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Judges,
Administrators and the Common Law in Angevin England
Ralph V. Turner
This collection of essays brings together
the author's work on th growth of administrative monarchy in Angevin England,
concentrating upon the personnnel of royal government and especially upon
the common law courts. It describes the institutions of the English common
law during its formative period, including the growth of the jury and of
the two central courts, Common Pleas at Westminster and the court following
the king, later King's Bench. Another group of essays illustrate the justices'
handling of cases coming before the law courts, examining please that touched
the king's interest. After a discussion of the authorship of England's
first great lawbook, Glanvill, other essays examine the justices, their
level of literacy, the conflicts facing the clerics among them in hearing
secular cases, and the hostility that they aroused as 'new men' in the
king's service from conservative elements in society.
300 pages 1994
1 85285 104 X Cased £45.00
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