A highwayman was a robber who stole from travellers. This type of thief usually travelled and robbed by horse as compared to a footpad who travelled and robbed on foot; mounted highwaymen were widely considered to be socially superior to footpads. Such criminals operated until the mid- or late 19th century. Highwaywomen, such as Katherine Ferrers, were said to also exist, often dressing as men, especially in fiction.[citation needed]
The first attestation of the word highwayman is from 1617.Euphemisms such as "knights of the road" and "gentlemen of the road" were sometimes used by people interested in romanticizing (with a Robin Hood–esque slant) what was often an especially violent form of stealing. In the 19th-century American West, highwaymen were sometimes known as road agents. In Australia, they were known as bushrangers.
Robbing
The great age of highwaymen was the period from the Restoration in 1660 to the death of Queen Anne in 1714. Some are known to have been disbanded soldiers, and even officers, of the English Civil War and French wars. What favoured them most was the lack of governance and absence of a police force: parish constables were almost entirely ineffective, while detection and arrest were very difficult. Most of the highwaymen held up travellers and took their money. Some had channels by which they could dispose of bills of exchange. Others had a 'racket' on the road transport of an extensive district; carriers regularly paid them a ransom to go unmolested.
They often attacked coaches for their lack of protection, including public stagecoaches; the postboys who carried the mail were also frequently held up. The demand to "Stand and deliver!" (sometimes in forms such as "Stand and deliver your purse!" "Stand and deliver your money!") was in use from the 17th century to the 19th century:
A fellow of a good Name, but poor Condition, and worse Quality, was Convicted for laying an Embargo on a man whom he met on the Road, by bidding him Stand and Deliver, but to little purpose; for the Traveller had no more Money than a Capuchin, but told him, all the treasure he had was a pound of Tobacco, which he civilly surrendered.
— The Proceedings of the Old Bailey, 25 April 1677,
The phrase "Your money or your life!" is mentioned in trial reports from the mid-18th century:
Evidence of John Mawson: "As I was coming home, in company with Mr. Andrews, within two fields of the new road that is by the gate-house of Lord Baltimore, we were met by two men; they attacked us both: the man who attacked me I have never seen since. He clapped a bayonet to my breast, and said, with an oath, Your money, or your life! He had on a soldier's waistcoat and breeches. I put the bayonet aside, and gave him my silver, about three or four shillings."
— The Proceedings of the Old Bailey, 12 September 1781,
Victims of highwaymen included the Prime Minister Lord North, who wrote in 1774: "I was robbed last night as I expected, our loss was not great, but as the postilion did not stop immediately one of the two highwaymen fired at him (They had guns at the time) – It was at the end of Gunnersbury Lane." Horace Walpole, who was shot at in Hyde Park, wrote that "One is forced to travel, even at noon, as if one was going to battle." During this period, crime was rife and encounters with highwaymen or women could be bloody if the victim attempted to resist. The historian Roy Porter described the use of direct, physical action as a hallmark of public and political life: "From the rough-house of the crowd to the dragoons' musket volley, violence was as English as plum pudding. Force was used not just criminally, but as a matter of routine to achieve social and political goals, smudging hard-and-fast distinctions between the worlds of criminality and politics... Highwaymen were romanticized, with a hidden irony, as 'gentlemen of the road.'"
Robbers as heroes
There is a long history of treating highway robbers as heroes. They were admired by many as bold men who confronted their victims face to face and were ready to fight for what they wanted.Medieval outlaw Robin Hood is regarded as an English folk hero. Later robber heroes included the Cavalier highwayman James Hind; the French-born gentleman highwayman Claude Du Vall; John Nevison; Dick Turpin; Sixteen String Jack; William Plunkett and his partner, the "Gentleman Highwayman" James MacLaine; the Slovak Juraj Jánošík; and Indians including Kayamkulam Kochunni, Veerappan, and Phoolan Devi. In the same way, the Puerto Rican pirate Roberto Cofresí also came to be venerated as a hero.
British-ruled Ireland
In the 17th to the early 19th centuries in Ireland, acts of robbery were often part of a tradition of Irish resistance to the English and British authorities and the Protestant Ascendancy. From the mid-17th century onwards, highwaymen who harassed the English authorities were known as 'tories' (from Irish tóraidhe, raider; tóraí in modern spelling). Later that century, they became known as rapparees. Their ranks included James Freney, Redmond O'Hanlon, Willy Brennan and Jeremiah Grant.
Dangerous places
English highwaymen often laid in wait on the main roads radiating from London. They usually chose lonely areas of heathland or woodland. Hounslow Heath was a favourite haunt: it was crossed by the roads to Bath and Exeter.Bagshot Heath in Surrey was another dangerous place on the road to Exeter. One of the most notorious places in England was Shooter's Hill on the Great Dover Road. Finchley Common, on the Great North Road, was nearly as bad.
To the south of London, highwaymen sought to attack wealthy travellers on the roads leading to and from the Channel ports and aristocratic arenas like Epsom, which became a fashionable spa town in 1620, and Banstead Downs where horse races and sporting events became popular with the elite from 1625. Later in the 18th century the road from London to Reigate and Brighton through Sutton attracted highwaymen. Commons and heaths considered to be dangerous included Blackheath, Putney Heath, Streatham Common, Mitcham Common, Thornton Heath – also the site of a gallows known as "Hangman's Acre" or "Gallows Green" – Sutton Common, Banstead Downs and Reigate Heath.
During the late 17th and early 18th centuries, highwaymen in Hyde Park were sufficiently common for King William III to have the route between St James's Palace and Kensington Palace (Rotten Row) lit at night with oil lamps as a precaution against them. This made it the first artificially lit highway in Britain.
Executions
The penalty for robbery with violence was hanging, and most notorious English highwaymen ended on the gallows. The chief place of execution for London and Middlesex was Tyburn Tree. Highwaymen whose lives ended there include Claude Du Vall, James MacLaine, and Sixteen-string Jack. Highwaymen who went to the gallows laughing and joking, or at least showing no fear, are said to have been admired by many of the people who came to watch.
Decline
During the 18th century French rural roads were generally safer from highwaymen than those of England, an advantage credited by the historian Alexis de Tocqueville to the existence of a uniformed and disciplined mounted constabulary known as the Maréchaussée. In England this force was often confused with the regular army and as such cited as an instrument of royal tyranny not to be imitated.
In England the causes of the decline are more controversial. After about 1815, mounted robbers are recorded only rarely, the last recorded robbery by a mounted highwayman having occurred in 1831. The decline in highwayman activity also occurred during the period in which repeating handguns, notably the pepper-box and the percussion revolver, became increasingly available and affordable to the average citizen. The development of the railways is sometimes cited as a factor, but highwaymen were already obsolete before the railway network was built. The expansion of the system of turnpikes, manned and gated toll-roads, made it all but impossible for a highwayman to escape notice while making his getaway, but he could easily avoid such systems and use other roads, almost all of which outside the cities were flanked by open country.
