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4. Adelaide Bartlett

A sensational case of murder by poisoning puts medical science in the dock. Robert Glenister reads Judith Flanders' book.

Over the course of the nineteenth century, murder - in reality a rarity - became ubiquitous: transformed into novels, into broadsides and ballads, into theatre and melodrama. "The Invention of Murder" explores the Victorian fascination with deadly violence by relating some of the century's most gripping and gruesome cases and the ways in which they were commercially exploited.

As the century progressed, so did advances in medical knowledge and expert witnesses were soon playing a major part in criminal trials. This episode looks at the sensational case of Adelaide Bartlett, who was accused of murdering her husband with chloroform in 1886. Newspapers and magazines pored over lurid details of the Bartletts' marriage and the case was responsible for inspiring a rash of fiction.

By Judith Flanders.

Read by Robert Glenister.
Abridged by David Jackson Young.
Produced by Kirsteen Cameron.

First broadcast on Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4 in January 2011.

15 minutes

Last on

Fri 29 Apr 2022 02:15

Broadcasts

  • Thu 13 Jan 2011 09:45
  • Fri 14 Jan 2011 00:30
  • Thu 30 Jul 2015 11:00
  • Thu 30 Jul 2015 21:00
  • Thu 28 Apr 2022 14:15
  • Fri 29 Apr 2022 02:15

Lucy Worsley's Crime Collection

Lucy Worsley's Crime Collection

Hand-picked programmes on the themes of 19th-century murder and mores.