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FEHMIC COURTS (Ger. Femgerichte, or Vehmgerichte, of disputed origin, but probably, according to J. See also: middle ages, exercised a powerful and some-times sinister jurisdiction in See also: Germany, and more especially in Westphalia
.
Their origin is uncertain, but is traceable to the See also: time of Charlemagne and in all probability to the old Teutonic See also: free courts
.
They were, indeed, also known as free courts (Freigerichte), a name due to the fact that all free-See also: born men were eligible for membership and also to the fact that they claimed certain exceptional liberties
.
Their jurisdiction they owed to the emperor, from whom they received the power of See also: life and See also: death (Blutbann) which they exercised in his name
.
The sessions were often held in secret, whence the names of secret See also: court (heimliches Gericht, Stillgericht, &c.); and these the uninitiated were forbidden to attend, on See also: pain of death, which led to the designation forbidden courts (verbotene Gerichte)
.
See also: Legend and See also: romance have combined to exaggerate the sinister reputation of the Fehmic courts; but See also: modern See also: historical research has largely discounted this, proving that they never employed torture, that their sittings were only sometimes secret, and that
their meeting-places were always well known
.
They were, in fact, a survival of an See also: ancient and venerable See also: German institution; and if, during a certain See also: period, they exercised something like a reign of terror over a See also: great See also: part of Germany, the cause of this See also: lay in the sickness of the times, which called for some powerful organization to combat the growing feudal anarchy
.
Such an organization the Westphalian free courts, with their discipline of terror and elaborate See also: system of secret service, were well calculated to supply
.
Everywhere else the power of life and death, originally reserved to the emperor alone, had been usurped by the territorial nobles; only in Westphalia, called " the Red See also: Earth " because here the imperial See also: blood-See also: ban was still valid, were capital sentences passed and executed by the Fehmic courts in the emperor's name alone
.
The system, though ancient, began to become of importance only after the division of the duchy of See also: Saxony on the fall of See also: Henry the
See also: Lion, when the archbishop of Cologne, duke of Westphalia from 118o onwards, placed himself as representative of the emperor at the See also: head of the Fehme
.
The organization now rapidly spread
.
Every free See also: man, born in lawful wedlock, and neither excommunicate nor outlaw, was eligible for membership
.
Princes and nobles were initiated; and in 1429 even the emperor See also: Sigismund himself became " a true and proper Freischoffe of the See also: Holy See also: Roman See also: Empire." By the middle of the 14th century these FreischoJf en (Latin scabini), sworn associates of the Fehme, were scattered in thousands throughout the length and breadth of Germany, known to each other by secret signs and pass-words, and all of them pledged to serve the summons of the secret courts and to execute their See also: judgment
.
The organization of the Fehme was elaborate
.
The head of each centre of jurisdiction (Freistuhl), often a secular or spiritual See also: prince, sometimes a civic community, was known as the Stuhlhere, the archbishop of Cologne being, as stated above, supreme over all (Oberststuhlherr)
.
The actual president of the court was the Freigraf (free count) chosen for life by the Stuhlherr from among the Freischoffen, who formed the great See also: body of the initiated
.
Of these the lowest See also: rank were the Fronboten or Freifronen, charged with the maintenance of See also: order in the courts and the duty of carrying out the commands of the Freigraf
.
The immense development of the Fehme is explained by the privileges of the Freischoffen; for they were subject to no jurisdiction but those of the Westphalian courts, whether as accused or accuser they had See also: access to the secret sessions, and they shared in the discussions of the general chapter as to the policy of the society
.
At their initiation these swore to support the Fehme with all their See also: powers, to guard its secrets, and to bring before its tribunal anything within its competence that they might discover
.
They were then initiated into the secret signs by which members recognized each other, and were presented with a rope and with a knife on which were engraved the mystic letters S.S.G.G., supposed to mean Strick, Stein, Gras, See also: Grun (rope, See also: stone, grass,
See also: green)
.
The procedure of the Fehmic courts was practically that of the ancient German courts generally
.
The place of session, known as the Freistuhl (free seat), was usually a hillock, or some other well-known and accessible spot
.
The Freigraf and Schoffen occupied the bench, before which a table, with a sword and rope upon it, was placed
.
The court was held by See also: day and, unless the session was declared secret, all freemen, whether initiated or not, were admitted
.
The accusation was in the old GermanSee also: form; but only a Freischoffe could See also: act as accuser
.
If the offence came under the competence of the court, i.e. was punishable by death, a summons to the accused was issued under the See also: seal of the Freigraf
.
This was not usually served on him personally, but was nailed to his door, or to some convenient place where he was certain to pass
.
Six See also: weeks and three days' See also: grace were allowed, according to the old Saxon See also: law, and the summons was thrice repeated
.
If the accused appeared, the accuser stated the See also: case, and the investigation proceeded by the examination of witnesses as in an ordinary court of law
.
The judgment was put into execution on the spot if that was possible
.
The secret court, from whose procedure the whole institutionhas acquired its evil reputation, was closed to all but the initiated, although these were so numerous as to secure quasi-publicity; any one not a member on being discovered was instantly put to death, and the members See also: present were bound under the same See also: penalty not to disclose what took place
.
Crimes of a serious nature, and especially those that were deemed unfit for ordinary judicial investigation—such as See also: heresy and witchcraft—fell within its jurisdiction, as also did appeals by persons condemned in the open courts, and likewise the cases before those tribunals in which the accused had not appeared
.
The accused • if a member could clear himself by his own See also: oath, unless he had revealed the secrets of the Fehme
.
If he were one of the uninitiated it was necessary for him to bring forward witnesses to his innocence from among the initiated, whose number varied according to the number on the See also: side of the accuser, but twenty-one in favour of innocence necessarily secured an acquittal
.
The only punishment which the secret court could inflict was death
.
If the accused appeared, the See also: sentence was carried into execution at once; if he did not appear, it was quickly made known to the whole body, and the Freischoffe who was the first to meet the condemned was bound to put him to death
.
This was usually done by See also: hanging, the nearest See also: tree serving for gallows
.
A knife with the cabalistic letters was See also: left beside the See also: corpse to show that the deed was not a See also: murder
.
That an organization of this character should have outlived its usefulness and issued in intolerable abuses was inevitable
.
With the growing power of the territorial sovereigns and the gradual improvement of the ordinary See also: process of See also: justice, the functions of the Fehmic courts were superseded
.
By the See also: action of the emperor See also: Maximilian and of other German princes they were, in the 16th century, once more restricted to Westphalia, and here, too, they were brought under the jurisdiction of the ordinary courts, and finally confined to See also: mere police duties
.
With these functions, however, but with the old forms long since robbed of their impressiveness, they survived into the 19th century
.
They were finally abolished by order of See also: Jerome See also: Bonaparte, See also: king of Westphalia, in 1811
.
The last Freigraf died in 1835
.
See also: des deutschen Strafrechts (See also: Tubingen, 1845) ; 0
.
Wachter, Femgerichte and Hexenprozesse in Deutschland (See also: Stuttgart
.
1882) ; T
.
Lindner, Die Feme (Munster and Paderborn, 1888) ; F
.
Thudichum, Femgericht and Inquisition (See also: Giessen, 1889) whose theory concerning the origin of the Fehme is combated in T
.
Lindner's Der angebliche Ursprung der Femgerichte aus der Inquisition (Paderborn, 189o)
.
For See also: works on individual aspects see further Dahlmann-Waitz, Quellenkunde (ed
.
See also: Leipzig, 1906), p
.
401; also ib. supplementary vol
.
(1907), p
.
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