Cities such as London were becoming much better policed: in 1805 a body of mounted police began to patrol the districts around the city at night. London was growing rapidly, and some of the most dangerous open spaces near the city, such as Finchley Common, were being covered with buildings. However, this only moved the robbers' operating area further out, to the new exterior of an expanded city, and does not therefore explain decline. A greater use of banknotes, more traceable than gold coins, also made life more difficult for robbers, but the Inclosure Act 1773 was followed by a sharp decline in highway robberies; stone walls falling over the open range like a net, confined the escaping highwaymen to the roads themselves, which now had walls on both sides and were better patrolled. The dramatic population increase which began with the Industrial Revolution also meant, quite simply, that there were more eyes around, and the concept of remote place became a thing of the past in England.
Outside Anglophone countries
Greece
The bandits in Greece under Ottoman rule were the Klephts (κλέφτες), Greeks who had taken refuge in the inaccessible mountains. The klephts, who acted as a guerilla force, were instrumental in the Greek War of Independence.
Kingdom of Hungary
The highwaymen of the 17th- to 19th-century Kingdom of Hungary were the betyárs (Slovak: zbojník). Until the 1830s they were mainly simply regarded as criminals but an increasing public appetite for betyar songs, ballads and stories gradually gave a romantic image to these armed and usually mounted robbers. Several of the betyárs have become legendary figures who in the public mind fought for social justice. Hungarian betyárs included Jóska Sobri, Márton Vidróczki, András Juhász, Bandi Angyal, Pista Sisa, Jóska Savanyú. Juraj Jánošík (Hungarian: Jánosik György), who was born and operated in Upper Hungary (now Slovakia), is still regarded as the Slovak version, and Sándor Rózsa the Hungarian version of Robin Hood in their regions.
The Hajduk (Hungarian: Hajdú) also originated in Hungary. They were formed from large numbers of Hungarians forced out of Syrmia and the Banates (Banate of Srebrenik, Banate of Nándorfehérvár, Banat of Macsó), moving upwards to central Hungary because of the Turkish attacks (they are replaced by the Serbs, Bosnians and Croats settling in the region). By the end of the 16th century, they had developed into a significant military force. They developed their own military organisation, separate from the ranks established in the country - they chose their own commanders, captains, lieutenants and corporals. Their rights were later taken away by the Austrians after the defeat of the Rákóczi's War of Independence, fearing their military power, they forced them into serfdom, so this was the end of the Hajduk golden age.
India
The Indian Subcontinent has had a long and documented history of organised robbery for millennia. These included the Thuggees, a quasi-religious group that robbed travellers on Indian roads until the cult was systematically eradicated in the mid-1800s by British colonial administrators. Thugees would befriend large road caravans and gain their confidence, before strangling them to death and robbing their valuables. According to some estimates the Thuggees murdered a million people between 1740 and 1840. More generally, armed bands known colloquially as "dacoits" have long wreaked havoc on many parts of the country. In recent times this has often served as a way to fund various regional and political insurgencies that includes the Maoist Naxalite movement. Kayamkulam Kochunni was also a famed highwayman who was active in Central Travancore in the early 19th century. Along with his close friend Ithikkarappkki from the nearby Ithikkara village, he is said to have stolen from the rich and given to the poor. With the help of an Ezhava warrior called Arattupuzha Velayudha Panicker, Kochunni was arrested and sent to Poojappura Central Jail. Legends of his works are compiled in folklore and are still read and heard today.
The Balkans and eastern Europe
The bandits in Serbia, Bosnia, Croatia and Bulgaria under Ottoman rule, and in Hungary were the Hajduks (Hajduci, Хајдуци, Хайдути), rebels who opposed Ottoman rule and acted as a guerilla force, also instrumental in the many wars against the Ottomans, especially the Serbian revolution. Serbian and Croatian refugees in Austro-Hungarian (and Habsburg) lands were also part of the Uskoci. Notable freedom fighters include Starina Novak, a notable outlaw was Jovo Stanisavljević Čaruga. In medieval Vlachia, Moldavia, Transylvania, and Ukraine, the Haiduks (Romanian – Haiduci, Ukrainian – Гайдуки, Haiduky) were bandits and deserters who lived in forests and robbed local Boyars or other travelers along roads. Sometimes they would help the poor peasants. In the 1800s, betyárs became common in Hungary.
Literature and popular culture
In Shakespeare's Henry IV, Part 1 Falstaff is a highwayman, and part of the action of the play concerns a robbery committed by him and his companions. Another highwayman in English drama is Captain Macheath, hero of John Gay's 18th-century ballad opera The Beggar's Opera. The legend of Dick Turpin was significantly boosted by Rookwood (1834), in which a heavily fictionalised Turpin is one of the main characters.Alfred Noyes's narrative poem "The Highwayman" has been immensely popular ever since its publication in 1906.
A number of traditional folk songs about highwaymen exist, both positive and negative, such as "Young Morgan", "Whiskey in the Jar", and "The Wild Colonial Boy".
From the early 18th century, collections of short stories of highwaymen and other notorious criminals became very popular. The earliest of these is Captain Alexander Smith's Complete History of the Lives and Robberies of the Most Notorious Highwaymen (1714). Some later collections of this type had the words The Newgate Calendar in their titles and this has become a general name for this kind of publication.
In the later 19th century, highwaymen such as Dick Turpin were the heroes of a number of penny dreadfuls, stories for boys published in serial form. In the 20th century the handsome highwayman became a stock character in historical love romances, including books by Baroness Orczy and Georgette Heyer.
Sir Walter Scott's romance The Heart of Midlothian (1818) recounts the heroine waylaid by highwaymen while travelling from Scotland to London.
Ronia, the Robber's Daughter (1981) is a children's fantasy book by Astrid Lindgren, which portrays the adventures of Ronia, the daughter of the leader of a gang of highwaymen.
Comics
The Belgian comics series
by Turk and De Groot is a gag-a-day series about Robin Hood's attempts at robbing travellers in the forest.The Dutch comics series Gilles de Geus by Hanco Kolk and Peter de Wit was originally a gag-a-day about a failed highwayman called Gilles, but the character later evolved into a resistance fighter with the Geuzen against the Spanish army.
Ithikkara Pakki, a graphic children's story book about the Indian highwayman Ithikkara Pakki, was published in April 2010 in Malayalam. The life of the Indian highwayman Kayamkulam Kochunni was adapted as a comic by Radha M. Nair in the 794th issue of the Indian comic book series, Amar Chitra Katha.
Music
There were many broadsheet ballads about highwaymen; these were often written to be sold on the occasion of a famous robber's execution. A number of highwaymen ballads have remained current in oral tradition in England and Ireland.
