| 21. | But buggery has been around forever . talk ) 16 : 28, 8 July 2015 ( UTC)
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| 22. | Although he had been married three times, and had four children, he was also accused of buggery.
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| 23. | In summary, the British anti-buggery law was enacted in 1534, taking over from ecclesiastical law.
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| 24. | For these reasons, Deleuze developed an idiosyncratic way of reading philosophers which he once referred to as buggery.
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| 25. | Buggery over the age of 17 had been abolished by the Criminal Law ( Sexual Offences ) Act 1993.
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| 26. | The punishment for " buggery " ( sodomy ) was reduced from execution to life in prison in 1899.
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| 27. | As with the crime of rape, buggery required that penetration must have occurred, but ejaculation is not necessary.
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| 28. | Buggery was a capital offence between 1533 and 1861 under UK law, although it rarely resulted in death penalty.
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| 29. | In 2013, the Government created a Parliamentary Commission to decide whether to scrap the country's buggery laws.
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| 30. | One such prisoner was Derek White, who was being held on remand on charges of indecent assault and buggery.
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