Early history and Middle Ages and
Taira no Shigemori (Japan in 1159) , fought on 13 February 1503 between 13 Italian and 13 French
knights all shown wearing full
plate armour. In
Western society, the formal concept of a duel developed out of the
medieval judicial duel and older pre-Christian practices such as the
Viking Age . In medieval society, judicial duels were fought by knights and squires to end various disputes. Countries such as France, Spain, Germany, England, and Ireland practiced this tradition. Judicial combat took two forms in medieval society, the feat of arms and chivalric combat. If a traveling did not have weapons or horse to meet the challenge, one might be provided, and if the chose not to fight, he would leave his spurs behind as a sign of humiliation. If a lady passed unescorted, she would leave behind a glove or scarf, to be rescued and returned to her by a future knight who passed that way. The
Catholic Church was critical of dueling throughout medieval history, frowning both on the traditions of
judicial combat and on the duel on points of honor among the nobility. Judicial duels were deprecated by the
Lateran Council of 1215, but the judicial duel persisted in the
Holy Roman Empire into the 15th century.
Renaissance and early modern Europe During the early
Renaissance, dueling established the status of a respectable
gentleman and was an accepted manner to resolve disputes. The first published , or "code of dueling", appeared in
Renaissance Italy. The first formalized national code was that of France, during the
Renaissance. From the late 1580s to the 1620s, an estimated 10,000 French individuals (most of them nobility) were killed in duels. By the 17th century, dueling had become regarded as a prerogative of the
aristocracy, throughout Europe, and attempts to discourage or suppress it generally failed. For example, King
Louis XIII of France outlawed dueling in 1626, a law which remained in force afterwards, and his successor
Louis XIV intensified efforts to wipe out the duel. Despite these efforts, dueling continued unabated, and it is estimated that between 1685 and 1716, French officers fought 10,000 duels, leading to over 400 deaths. In
Ireland, as late as 1777, a code of practice was drawn up for the regulation of duels, at the summer
assizes in the town of
Clonmel,
County Tipperary. A copy of the code, known as 'the twenty-six commandments', was to be kept in a gentleman's pistol case for reference should a dispute arise regarding procedure.
Enlightenment-era opposition By the late 18th century,
Enlightenment era values began to influence society with new self-conscious ideas about
politeness,
civil behavior, and new attitudes toward
violence. The cultivated art of politeness demanded that there should be no outward displays of anger or violence, and the concept of honor became more personalized. By the 1770s, the practice of dueling was increasingly coming under attack from many sections of enlightened society, as a violent relic of Europe's medieval past unsuited for modern life. As England began to
industrialize and benefit from urban planning and more effective
police forces, the culture of street violence in general began to slowly wane. The growing
middle class maintained their reputation with recourse to either bringing charges of
libel, or to the fast-growing print media of the early 19th century, where they could defend their honor and resolve conflicts through correspondence in newspapers. Influential new intellectual trends at the turn of the 19th century bolstered the anti-dueling campaign; the
utilitarian philosophy of
Jeremy Bentham stressed that praiseworthy actions were exclusively restricted to those that maximize human welfare and happiness, and the
Evangelical notion of the "Christian conscience" began to actively promote social activism. Individuals in the
Clapham Sect and similar societies, who had successfully campaigned for the
abolition of slavery, condemned dueling as ungodly violence and as an egocentric culture of honor.
Modern history (1863–1925) The former United States Secretary of the Treasury
Alexander Hamilton was killed in a duel against the sitting Vice President
Aaron Burr in 1804. Between 1798 and the
Civil War, the
U.S. Navy lost two-thirds as many officers to dueling as it did in combat at sea, including naval hero
Stephen Decatur. Many of those killed or wounded were
midshipmen or junior officers. Despite prominent deaths, dueling persisted because of contemporary ideals of
chivalry, particularly in the
South, and because of the threat of ridicule if a challenge was rejected. By about 1770, the duel underwent a number of important changes in
England. Firstly, unlike their counterparts in many
continental nations, English duelists enthusiastically adopted the pistol, and sword duels dwindled. Special sets of
dueling pistols were crafted for the wealthiest of noblemen for this purpose. Also, the office of 'second' developed into 'seconds' or 'friends' being chosen by the aggrieved parties to conduct their honor dispute. These friends would attempt to resolve a dispute upon terms acceptable to both parties and, should this fail, they would arrange and oversee the mechanics of the encounter. In England, to kill in the course of a duel was formally judged as
murder, but generally the courts were very lax in applying the law, as they were sympathetic to the culture of honor. Despite being a criminal act, military officers in many countries could be punished if they failed to fight a duel when the occasion called for it. In 1814, a British officer was court-martialed,
cashiered, and dismissed from the army for failing to issue a challenge after he was publicly insulted. This attitude lingered on –
Queen Victoria even expressed a hope that
Lord Cardigan, prosecuted for wounding another in a duel, "would get off easily". The
Anglican Church was generally hostile to dueling, but