The traditional Irish song "Whiskey in the Jar" tells the story of an Irish highwayman who robs an army captain and includes the lines "I first produced me pistol, then I drew me rapier. Said 'Stand and deliver, for you are a bold deceiver'." The hit single version recorded in 1973 by Irish rock band Thin Lizzy renders this last line "I said 'Stand-oh and deliver, or the devil he may take ya'."
The traditional Irish song "The Newry Highwayman" recounts the deeds and death of a highwayman who robbed "the lords and ladies bright". The traditional Irish song "Brennan on the Moor" describes an escapade of the "bold, undaunted robber". Adam and the Ants had a number one song for five weeks in 1981 in the UK with "Stand and Deliver". The video featured Adam Ant as an English highwayman.
The contemporary folk song "On the Road to Fairfax County" by David Massengill, recorded by The Roches and by Joan Baez, recounts a romantic encounter between a highwayman and his female victim. In the end, the highwayman is hanged over the objections of his victim.
Musician Jimmy Webb penned and recorded a song entitled "Highwayman" in 1977 about a soul with incarnations in four different places in time and history, a highwayman, a sailor, a construction worker on the Hoover Dam, and finally as a star ship captain. Glen Campbell recorded a version of the song in 1978, but the most popular incarnation of the song was recorded by Willie Nelson, Kris Kristofferson, Waylon Jennings and Johnny Cash in 1984, who as a group called themselves The Highwaymen.
The Canadian singer Loreena McKennit adapted the narrative poem, "The Highwayman" written by Alfred Noyes, as a song by the same title in her 1997 album The Book of Secrets.
Cinema and television
The Carry On films included a highwayman spoof in Carry On Dick (1974). Monty Python sent up the highwayman legends in the Dennis Moore sketch in Episode 37 of Monty Python's Flying Circus, in which John Cleese played the titular criminal who stole only lupins. In a linking sketch in an episode of Not the Nine O'Clock News a highwayman holds up a stagecoach with pistols – in order to wash the coach in exchange for small monies in the manner of a modern-day unsolicited car window washer in traffic. In Blackadder the Third, Mr. E. Blackadder turns highwayman in the episode "Amy and Amiability". In the British children's television series Dick Turpin, starring Richard O'Sullivan, the highwayman was depicted as an 18th-century Robin Hood figure. Additionally the actor Mathew Baynton played Dick Turpin in Horrible Histories. A singing highwayman appears in the fourth episode of the animated mini-series, Over the Garden Wall, Songs of the Dark Lantern.
The highwayman known as Juraj Jánošík (1688–1713) became a hero of many folk legends in the Slovak, Czech, and Polish cultures by the 19th century and hundreds of literary works about him have since been published. The first Slovak feature film was Jánošík, made in 1921, followed by seven more Slovak and Polish films about him.
Curro Jiménez, a Spanish TV series which aired from 1976 to 1979, starred a group of 19th-century highwaymen or bandoleros in the mountains of Ronda in the south of Spain.
Ronia, the Robber's Daughter (aka Ronja Robbersdaughter in the US) is a 1984 Swedish fantasy film, based on the 1981 novel of the same title by Astrid Lindgren, and narrating the adventures of Ronia, the daughter of the leader of a gang of highwaymen.
Ronja, the Robber's Daughter (Japanese: 山賊の娘ローニャ, Hepburn: Sanzoku no Musume Rōnya) is a Japanese animated television series, also based on Lindgren's novel Ronia, the Robber's Daughter, and directed and storyboarded by Gorō Miyazaki.
The lives of numerous Indian highwaymen including Arattupuzha Velayudha Panicker, Ithikkara Pakki, Jambulingam Nadar, Kayamkulam Kochunni and Papadu have been adapted for cinema and television multiple times.
Season two, episode 20, of Scooby-Doo! Mystery Incorporated, the main villain (voiced by James Marsters) disguises himself as a highwayman.
Films
- The Mark of Zorro (1920)
- Dick Turpin (1925)
- Dick Turpin (1933)
- The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938)
- The Night Riders (1939)
- Frontier Marshal (1939)
- My Little Chickadee (1940)
- Virginia City (1940)
- The Mark of Zorro (1940)
- The Wicked Lady (1945)
- The Loves of Carmen (1948)
- The Lady and the Bandit (1951)
- Bend of the River (1952)
- Son of Paleface (1952)
- The King's Thief (1955)
- The Amorous Adventures of Moll Flanders (1965)
- Kayamkulam Kochunni (1966)
- Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969)
- Robin Hood (1973)
- Carry On Dick (1974)
- The Mark of Zorro (1974)
- Barry Lyndon (1975)
- Kaayamkulam Kochunniyude Makan (1976)
- Joseph Andrews (1977)
- Vellayani Paramu (1979)
- Ronia, the Robber's Daughter (1981)
- Jambulingam (1982)
- The Wicked Lady (1983)
- The Deceivers (1988)
- The Lady and the Highwayman (1989)
- Plunkett & Macleane (1999)
- Kayamkulam Kochunni (2018)
- The Highwaymen (2019)
Video games
In Fable II, Highwaymen appear as an elite type of enemy which works alongside bandits and makes use of speed and agility over brute strength. It is also possible for players to dress as Highwaymen. There is an enemy type in The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim called the "bandit highwayman" that acts as one of the higher-level bandit enemies. In World of Warcraft one can encounter the Defias Highwaymen, the strongest members of the Defias Brotherhood. In Darkest Dungeon the Highwayman is a class of hero who wields a dirk and flintlock to fight. In Runescape, highwaymen attack lower-leveled players on a route between two cities. In Bushido Blade 2 there is a playable character named Highwayman who is dressed in Victorian clothing and represents the hero archetype. In Bloodborne many articles of clothing obtained by "The Hunter" are inspired by Highwaymen attire.
See also
- List of highwaymen
- Brigandage
- Bushranger
- Dacoity
- Hajduk
- Mail robbery
- Marauder (disambiguation)
- Piracy
- Renegade Nell
- Road agent (disambiguation)
- Social bandits
- Thuggees
References
- Rid, Samuel. "Martin Markall, Beadle of Bridewell," in The Elizabethan Underworld, A. V. Judges, ed. pp. 415–416. George Routledge, 1930. Online quotation. See also Spraggs, Gillian: Outlaws and Highwaymen: the Cult of the Robber in England from the Middle Ages to the Nineteenth Century, pp. 107, 169, 190–191. Pimlico, 2001
- Fennor, William. "The Counter's Commonwealth," in The Elizabethan Underworld, p. 446.
- Brewer, E. Cobham. Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, 1898, defines road-agent as "A highwayman in the mountain districts of North America," citing the generation earlier, W. Hepworth Dixon, New America, p. 14: "Road-agent is the name applied in the mountains to a ruffian who has given up honest work in the store, in the mine, in the ranch, for the perils and profits of the highway."
- Clark, Sir George (1956). The Later Stuarts, 1660–1714. Oxford History of England: Oxford University Press. p. 259. ISBN 0-19-821702-1.
