In 1832, after a series of calculated murdres in Edinburgh and London, British parliamentarians passed a new law to regulate how the country's medical schools could lawfully obtain bodies for dissection. The Anatomy Act's aim was to bring halt to the grave-robbing and murders through which the schools had been tenuously supplied. But this controversial statute's deliberate ambiguity on many matters caused snatching of one kind or another to remain the pivotal means through which corpses were obtained for the rest of the century.
This book explores what happened in the wake of the Anatomy Act in Britain and Australia.