Wolfgang P. Muller is Professor of History at Fordham University. He is the author of Huguccio: The Life, Works, and Thought of a Twelfth-Century Jurist and coeditor of MedievalChurch Law and the Origins of the Western Legal Tradition.
""Muller traces the tortuous path of the treatment of abortion as a public crime (felony) between the late 12th and early 16th centuries... He succeeds in demonstrating the shift in the settlement of disputes from the pre-12th-century local control of justice depending on local power and the strength of family status to a more public hearing under the control of centralizing authorities... Added to these public tribunals to investigate abortion as a crime was the widespread public attitude that regarded it as no more than a sin, if that, subject to confession to a priest and the performance of penance.""-Choice (February 2013) ""The Criminalization of Abortion in the West examines the processes which led to the voluntary killing of a human fetus becoming a crime, as opposed to a sin or a wrong compensable by a money payment...This book should be regarded as essential reading for those studying the interface between law and medicine in medieval Europe, to legal historians and social historians.""-Gwen Seabourne,Social History of Medicine (August 2013) ""[T]he argumentation is intricate. To put it differently, this reader found that the importance of Criminalization rose to the surface upon a second reading. For, this is an important book, which will interest historians across the sub-disciplinary spectrum and not only late medievalists. It provides a stimulating account of the theoretical and practical development of medieval criminal justice and will become a sine qua non in the history of abortion.""-Zubin Mistry, The Mediaeval Journal (June 2014) ""In The Criminalization of Abortion in the West, Wolfgang P. Muller addresses a question of broad modern interest and dispute. This is the definitive book on the subject of the history of the criminalization of abortion in the Western world and also a brilliant account of the history of the invention of criminalization itself-that is, early criminal law-in the Western legal tradition.""-Edward Peters, Henry Charles Lea Professor of History, University of Pennsylvania, author ofInquisition ""Wolfgang P. Muller presents a well-informed, comprehensive account of the process that led to the classification of abortion of a human fetus as a species of homicide punishable by severe penalties up to and including execution of convicted perpetrators. The Criminalization of Abortion in the West is a substantial contribution to our knowledge about a critical facet of the history of abortion.""-James A. Brundage, Ahmanson-Murphy Distinguished Professor Emeritus of History and Law, University of Kansas, author of The Medieval Origins of the Legal Profession: Canonists, Civilians, and Courts