- Beattie, J. M.: Crime and the Courts in England, 1660–1800, pp. 149–158. Clarendon Press, 1986; Extracts from Wilson, Ralph: A Full and Impartial Account of all the Robberies Committed by John Hawkins, George Sympson (lately Executed for Robbing the Bristol Mails) and their Companions. 3rd edition, J. Peele, 1722.
- "Browse – Central Criminal Court". www.oldbaileyonline.org.
- "Trial of John Buckley, Thomas Shenton". www.oldbaileyonline.org.
- Porter, Roy (1982). English Society in the Eighteenth Century. Pelican Social History of Britain: Pelican Books. pp. 31, 114–115. ISBN 0-14-022099-2.
- Spraggs, Gillian: Outlaws and Highwaymen: the Cult of the Robber in England from the Middle Ages to the Nineteenth Century, pp. 2–3, 7–8, 255. Pimlico, 2001.
- Dunford, Stephen. The Irish Highwaymen. Merlin Publishing, 2000
- Seal, Graham. The Outlaw Legend: a cultural tradition in Britain, America and Australia, pp. 69–78. Cambridge University Press, 1996.
- Maxwell, Gordon S. : Highwayman's Heath: Story in Fact and Fiction of Hounslow Heath in Middlesex . Heritage Publications, Hounslow Leisure Services, 1994.
- Beattie, J. M.: Crime and the Courts in England, 1660–1800, pp. 155–156. Clarendon Press, 1986; Spraggs, Gillian: Outlaws and Highwaymen: the Cult of the Robber in England from the Middle Ages to the Nineteenth Century, p. 93. Pimlico, 2001. Harper, Charles George: Half-hours with the Highwaymen: picturesque biographies and traditions of the "knights of the road", pp. 245–255. Chapman & Hall, 1908; Online edition of Half-hours with the Highwaymen. via Internet Archive.
- Walford, Leslie (7 March 2011). "Stand and Deliver!". Time & Leisure. Archived from the original on 7 July 2018. Retrieved 27 December 2016.
- Hibbert, Cristopher; Weinreb, Ben; Keay, John; Keay, Julia (2011). The London Encyclopaedia. Pan Macmillan. p. 424. ISBN 978-0230738782.
- Spraggs, Gillian: Outlaws and Highwaymen: the Cult of the Robber in England from the Middle Ages to the Nineteenth Century, pp. 212–233. Pimlico, 2001
- Alexis de Tocqueville L'Ancien Régime et la Révolution
- McLynn, Frank: Crime and punishment in eighteenth-century England, p. 81. Routledge, 1989.
- Spraggs, Gillian: Outlaws and Highwaymen: the Cult of the Robber in England from the Middle Ages to the Nineteenth Century, p. 234. Pimlico, 2001.
- 'The Enclosure Acts and the Industrial Revolution', Wendy McElroy, 2012
- "SHP History B – Crime and Punishment 1750–1900, 3.3 Highwaymen" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 April 2016. Retrieved 31 March 2016.
- "Impact of the Industrial Revolution". Ecology Global Network. 18 September 2011. Archived from the original on 8 January 2020. Retrieved 31 March 2016.
- "hajdúk | Magyar néprajzi lexikon | Kézikönyvtár". www.arcanum.com (in Hungarian). Retrieved 2 October 2024.
- Rubinstein, W. D. (2004). Genocide: A History. Pearson Education. pp. 82–83. ISBN 0-582-50601-8.
- Sharpe, James: Dick Turpin: the Myth of the English Highwayman, Chapter 5: 'The Man from Manchester'. Profile Books, 2004
- Spraggs, Gillian: Outlaws and Highwaymen: the Cult of the Robber in England from the Middle Ages to the Nineteenth Century, pp. 237–240. Pimlico, 2001.
- Seal, Graham (1996). "Positive Highwayman Ballads". The Outlaw Legend. Cambridge University Press. pp. 31–37, 209.
- The Newgate Calendar – Bibliographical Note
- "'ഇത്തിക്കര പക്കി'യുടെ കഥ കടം കൊണ്ടു, കടപ്പാടുപോലുമില്ല" [Ithikkara Pakki's story adapted, without courtesy]. Janayugom (in Malayalam). 9 October 2018. Retrieved 2 July 2019.
- Radha M. Nair (1971). Kochunni. Amar Chitra Katha Pvt Ltd. ISBN 9788184824940.
- Seal, Graham: The Outlaw Legend: a cultural tradition in Britain, America and Australia, pp. 47–78. Cambridge University Press, 1996.
- Monty Python's Flying Circus Script – Episode 37
- Votruba, Martin: "Hang Him High: The Elevation of Jánošík to an Ethnic Icon." Slavic Review, 65#1, pp. 24–44, 2006. Abstract. Archived 5 July 2008 at the Wayback Machine
- Few in English, e.g.: Moore Coleman, Marion (1972). A brigand, two queens, and a prankster; stories of Janosik, Queen Bona, Queen Kinga and the Sowizdrzal. Cherry Hill Books. ISBN 978-0-910366-13-7
Further reading
- Ash, Russell (1970). Highwaymen, Shire Publications, ISBN 978-0-85263-101-0; revised edition (1994) ISBN 978-0-7478-0260-0
- Billett, Michael (1997). Highwaymen and Outlaws, Weidenfeld Military, ISBN 978-1-85409-318-9
- Brandon, David (2004). Stand and Deliver! A History of Highway Robbery, Sutton Publishing, ISBN 978-0-7509-3528-9
- Dunford, Stephen (2000). The Irish Highwaymen, Merlin Publishing, ISBN 1-903582-02-4
- Evans, Hilary & Mary (1997). Hero on a Stolen Horse: Highwayman and His Brothers-in-arms – The Bandit and the Bushranger, Muller, ISBN 978-0-584-10340-3
- Haining, Peter (1991). The English Highwayman: A Legend Unmasked, Robert Hale, ISBN 978-0-7090-4426-0
- Harper, Charles George (1908). Half-hours with the Highwaymen: picturesque biographies and traditions of the "knights of the road", Chapman & Hall. Online edition, via Internet Archive.