non-conformist sects in particular began to actively campaign against it. By 1840, dueling had declined dramatically; when the
7th Earl of Cardigan was acquitted on a legal technicality for homicide in connection with a duel with one of his former officers, outrage was expressed in the media, with
The Times alleging that there was deliberate, high-level complicity to leave the loophole in the prosecution and reporting the view that "in England there is one law for the rich and another for the poor", and
The Examiner describing the verdict as "a defeat of justice". The last-known fatal duel between Englishmen in England occurred in 1845, when
James Alexander Seton had an altercation with
Henry Hawkey over the affections of his wife, leading to a duel at Browndown, near
Gosport. However,
the last-known fatal duel to occur in
England was between two French political refugees, Frederic Cournet and
Emmanuel Barthélemy near
Englefield Green in 1852; the former was killed. and Barthélemy, . Dueling also began to be criticized in America in the late 18th century;
Benjamin Franklin denounced the practice as uselessly violent, and
George Washington encouraged his officers to refuse challenges during the
American Revolutionary War because he believed that the death by dueling of officers would have threatened the success of the war effort. In the early nineteenth century, American writer and activist
John Neal took up dueling as his earliest reform issue, attacking the institution in his first novel,
Keep Cool (1817), and referring to it in an essay that same year as "the unqualified evidence of manhood". Ironically, Neal was challenged to a duel by a fellow
Baltimore lawyer for insults published in his 1823 novel
Randolph. He refused and mocked the challenge in his next novel,
Errata, published the same year. Reports of dueling gained in popularity in the first half of the 19th century especially in the
South and the states of the
Old Southwest. However, in this regional context, the term
dueling had severely degenerated from its original 18th-century definition as a formal social custom among the wealthy classes, using fixed rules of conduct. Instead, 'dueling' was used by the contemporary press of the day to refer to any
melee knife or gun fight between two contestants, where the clear object was simply to kill one's opponent. Dueling began an irreversible decline in the aftermath of the
Civil War. Even in the South,
public opinion increasingly came to regard the practice as little more than bloodshed.
Prominent 19th-century duels fighting his fatal duel with Vice President
Aaron Burr, July 1804
United States The most notorious American duel is the
Burr–Hamilton duel, in which notable
Federalist and former Secretary of the Treasury
Alexander Hamilton was fatally wounded by his political rival, the sitting Vice President
Aaron Burr. This was later popularized in the musical
Hamilton, which premiered in 2015. Another American politician,
Andrew Jackson, later to serve as a
General Officer in the
U.S. Army and to become the
seventh president, fought two duels, though some legends claim he fought many more. On May 30, 1806, he killed prominent duellist
Charles Dickinson, suffering himself from a chest wound that caused him a lifetime of pain. Jackson also reportedly engaged in a bloodless duel with a lawyer and in 1803 came very near dueling with
John Sevier. Jackson also engaged in a frontier brawl (not a duel) with
Thomas Hart Benton in 1813. In 1827, during the
Sandbar Fight,
James Bowie was involved in an arranged pistol duel that quickly escalated into a knife-fighting
melee, not atypical of American practices at the time. On September 22, 1842, future President
Abraham Lincoln, at the time an
Illinois state
legislator, met to duel with state auditor
James Shields, but friends intervened and persuaded them against it. In 1864, American writer
Mark Twain, then a contributor to the
New York Sunday Mercury, narrowly avoided fighting a duel with a rival newspaper editor, apparently through the intervention of his second, who exaggerated Twain's prowess with a pistol.
France In 1808, two Frenchmen are said to have fought in balloons over Paris, each attempting to shoot and puncture the other's balloon. One duellist is said to have been shot down and killed with his second. On 30 May 1832, French mathematician
Évariste Galois was mortally wounded in a duel at the age of twenty, cutting short his promising mathematical career. He spent the night before the duel writing mathematics; the inclusion of a note claiming that he did not have time to finish a proof spawned the
urban legend that he wrote his most important results on that night. In 1843, two Frenchmen are said to have fought a duel by means of throwing billiard balls at each other. D'Esterre's wife consented to accept an allowance for her daughter, which O'Connell regularly paid for more than thirty years until his death. The memory of the duel haunted him for the remainder of his life.
Russia The works of Russian poet
Alexander Pushkin contain a number of duels, notably Onegin's duel with Lensky in
Eugene Onegin. These turned out to be prophetic, as Pushkin himself was mortally wounded in a controversial duel with
Georges d'Anthès, a French officer rumored to be his wife's lover. D'Anthès, who was accused of cheating in this duel, married Pushkin's sister-in-law and went on to become a French minister and senator.
Germany In the 1860s,
Otto von Bismarck was reported to have challenged
Rudolf Virchow to a duel. Virchow, being entitled to choose the weapons, chose two pork sausages, one infected with the roundworm
Trichinella; the two would each choose and eat a sausage. Bismarck reportedly declined. The story could be apocryphal, however.
Scotland In Scotland,
James Stuart of Dunearn, was tried and acquitted after a duel that fatally wounded Sir
Alexander Boswell.
