A History of English Law
A History of English Law
A History of English Law
following two texts will be supplied, Xeroxed, by the Instructor: Anthony Musson, Medieval Law in Context Anthony Musson and W.M. Ormrod, The Evolution of English Justice Other texts to be supplied by the Instructor PURPOSE OF THIS COURSE: THIS course is intended as an introduction to the development of the English legal tradition and system from the Anglo-Saxon period to the end of the Elizabethan period. By that time the basic institutions, doctrines and forms of action of the law were in place and constituted the raw material brought to the American colonies by settlers, which would ultimately be incorporated, in one way or another, into the law and legal institutions of the new United States. This is also a course which will make extensive use of the sources of the evolving English law, so that to a large extent class sessions will be a combination of comments by the Instructor and discussions and analyses by the class as a whole of the texts themselves. Finally, this is a course that assumes a certain degree of familiarity with the basic outline of the history of England between the Anglo-Saxon settlement and the early 17th century. Students lacking such familiarity are urged to reconsider whether they belong in this class. If, after such reflection, such students wish to continue, they are urged to obtain and read a general history of medieval and Tudor/Stuart England to fill in the necessary background material. EXAMINATIONS AND OTHER ASSIGNMENTS There is one examination for this course: the Final. Thats it. It will not be a true/false or multiple-choice exam but will involve writing complete sentences.
CALENDAR January 7 January 9: Introduction (distribution of syllabus and hand-outs for the first class sessions). NO CLASS!!! Read the material distributed in the previous meeting. Readings: Alan Harding, The Social History of English Law, Chapter I, Patrick Wormald, The Making of English Law (selection), and selections from Anglo-Saxon law codes.
January 31: Royal Justice in the 11th and early 12th centuries February 4: Courts and actions February 6: Leges Henrici Primi Reading: Leges Henrici Primi (selectionsto be supplied) February 11: The Angevin Revolution Reading: Hudson, Chapters 5-7 Assizes of Clarendon, Northampton (to be supplied) February 13: Criminal Law February 18: Land law February 20:
February 25: The new rationalism of the 12th century and professionalization
Reading: The Dialogue of the Exchequer (selectionssupplied) February 27: Glanvill Reading: Glanvill, De legibus et consuetudinibus Angliae (selections supplied) March 3: March 5: March 11: Spring Break Spring Break King John to Henry III: a century of troubles Reading: Hudson, Chapter 8; Musson, Medieval Law in Context, Ch. 1-2 Magna Carta (to be supplied) March 13: March 18: March 20: The expanding forms of action The court system defined Courts in action Reading: Musson, Chapters 3-4 Roll and Writ File of the Berkshire Eyre of 1248 (selections) March 25: March 27: April 1: Statutes and Parliament Reading: Musson, Chapters 5-6 Trespass The Changing Law of the 14th and 15th centuries Reading: Barbara Hanawalt, Norfolk Gaol Deliveries (supplied) Musson and Ormrod, The Evolution of English Law (all) April 3: April 8:
April 10:
April 15:
The Rivals of the Common Law: the Prerogative Courts Reading: TBA
April 17:
The Rivals of the Common Law: Canon Law/Benefit of Clergy Reading: Harold Berman, Law and Revolution (selections, supplied) J. Bellamy, Benefit of Clergy in the 15th and 16th Centuries, in idem, Criminal Law and Society in Late Medieval and Tudor England) (supplied)
April ??:
Final Examination