- Hobsbawm, Eric (1969). Bandits, Delacorte Press; Revised edition (2000). ISBN 978-1-56584-619-7
- Koliopoulos, John S (1987). Brigands with a Cause, Brigandage and Irredentism in Modern Greece 1821–1912. Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0-19-822863-9
- Liapi, Lena (2019). "Roguery in Print: Crime and Culture in Early Modern London" Boydell & Brewer. ISBN 9781783274406
- Maxwell, Gordon S (1994). Highwayman's Heath: Story in Fact and Fiction of Hounslow Heath in Middlesex , Heritage Publications, Hounslow Leisure Services, ISBN 978-1-899144-00-6
- Newark, Peter (1988). Crimson Book of Highwaymen, Olympic Marketing Corp, ISBN 9789997354792
- Pringle, Patrick (1951). Stand and Deliver: The Story of the Highwaymen, Museum Press, ASIN B0000CHVTK
- Seal, Graham (1996). The Outlaw Legend: a cultural tradition in Britain, America and Australia, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-55317-2 (hbk), ISBN 0-521-55740-2 (pbk)
- Sharpe, James (2005). Dick Turpin: The Myth of the English Highwayman, Profile Books, ISBN 978-1-86197-418-1
- Spraggs, Gillian (2001). Outlaws and Highwaymen: The Cult of the Robber in England from the Middle Ages to the Nineteenth Century, Pimlico, ISBN 978-0-7126-6479-0
- Sugden, John and Philip (2015). The Thief of Hearts: Claude Duval and the Gentleman Highwayman in Fact and Fiction, Forty Steps, ISBN 978-0-9934183-0-3
External links
Media related to Highwaymen at Wikimedia Commons
- The Heroic Outlaw in Irish Folklore and Popular Literature
- Primary source book from 1674 on aspects of Highwaymen, their customs and their crimes - Jackson's Recantation; or, the Life and Death of the Notorious Highwayman
A highwayman was a robber who stole from travellers This type of thief usually travelled and robbed by horse as compared to a footpad who travelled and robbed on foot mounted highwaymen were widely considered to be socially superior to footpads Such criminals operated until the mid or late 19th century Highwaywomen such as Katherine Ferrers were said to also exist often dressing as men especially in fiction citation needed Asalto al coche Attack on a Coach by Francisco de Goya English highwayman James Hind depicted in an engraving now in the National Portrait Gallery The first attestation of the word highwayman is from 1617 Euphemisms such as knights of the road and gentlemen of the road were sometimes used by people interested in romanticizing with a Robin Hood esque slant what was often an especially violent form of stealing In the 19th century American West highwaymen were sometimes known as road agents In Australia they were known as bushrangers RobbingThe great age of highwaymen was the period from the Restoration in 1660 to the death of Queen Anne in 1714 Some are known to have been disbanded soldiers and even officers of the English Civil War and French wars What favoured them most was the lack of governance and absence of a police force parish constables were almost entirely ineffective while detection and arrest were very difficult Most of the highwaymen held up travellers and took their money Some had channels by which they could dispose of bills of exchange Others had a racket on the road transport of an extensive district carriers regularly paid them a ransom to go unmolested They often attacked coaches for their lack of protection including public stagecoaches the postboys who carried the mail were also frequently held up The demand to Stand and deliver sometimes in forms such as Stand and deliver your purse Stand and deliver your money was in use from the 17th century to the 19th century A fellow of a good Name but poor Condition and worse Quality was Convicted for laying an Embargo on a man whom he met on the Road by bidding him Stand and Deliver but to little purpose for the Traveller had no more Money than a Capuchin but told him all the treasure he had was a pound of Tobacco which he civilly surrendered The Proceedings of the Old Bailey 25 April 1677 The phrase Your money or your life is mentioned in trial reports from the mid 18th century Evidence of John Mawson As I was coming home in company with Mr Andrews within two fields of the new road that is by the gate house of Lord Baltimore we were met by two men they attacked us both the man who attacked me I have never seen since He clapped a bayonet to my breast and said with an oath Your money or your life He had on a soldier s waistcoat and breeches I put the bayonet aside and gave him my silver about three or four shillings The Proceedings of the Old Bailey 12 September 1781 Victims of highwaymen included the Prime Minister Lord North who wrote in 1774 I was robbed last night as I expected our loss was not great but as the postilion did not stop immediately one of the two highwaymen fired at him They had guns at the time It was at the end of Gunnersbury Lane Horace Walpole who was shot at in Hyde Park wrote that One is forced to travel even at noon as if one was going to battle During this period crime was rife and encounters with highwaymen or women could be bloody if the victim attempted to resist The historian Roy Porter described the use of direct physical action as a hallmark of public and political life From the rough house of the crowd to the dragoons musket volley violence was as English as plum pudding Force was used not just criminally but as a matter of routine to achieve social and political goals smudging hard and fast distinctions between the worlds of criminality and politics Highwaymen were romanticized with a hidden irony as gentlemen of the road Robbers as heroesThere is a long history of treating highway robbers as heroes They were admired by many as bold men who confronted their victims face to face and were ready to fight for what they wanted Medieval outlaw Robin Hood is regarded as an English folk hero Later robber heroes included the Cavalier highwayman James Hind the French born gentleman highwayman Claude Du Vall John Nevison Dick Turpin Sixteen String Jack William Plunkett and his partner the Gentleman Highwayman James MacLaine the Slovak Juraj Janosik and Indians including Kayamkulam Kochunni Veerappan and Phoolan Devi In the same way the Puerto Rican pirate Roberto Cofresi also came to be venerated as a hero British ruled Ireland In the 17th to the early 19th centuries in Ireland acts of robbery were often part of a tradition of Irish resistance to the English and British authorities and the Protestant Ascendancy From the mid 17th century onwards highwaymen who harassed the English authorities were known as tories from Irish toraidhe raider torai in modern spelling Later that century they became known as rapparees Their ranks included James Freney Redmond O Hanlon Willy Brennan and Jeremiah Grant Dangerous placesEnglish highwaymen often laid in wait on the main roads radiating from London They usually chose lonely areas of heathland or woodland Hounslow Heath was a favourite haunt it was crossed by the roads to Bath and Exeter Bagshot Heath in Surrey was another dangerous place on the road to Exeter One of the most notorious places in England was Shooter s Hill on the Great Dover Road Finchley Common on the Great North Road was nearly as bad To the south of London highwaymen sought to attack wealthy travellers on the roads leading to and from the Channel ports and aristocratic arenas like Epsom which became a fashionable spa town in 1620 and Banstead Downs where horse races and sporting events became popular with the elite from 1625 Later in the 18th century the road from London to Reigate and