;
and if any person, in or belonging to the fleet, shall conceal
any traitorous or mutinous words spoken by any, to the prejudice
of His Majesty or government, or any words, practice, or
design, tending to the hindrance of the service, and shall
not forthwith reveal the same to the commanding officer,
or being present at any mutiny or sedition, shall not use
his utmost endeavours to suppress the same, he shall be
punished as a court martial shall think he deserves.
- If
any person in the fleet shall find cause of complaint of
the unwholesomeness of the victual, or upon other just ground,
he shall quietly make the same known to his superior, or
captain, or commander in chief, as the occasion may deserve,
that such present remedy may be had as the matter may require;
and the said superior, captain, or commander in chief, shall,
as far as he is able, cause the same to be presently remedied;
and no person in the fleet, upon any such or other pretence,
shall attempt to stir up any disturbance, upon pain of such
punishment, as a court martial shall think fit to inflict,
according to the degree of the offence.
- If
any officer, mariner, soldier or other person in the fleet,
shall strike any of his superior officers, or draw, or offer
to draw, or lift up any weapon against him, being in the
execution of his office, on any pretence whatsoever, every
such person being convicted of any such offense, by the
sentence of a court martial, shall suffer death; and if
any officer, mariner, soldier or other person in the fleet,
shall presume to quarrel with any of his superior officers,
being in the execution of his office, or shall disobey any
lawful command of any of his superior officers; every such
person being convicted of any such offence, by the sentence
of a court martial, shall suffer death, or such other punishment,
as shall, according to the nature and degree of his offence,
be inflicted upon him by the sentence of a court martial.
- If
any person in the fleet shall quarrel or fight with any
other person in the fleet, or use reproachful or provoking
speeches or gestures, tending to make any quarrel or disturbance,
he shall, upon being convicted thereof, suffer such punishment
as the offence shall deserve, and a court martial shall
impose.
- There
shall be no wasteful expense of any powder, shot, ammunition,
or other stores in the fleet, nor any embezzlement thereof,
but the stores and provisions shall be careful preserved
, upon pain of such punishment to be inflicted upon the
offenders, abettors, buyers and receivers (being persons
subject to naval discipline) as shall be by a court martial
found just in that behalf.
- Every
person in the fleet, who shall unlawfully burn or set fire
to any magazine or store of powder, or ship, boat, ketch,
hoy or vessel, or tackle or furniture thereunto belonging,
not then appertaining to an enemy, pirate, or rebel, being
convicted of any such offence, by the sentence of a court
martial, shall suffer death.
- Care
shall be taken in the conducting and steering of any of
His Majesty's ships, that through willfulness, negligence,
or other defaults, no ship be stranded, or run upon any
rocks or sands, or split or hazarded, upon pain, that such
as shall be found guilty therein, be punished by death,
or such other punishment, as the offence by a court martial
shall be judged to deserve.
- No
person in or belonging to the fleet shall sleep upon his
watch, or negligently perform the duty imposed on him, or
forsake his station, upon pain of death, or such other punishment
as a court martial shall think fit to impose, and as the
circumstances of the case shall require.
- All
murders committed by any person in the fleet, shall be punished
with death by the sentence of a court martial.
- If
any person in the fleet shall commit the unnatural and detestable
sin of buggery and sodomy with man or beast, he shall be
punished with death by the sentence of a court martial.
- All
robbery committed by any person in the fleet, shall be punished
with death, or otherwise, as a court martial, upon consideration
of the circumstances, shall find meet.
- Every
officer or other person in the fleet, who shall knowingly
make or sign a false muster or muster book, or who shall
command, counsel, or procure the making or signing thereof,
or who shall aid or abet any other person in the making
or signing thereof, shall, upon proof of any such offence
being made before a court martial, be cashiered, and rendered
incapable of further employment in His Majesty's naval service.
- No
provost martial belonging to the fleet shall refuse to apprehend
any criminal, whom he shall be authorized by legal warrant
to apprehend, or to receive or keep any prisoner committed
to his charge, or willfully suffer him to escape, being
once in his custody, or dismiss him without lawful order,
upon pain of such punishment as a court martial shall deem
him fit to deserve; and all captains, officers, and others
in the fleet, shall do their endeavour to detect, apprehend,
and bring to punishment all offenders, and shall assist
the officers appointed for that purpose therein, upon pain
of being proceeded against, and punished by a court martial,
according to the nature and degree of the offence.
