Lawyers, Litigation & English Society Since 1450

Lawyers, Litigation & English Society Since 1450

by Christopher Brooks
Lawyers, Litigation & English Society Since 1450

Lawyers, Litigation & English Society Since 1450

by Christopher Brooks

Hardcover

$175.00 
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Overview

Legal history has usually been written in terms of writs and legislation, and the development of legal doctrine. Christopher Brooks, in this series of essays roughly half of which are previously unpublished, approaches the law from two different angles: the uses made of courts and the fluctuations in the fortunes of the legal profession. Based on extensive original research, his work has helped to redefine the parameters of British legal history, away from procedural development and the refinement of legal doctrine and towards the real impact that the law had in society. He also places the law into a wider social and political context, showing how changes in the law often reflected, but at the same time influenced, changes in intellectual assumptions and political thought.

Lawyers as a profession flourished in the second half of the sixteenth century and throughout the seventeenth century. This great age of lawyers was followed by a decline in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, reflecting both a decline in litigation and the perception of the law as slow, artificially complicated and ruinously expensive.

In Lawyers, Litigation and Society, 1450-1900, Christopher Brooks also looks at the sorts of cases brought before different courts, showing why particular courts were used and for what reasons, as well as showing why the popularity of individual courts changed over the years.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781852851569
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 11/01/2003
Series: Legal History
Pages: 290
Product dimensions: 6.40(w) x 9.30(h) x 1.10(d)

Table of Contents

Litigants and attorneys in King's Bench and common pleas, 1590-1640
interpersonal conflict and social tension - civil litigation in England, 1640-1830
litigation, state and society in England, 1200-1990
the decline and re-creation of the English legal profession in the 18th and 19th centuries
apprenticeship and legal education in the 18th and first half of the 19th centuries
law, lawyers and the social history of England, 1500-1850
the place of Magna Carta and the "ancient constitution" in 16th-century English legal thought
courts, legal discourse, and political consciousness in early 17th-century England.
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