Brighton through Sutton attracted highwaymen Commons and heaths considered to be dangerous included Blackheath Putney Heath Streatham Common Mitcham Common Thornton Heath also the site of a gallows known as Hangman s Acre or Gallows Green Sutton Common Banstead Downs and Reigate Heath During the late 17th and early 18th centuries highwaymen in Hyde Park were sufficiently common for King William III to have the route between St James s Palace and Kensington Palace Rotten Row lit at night with oil lamps as a precaution against them This made it the first artificially lit highway in Britain ExecutionsThe execution of the French highwayman Cartouche 1721 The penalty for robbery with violence was hanging and most notorious English highwaymen ended on the gallows The chief place of execution for London and Middlesex was Tyburn Tree Highwaymen whose lives ended there include Claude Du Vall James MacLaine and Sixteen string Jack Highwaymen who went to the gallows laughing and joking or at least showing no fear are said to have been admired by many of the people who came to watch DeclineDuring the 18th century French rural roads were generally safer from highwaymen than those of England an advantage credited by the historian Alexis de Tocqueville to the existence of a uniformed and disciplined mounted constabulary known as the Marechaussee In England this force was often confused with the regular army and as such cited as an instrument of royal tyranny not to be imitated In England the causes of the decline are more controversial After about 1815 mounted robbers are recorded only rarely the last recorded robbery by a mounted highwayman having occurred in 1831 The decline in highwayman activity also occurred during the period in which repeating handguns notably the pepper box and the percussion revolver became increasingly available and affordable to the average citizen The development of the railways is sometimes cited as a factor but highwaymen were already obsolete before the railway network was built The expansion of the system of turnpikes manned and gated toll roads made it all but impossible for a highwayman to escape notice while making his getaway but he could easily avoid such systems and use other roads almost all of which outside the cities were flanked by open country Cities such as London were becoming much better policed in 1805 a body of mounted police began to patrol the districts around the city at night London was growing rapidly and some of the most dangerous open spaces near the city such as Finchley Common were being covered with buildings However this only moved the robbers operating area further out to the new exterior of an expanded city and does not therefore explain decline A greater use of banknotes more traceable than gold coins also made life more difficult for robbers but the Inclosure Act 1773 was followed by a sharp decline in highway robberies stone walls falling over the open range like a net confined the escaping highwaymen to the roads themselves which now had walls on both sides and were better patrolled The dramatic population increase which began with the Industrial Revolution also meant quite simply that there were more eyes around and the concept of remote place became a thing of the past in England Outside Anglophone countriesGreece The bandits in Greece under Ottoman rule were the Klephts kleftes Greeks who had taken refuge in the inaccessible mountains The klephts who acted as a guerilla force were instrumental in the Greek War of Independence Kingdom of Hungary The highwaymen of the 17th to 19th century Kingdom of Hungary were the betyars Slovak zbojnik Until the 1830s they were mainly simply regarded as criminals but an increasing public appetite for betyar songs ballads and stories gradually gave a romantic image to these armed and usually mounted robbers Several of the betyars have become legendary figures who in the public mind fought for social justice Hungarian betyars included Joska Sobri Marton Vidroczki Andras Juhasz Bandi Angyal Pista Sisa Joska Savanyu Juraj Janosik Hungarian Janosik Gyorgy who was born and operated in Upper Hungary now Slovakia is still regarded as the Slovak version and Sandor Rozsa the Hungarian version of Robin Hood in their regions The Hajduk Hungarian Hajdu also originated in Hungary They were formed from large numbers of Hungarians forced out of Syrmia and the Banates Banate of Srebrenik Banate of Nandorfehervar Banat of Macso moving upwards to central Hungary because of the Turkish attacks they are replaced by the Serbs Bosnians and Croats settling in the region By the end of the 16th century they had developed into a significant military force They developed their own military organisation separate from the ranks established in the country they chose their own commanders captains lieutenants and corporals Their rights were later taken away by the Austrians after the defeat of the Rakoczi s War of Independence fearing their military power they forced them into serfdom so this was the end of the Hajduk golden age India The Indian Subcontinent has had a long and documented history of organised robbery for millennia These included the Thuggees a quasi religious group that robbed travellers on Indian roads until the cult was systematically eradicated in the mid 1800s by British colonial administrators Thugees would befriend large road caravans and gain their confidence before strangling them to death and robbing their valuables According to some estimates the Thuggees murdered a million people between 1740 and 1840 More generally armed bands known colloquially as dacoits have long wreaked havoc on many parts of the country In recent times this has often served as a way to fund various regional and political insurgencies that includes the Maoist Naxalite movement Kayamkulam Kochunni was also a famed highwayman who was active in Central Travancore in the early 19th century Along with his close friend Ithikkarappkki from the nearby Ithikkara village he is said to have stolen from the rich and given to the poor With the help of an Ezhava warrior called Arattupuzha Velayudha Panicker Kochunni was arrested and sent to Poojappura Central Jail Legends of his works are compiled in folklore and are still read and heard today The Balkans and eastern Europe The bandits in Serbia Bosnia Croatia and Bulgaria under Ottoman rule and in Hungary were the Hajduks Hajduci Haјduci Hajduti rebels who opposed Ottoman rule and acted as a guerilla force also instrumental in the many wars against the Ottomans especially the Serbian revolution Serbian and Croatian refugees in Austro Hungarian and Habsburg lands were also part of the Uskoci Notable freedom fighters include Starina Novak a notable outlaw was Jovo Stanisavljevic Caruga In medieval Vlachia Moldavia Transylvania and Ukraine the Haiduks Romanian Haiduci Ukrainian Gajduki Haiduky were bandits and deserters who lived in forests and robbed local Boyars or other travelers along roads Sometimes they would help the poor peasants In the 1800s betyars became common in Hungary Literature and popular cultureDick Turpin riding Black Bess from a Victorian toy theatre In Shakespeare s Henry IV Part 1 Falstaff is a highwayman and part of the action of the play concerns a robbery committed by him and his companions Another highwayman in English drama is Captain Macheath hero of John Gay s 18th century ballad opera The Beggar s Opera The legend of Dick Turpin was significantly boosted by Rookwood 1834 in which a heavily fictionalised Turpin is one of the