- If
any flag officer, captain, or commander, or lieutenant belonging
to the fleet, shall be convicted before a court martial
of behaving in a scandalous, infamous, cruel, oppressive,
or fraudulent manner, unbecoming the character of an officer,
he shall be dismissed from His Majesty's service.
- Every
person being in actual service and full pay, and part of
the crew in or belonging to any of His Majesty's ships or
vessels of war, who shall be guilty of mutiny, desertion,
or disobedience to any lawful command, in any part of His
Majesty's dominions on shore, when in actual service relative
to the fleet, shall be liable to be tried by a court martial,
and suffer the like punishment for every such offence, as
if the same had been committed at sea on board any of His
Majesty's ships or vessels of war.
- If
any person who shall be in the actual service and full pay
of His Majesty' ships and vessels of war, shall commit upon
the shore, in any place or places out of His Majesty's dominions,
any of the crimes punishable by these articles and orders,
the person so offending shall be liable to be tried and
punished for the same, in like manner, to all intents and
purposes, as if the same crimes had been committed at sea,
on board any of His Majesty's ships or vessels of war.
- All
other crimes not capital committed by any person or persons
in the fleet, which are not mentioned in this act, or for
which no punishment is hereby directed to be inflicted,
shall be punished by the laws and customs in such cases
used at sea.

Some
Facts About Punishment
In
the British Navy during the age of sail, flogging was the most
common of all punishments. In his book, Sea Life In Nelson's
Time, John Masefield writes: "One blow was sufficient to take
off the skin, and to draw blood wherever the knots fell. Six
blows were enough to make the back positively raw. Twelve blows
cut deeply into it, and left it a horrible red slough, sickening
to look upon. Yet three dozen was a common punishment. Six dozen
lashes were counted as nothing. Three hundred lashes were very
frequently given." In fact, Sven Wahlroos (Mutiny and Romance
in the South Seas) reports: "...as late as 1807, King George
III saw fit to intervene in Navy affairs by setting an upper
limit of 1000 lashes!"
Captain
Bligh (actually Lieutenant Bligh) of HMS Bounty Mutiny fame
is widely known as a cruel and harsh commander. In fact, up
until the time of the famous mutiny, Bligh was considered a
fair and competent Ship's commander among his contemporaries.
Consider
Captain Hugh Pigot of the HMS Hermione. Pigot flogged his men
frequently and severely for insignificant offenses and had killed
at least two seamen with the cat-o-nine tails. He often shouted
to the men in the rigging that the last man down would be flogged.
A dozen men flogged in a day was not unusual on the Hermione
under his command..."
In 1871,
The British Admiralty issued instructions by circular letter
(of 18th December, 1871) that corporal punishment was to be
inflicted only in cases of.........
(1) mutiny
(2) using or offering violence to a superior officer.
A Circular letter of 16th September, 1879, directed that no
Commanding Officer was to award a sentence of corporal punishment
exceeding 25 lashes. On 10th January, 1881, a Bill to amend
the Naval Discipline Act of 1866 with a view to abolishing corporal
punishment was presented to the House of Commons. This was finally
withdrawn on 12th July, 1881, but on 3rd August, 1881, Admiralty
issued instructions that the power of Command Officers to award
corporal punishment was suspended until further orders. Administrative
action was taken in 1881 to advise Court-martial convening authorities
that corporal punishment was not to be awarded without Admiralty
approval - one assumes that Admiralty approval would not be
given. Authority to award corporal punishment was finally removed
from the Naval Discipline Act by an Order-in-Council dated 29th
March, 1949.
The "cat"
itself was a whip with nine lashes; the French name for it was
"martinet" (from the Marquis de Martinet, a French Colonel of
the 17th Century who was a great disciplinarian). Originally
it was made by the victim himself, but later it was introduced
as a ready-made Naval Store item.

TWO
MUTINIES IN THE BRITISH NAVY
In the Royal
Navy during the spring of 1797, two mutinies ocurred, the first
at Spithead off the coast of England, and then at the Nore,
on the Thames near London. The Nore Mutiny was so serious it
became known as the Great Mutiny. British authorities were terrified
that naval mutinies would spread and lead to a revolution that
would eventually overthrow the government - like the revolution
that had so recently engulfed France. The fear proved to be
unfounded. The mutinies were put down, and the crews returned
to loyal service under their King. But a new and more severe
law - The Mutiny Act - was passed so that ship
captains could act with haste in the case of any further mutinous
acts.
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