George Buchan published his own examination of arguments in favour of duelling alongside an account of the trial, taken in shorthand. Other duels were fought in Scotland mostly between soldiers or the gentry with several subsequently brought to the law courts.
Canada The last known fatal duel in
Ontario was in Perth, in 1833, when
Robert Lyon challenged
John Wilson to a pistol duel after a quarrel over remarks Lyon had made about a local school teacher, whom Wilson eventually married after Lyon was killed in the duel.
Victoria, British Columbia was known to have been the scene of at least two duels near the time of the gold rush. One involved a British arrival by the name of George Sloane, and an American, John Liverpool, both arriving via San Francisco in 1858. In a duel by pistols, Sloane was fatally injured and Liverpool shortly returned to the US. The fight originally started on board the ship over a young woman, Miss Bradford, and then carried on later in Victoria's tent city. Another duel, involving a Mr. Muir, took place around 1861, but was moved to a US island near Victoria.
Decline in the 19th and 20th centuries Duels had mostly ceased to be fought to the death by the late 19th century. By the start of
World War I, dueling had not only been made illegal almost everywhere in the
Western world, but was also widely seen as an anachronism. Military establishments in most countries frowned on dueling because officers were the main contestants. Officers were often trained at military academies at government expense; when officers killed or disabled one another it imposed an unnecessary financial and leadership strain on a military organization, making dueling unpopular with high-ranking officers. With the end of the duel, the
dress sword lost its position as an indispensable part of a gentleman's wardrobe, a development described as an "archaeological terminus" by
Ewart Oakeshott, concluding the long period during which the
sword had been a visible attribute of the free man, beginning as early as three millennia ago with the
Bronze Age sword.
Legislation Emperor
Charles I outlawed dueling in
Austria-Hungary in 1917. Germany (the various states of the Holy Roman Empire) has a history of laws against dueling going back to the late medieval period, with a large amount of legislation () dating from the period after the Thirty Years' War.
Prussia outlawed dueling in 1851, and the law was inherited by the of the
German Empire after 1871.
Pope Leo XIII in the encyclical (1891) asked the bishops of Germany and Austria–Hungary to impose penalties on duellists. In Nazi-era Germany, legislation on dueling was tightened in 1937. After World War II,
West German authorities persecuted
academic fencing as duels until 1951, when a
Göttingen court established the legal distinction between academic fencing and dueling. In 1839, after the death of a congressman, dueling was outlawed in
Washington, D.C. A constitutional amendment was even proposed for the federal constitution to outlaw dueling. Some
U.S. states' constitutions, such as
West Virginia's, contain explicit prohibitions on dueling to this day. In
Kentucky, the state constitution of 1891, which remains in effect, mandates that all state and local officeholders, attorneys who are members of the state bar and delegates to the
Electoral College must swear or affirm that they had never engaged in a duel with deadly weapons, acted as a second in a duel with deadly weapons or otherwise aided or assisted anyone thus offending. Other U.S. states, like
Mississippi until the late 1970s, formerly had prohibitions on dueling in their state constitutions, but later repealed them, whereas others, such as Iowa, constitutionally prohibited known duelers from holding political office until the early 1990s. From 1921 until 1992,
Uruguay was one of the few places where duels were fully legal. During that period, a duel was legal in cases where "an honor tribunal of three respectable citizens, one chosen by each side and the third chosen by the other two, had ruled that sufficient cause for a duel existed".
Pistol sport dueling In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, pistol dueling became popular as a sport in France. The duelists were armed with conventional pistols, but the cartridges had
wax bullets and were without any powder charge; the bullet was propelled only by the explosion of the cartridge's
primer. Participants wore heavy, protective clothing and a metal helmet with a glass eye-screen. The pistols were fitted with a shield that protected the firing hand.
Olympic dueling Pistol dueling was an associate (non-medal) event at the
1908 Summer Olympics in London.
Late survivals Dueling culture survived in
France, Italy, and Latin America well into the 20th century.
After World War II, duels had become rare even in France, and those that still occurred were covered in the press as eccentricities. Duels in France in this period, while still taken seriously as a matter of honor, were not fought to the death. They consisted of fencing with the épée mostly in a fixed distance with the aim of drawing blood from the opponent's arm. In 1949, former Vichy official
Jean-Louis Tixier-Vignancour fought school teacher Roger Nordmann. The last known duel in France took place in 1967, when
Socialist Deputy and Mayor of Marseille
Gaston Defferre insulted
Gaullist Deputy
René Ribière at the
French Parliament and was subsequently challenged to a duel fought with swords. Ribière lost the duel, having been wounded twice. In Uruguay, a pistol duel was fought in 1971 between Danilo Sena and
Enrique Erro, in which neither of the combatants was injured. Various modern jurisdictions still retain
mutual combat laws, which allow disputes to be settled via consensual unarmed combat, which are essentially unarmed duels, though it may still be illegal for such fights to result in grievous bodily harm or death. Few if any modern jurisdictions allow armed duels. ==Rules==