main characters Alfred Noyes s narrative poem The Highwayman has been immensely popular ever since its publication in 1906 A number of traditional folk songs about highwaymen exist both positive and negative such as Young Morgan Whiskey in the Jar and The Wild Colonial Boy From the early 18th century collections of short stories of highwaymen and other notorious criminals became very popular The earliest of these is Captain Alexander Smith s Complete History of the Lives and Robberies of the Most Notorious Highwaymen 1714 Some later collections of this type had the words The Newgate Calendar in their titles and this has become a general name for this kind of publication In the later 19th century highwaymen such as Dick Turpin were the heroes of a number of penny dreadfuls stories for boys published in serial form In the 20th century the handsome highwayman became a stock character in historical love romances including books by Baroness Orczy and Georgette Heyer Sir Walter Scott s romance The Heart of Midlothian 1818 recounts the heroine waylaid by highwaymen while travelling from Scotland to London Ronia the Robber s Daughter 1981 is a children s fantasy book by Astrid Lindgren which portrays the adventures of Ronia the daughter of the leader of a gang of highwaymen Comics The Belgian comics series de fr nl by Turk and De Groot is a gag a day series about Robin Hood s attempts at robbing travellers in the forest The Dutch comics series Gilles de Geus by Hanco Kolk and Peter de Wit was originally a gag a day about a failed highwayman called Gilles but the character later evolved into a resistance fighter with the Geuzen against the Spanish army Ithikkara Pakki a graphic children s story book about the Indian highwayman Ithikkara Pakki was published in April 2010 in Malayalam The life of the Indian highwayman Kayamkulam Kochunni was adapted as a comic by Radha M Nair in the 794th issue of the Indian comic book series Amar Chitra Katha Music There were many broadsheet ballads about highwaymen these were often written to be sold on the occasion of a famous robber s execution A number of highwaymen ballads have remained current in oral tradition in England and Ireland The traditional Irish song Whiskey in the Jar tells the story of an Irish highwayman who robs an army captain and includes the lines I first produced me pistol then I drew me rapier Said Stand and deliver for you are a bold deceiver The hit single version recorded in 1973 by Irish rock band Thin Lizzy renders this last line I said Stand oh and deliver or the devil he may take ya The traditional Irish song The Newry Highwayman recounts the deeds and death of a highwayman who robbed the lords and ladies bright The traditional Irish song Brennan on the Moor describes an escapade of the bold undaunted robber Adam and the Ants had a number one song for five weeks in 1981 in the UK with Stand and Deliver The video featured Adam Ant as an English highwayman The contemporary folk song On the Road to Fairfax County by David Massengill recorded by The Roches and by Joan Baez recounts a romantic encounter between a highwayman and his female victim In the end the highwayman is hanged over the objections of his victim Musician Jimmy Webb penned and recorded a song entitled Highwayman in 1977 about a soul with incarnations in four different places in time and history a highwayman a sailor a construction worker on the Hoover Dam and finally as a star ship captain Glen Campbell recorded a version of the song in 1978 but the most popular incarnation of the song was recorded by Willie Nelson Kris Kristofferson Waylon Jennings and Johnny Cash in 1984 who as a group called themselves The Highwaymen The Canadian singer Loreena McKennit adapted the narrative poem The Highwayman written by Alfred Noyes as a song by the same title in her 1997 album The Book of Secrets Cinema and television The Carry On films included a highwayman spoof in Carry On Dick 1974 Monty Python sent up the highwayman legends in the Dennis Moore sketch in Episode 37 of Monty Python s Flying Circus in which John Cleese played the titular criminal who stole only lupins In a linking sketch in an episode of Not the Nine O Clock News a highwayman holds up a stagecoach with pistols in order to wash the coach in exchange for small monies in the manner of a modern day unsolicited car window washer in traffic In Blackadder the Third Mr E Blackadder turns highwayman in the episode Amy and Amiability In the British children s television series Dick Turpin starring Richard O Sullivan the highwayman was depicted as an 18th century Robin Hood figure Additionally the actor Mathew Baynton played Dick Turpin in Horrible Histories A singing highwayman appears in the fourth episode of the animated mini series Over the Garden Wall Songs of the Dark Lantern The highwayman known as Juraj Janosik 1688 1713 became a hero of many folk legends in the Slovak Czech and Polish cultures by the 19th century and hundreds of literary works about him have since been published The first Slovak feature film was Janosik made in 1921 followed by seven more Slovak and Polish films about him Curro Jimenez a Spanish TV series which aired from 1976 to 1979 starred a group of 19th century highwaymen or bandoleros in the mountains of Ronda in the south of Spain Ronia the Robber s Daughter aka Ronja Robbersdaughter in the US is a 1984 Swedish fantasy film based on the 1981 novel of the same title by Astrid Lindgren and narrating the adventures of Ronia the daughter of the leader of a gang of highwaymen Ronja the Robber s Daughter Japanese 山賊の娘ローニャ Hepburn Sanzoku no Musume Rōnya is a Japanese animated television series also based on Lindgren s novel Ronia the Robber s Daughter and directed and storyboarded by Gorō Miyazaki The lives of numerous Indian highwaymen including Arattupuzha Velayudha Panicker Ithikkara Pakki Jambulingam Nadar Kayamkulam Kochunni and Papadu have been adapted for cinema and television multiple times Season two episode 20 of Scooby Doo Mystery Incorporated the main villain voiced by James Marsters disguises himself as a highwayman Films The Mark of Zorro 1920 Dick Turpin 1925 Dick Turpin 1933 The Adventures of Robin Hood 1938 The Night Riders 1939 Frontier Marshal 1939 My Little Chickadee 1940 Virginia City 1940 The Mark of Zorro 1940 The Wicked Lady 1945 The Loves of Carmen 1948 The Lady and the Bandit 1951 Bend of the River 1952 Son of Paleface 1952 The King s Thief 1955 The Amorous Adventures of Moll Flanders 1965 Kayamkulam Kochunni 1966 Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid 1969 Robin Hood 1973 Carry On Dick 1974 The Mark of Zorro 1974 Barry Lyndon 1975 Kaayamkulam Kochunniyude Makan 1976 Joseph Andrews 1977 Vellayani Paramu 1979 Ronia the Robber s Daughter 1981 Jambulingam 1982 The Wicked Lady 1983 The Deceivers 1988 The Lady and the Highwayman 1989 Plunkett amp Macleane 1999 Kayamkulam Kochunni 2018 The Highwaymen 2019 Video games In Fable II Highwaymen appear as an elite type of enemy which works alongside bandits and makes use of speed and agility over brute strength It is also possible for players to dress as Highwaymen There is an enemy type in The Elder Scrolls V Skyrim called the bandit highwayman that acts as one of the higher level bandit enemies In World of Warcraft one can encounter the Defias Highwaymen the strongest members of the Defias Brotherhood In Darkest Dungeon the Highwayman is a class of hero who wields a dirk and flintlock to fight In Runescape highwaymen attack lower leveled players on a route between