In 1895, the City of London enacted a law that, by modern standards, seems unthinkable: wife-beating was banned only between the hours of 10 PM and 7 AM.
According to historical records, the restriction had little to do with protecting women’s welfare. Instead, lawmakers were responding to complaints from neighbors about nighttime noise disrupting their sleep.
Prior to the ordinance, there were no time-based limits on domestic abuse. Husbands could, and did, beat their wives at any hour without legal consequence.
The turning point came not from moral outrage over violence, but from exhausted residents who could no longer tolerate the sound of crying women drifting through the walls during the night.
Under the 1895 rule, beating your wife remained legal during daylight hours. Only nighttime assaults carried the risk of arrest.
It would take nearly eight decades — until the 1970s — for the UK to introduce comprehensive laws criminalizing domestic violence outright, regardless of the time of day.
Historians note the case as a stark reminder of how recently society began treating physical abuse within marriage as a crime rather than a private matter.