two cities In Bushido Blade 2 there is a playable character named Highwayman who is dressed in Victorian clothing and represents the hero archetype In Bloodborne many articles of clothing obtained by The Hunter are inspired by Highwaymen attire See alsoList of highwaymen Brigandage Bushranger Dacoity Hajduk Mail robbery Marauder disambiguation Piracy Renegade Nell Road agent disambiguation Social bandits ThuggeesReferencesRid Samuel Martin Markall Beadle of Bridewell in The Elizabethan Underworld A V Judges ed pp 415 416 George Routledge 1930 Online quotation See also Spraggs Gillian Outlaws and Highwaymen the Cult of the Robber in England from the Middle Ages to the Nineteenth Century pp 107 169 190 191 Pimlico 2001 Fennor William The Counter s Commonwealth in The Elizabethan Underworld p 446 Brewer E Cobham Dictionary of Phrase and Fable 1898 defines road agent as A highwayman in the mountain districts of North America citing the generation earlier W Hepworth Dixon New America p 14 Road agent is the name applied in the mountains to a ruffian who has given up honest work in the store in the mine in the ranch for the perils and profits of the highway Clark Sir George 1956 The Later Stuarts 1660 1714 Oxford History of England Oxford University Press p 259 ISBN 0 19 821702 1 Beattie J M Crime and the Courts in England 1660 1800 pp 149 158 Clarendon Press 1986 Extracts from Wilson Ralph A Full and Impartial Account of all the Robberies Committed by John Hawkins George Sympson lately Executed for Robbing the Bristol Mails and their Companions 3rd edition J Peele 1722 Browse Central Criminal Court www oldbaileyonline org Trial of John Buckley Thomas Shenton www oldbaileyonline org Porter Roy 1982 English Society in the Eighteenth Century Pelican Social History of Britain Pelican Books pp 31 114 115 ISBN 0 14 022099 2 Spraggs Gillian Outlaws and Highwaymen the Cult of the Robber in England from the Middle Ages to the Nineteenth Century pp 2 3 7 8 255 Pimlico 2001 Dunford Stephen The Irish Highwaymen Merlin Publishing 2000 Seal Graham The Outlaw Legend a cultural tradition in Britain America and Australia pp 69 78 Cambridge University Press 1996 Maxwell Gordon S Highwayman s Heath Story in Fact and Fiction of Hounslow Heath in Middlesex Heritage Publications Hounslow Leisure Services 1994 Beattie J M Crime and the Courts in England 1660 1800 pp 155 156 Clarendon Press 1986 Spraggs Gillian Outlaws and Highwaymen the Cult of the Robber in England from the Middle Ages to the Nineteenth Century p 93 Pimlico 2001 Harper Charles George Half hours with the Highwaymen picturesque biographies and traditions of the knights of the road pp 245 255 Chapman amp Hall 1908 Online edition of Half hours with the Highwaymen via Internet Archive Walford Leslie 7 March 2011 Stand and Deliver Time amp Leisure Archived from the original on 7 July 2018 Retrieved 27 December 2016 Hibbert Cristopher Weinreb Ben Keay John Keay Julia 2011 The London Encyclopaedia Pan Macmillan p 424 ISBN 978 0230738782 Spraggs Gillian Outlaws and Highwaymen the Cult of the Robber in England from the Middle Ages to the Nineteenth Century pp 212 233 Pimlico 2001 Alexis de Tocqueville L Ancien Regime et la Revolution McLynn Frank Crime and punishment in eighteenth century England p 81 Routledge 1989 Spraggs Gillian Outlaws and Highwaymen the Cult of the Robber in England from the Middle Ages to the Nineteenth Century p 234 Pimlico 2001 The Enclosure Acts and the Industrial Revolution Wendy McElroy 2012 SHP History B Crime and Punishment 1750 1900 3 3 Highwaymen PDF Archived from the original PDF on 13 April 2016 Retrieved 31 March 2016 Impact of the Industrial Revolution Ecology Global Network 18 September 2011 Archived from the original on 8 January 2020 Retrieved 31 March 2016 hajduk Magyar neprajzi lexikon Kezikonyvtar www arcanum com in Hungarian Retrieved 2 October 2024 Rubinstein W D 2004 Genocide A History Pearson Education pp 82 83 ISBN 0 582 50601 8 Sharpe James Dick Turpin the Myth of the English Highwayman Chapter 5 The Man from Manchester Profile Books 2004 Spraggs Gillian Outlaws and Highwaymen the Cult of the Robber in England from the Middle Ages to the Nineteenth Century pp 237 240 Pimlico 2001 Seal Graham 1996 Positive Highwayman Ballads The Outlaw Legend Cambridge University Press pp 31 37 209 The Newgate Calendar Bibliographical Note ഇത ത ക കര പക ക യ ട കഥ കട ക ണ ട കടപ പ ട പ ല മ ല ല Ithikkara Pakki s story adapted without courtesy Janayugom in Malayalam 9 October 2018 Retrieved 2 July 2019 Radha M Nair 1971 Kochunni Amar Chitra Katha Pvt Ltd ISBN 9788184824940 Seal Graham The Outlaw Legend a cultural tradition in Britain America and Australia pp 47 78 Cambridge University Press 1996 Monty Python s Flying Circus Script Episode 37 Votruba Martin Hang Him High The Elevation of Janosik to an Ethnic Icon Slavic Review 65 1 pp 24 44 2006 Abstract Archived 5 July 2008 at the Wayback Machine Few in English e g Moore Coleman Marion 1972 A brigand two queens and a prankster stories of Janosik Queen Bona Queen Kinga and the Sowizdrzal Cherry Hill Books ISBN 978 0 910366 13 7 Further reading Ash Russell 1970 Highwaymen Shire Publications ISBN 978 0 85263 101 0 revised edition 1994 ISBN 978 0 7478 0260 0 Billett Michael 1997 Highwaymen and Outlaws Weidenfeld Military ISBN 978 1 85409 318 9 Brandon David 2004 Stand and Deliver A History of Highway Robbery Sutton Publishing ISBN 978 0 7509 3528 9 Dunford Stephen 2000 The Irish Highwaymen Merlin Publishing ISBN 1 903582 02 4 Evans Hilary amp Mary 1997 Hero on a Stolen Horse Highwayman and His Brothers in arms The Bandit and the Bushranger Muller ISBN 978 0 584 10340 3 Haining Peter 1991 The English Highwayman A Legend Unmasked Robert Hale ISBN 978 0 7090 4426 0 Harper Charles George 1908 Half hours with the Highwaymen picturesque biographies and traditions of the knights of the road Chapman amp Hall Online edition via Internet Archive Hobsbawm Eric 1969 Bandits Delacorte Press Revised edition 2000 ISBN 978 1 56584 619 7 Koliopoulos John S 1987 Brigands with a Cause Brigandage and Irredentism in Modern Greece 1821 1912 Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 822863 9 Liapi Lena 2019 Roguery in Print Crime and Culture in Early Modern London Boydell amp Brewer ISBN 9781783274406 Maxwell Gordon S 1994 Highwayman s Heath Story in Fact and Fiction of Hounslow Heath in Middlesex Heritage Publications Hounslow Leisure Services ISBN 978 1 899144 00 6 Newark Peter 1988 Crimson Book of Highwaymen Olympic Marketing Corp ISBN 9789997354792 Pringle Patrick 1951 Stand and Deliver The Story of the Highwaymen Museum Press ASIN B0000CHVTK Seal Graham 1996 The Outlaw Legend a cultural tradition in Britain America and Australia Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 55317 2 hbk ISBN 0 521 55740 2 pbk Sharpe James 2005 Dick Turpin The Myth of the English Highwayman Profile Books ISBN 978 1 86197 418 1 Spraggs Gillian 2001 Outlaws and Highwaymen The Cult of the Robber in England from the Middle Ages to the Nineteenth Century Pimlico ISBN 978 0 7126 6479 0 Sugden John and Philip 2015 The Thief of Hearts Claude Duval and the Gentleman Highwayman in Fact and Fiction Forty Steps ISBN 978 0 9934183 0 3External linksWikisource has original text related to this article The Highwayman Media related to Highwaymen at Wikimedia Commons The Heroic Outlaw in Irish Folklore and Popular Literature Primary source book from 1674 on aspects of Highwaymen their customs and their crimes Jackson s Recantation or the Life and Death of the Notorious Highwayman