Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-zzh7m Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-25T07:54:09.681Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

20 - The books of the common law

from II - PROFESSIONS

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2008

Get access

Summary

Introductory

Although the common law of England was considered by academic lawyers as ‘unwritten law’, the upper branches of the English legal profession were necessarily learned in books. Chaucer’s man of law may not have owned books of cases literally stretching back to the time of the Conquest, but the poetic exaggeration must have worked upon fact; a serjeant at law was expected to possess an impressive array of law books. The library of a common lawyer in Chaucer’s day, or in 1557, would nevertheless have been unlike that of any other lawyer in the world. This was a result of the insularity of the English legal system, centred on the courts in Westminster Hall, which followed arcane procedures developed indigenously and was independent of Romanist terminology or method. Since the universities of Oxford and Cambridge disdained to notice a body of law that was not written in Latin and could not be expounded in lecturae, advanced instruction in the common law was provided by another university. The collegiate law school known as the Inns of Court probably dates from the 1340s, when it replaced a shadowy earlier studium for apprentices following the Common Bench. In addition to the four Inns of Court, there were a number of lesser colleges known as the Inns of Chancery, which provided lectures and exercises for less advanced students.

Though the writs and records of the law were in a sort of Latin, law French was used for virtually all professional literature. Probably it was no longer used for argument in court, but it was still spoken at exercises in the Inns of Court and was the only language in which formal pleadings could be framed orally at the bar before the clerks engrossed them in Latin. By 1450, law French was a language more often written than spoken, with its own arcane abbreviations. Though derived from the vernacular Anglo-Norman of the thirteenth century, it was as different from that of Stratford-atte-Bow as from that of Paris or Rouen. The words for trees and cows might be recognizably the same, but the lawyers had converted many ordinary words into a technical abstract vocabulary all their own. Even the Latin of our common lawyers was far removed from that of ancient Rome.

Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1999

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Baker, J. H. 1986 The Notebook of Sir John Port, Selden Society 102, London.
Baker, J. H. 1988 Introduction to St German, C., Doctor and student (rpt of 1787 edn), Birmingham AL.
Baker, J. H. 1989aJohn Bryt’s reports (1410–1411) and the year books of Henry IV’, Cambridge Law Jnl, 48.Google Scholar
Baker, J. H. 1989bRecords, reports and the origins of case-law in England’, in Baker, J. H. (ed.), Judicial records, law reports and the growth of case law, Berlin.Google Scholar
Baker, J. H. 1990a The third university of England: the Inns of Court and the common-law tradition, Selden Society, London.
Baker, J. H. 1990b Manual of law French, 2nd edn, Aldershot.
Baker, J. H. 1990c intro. to Readings and moots at the Inns of Court, II, Selden Society 105, London.
Baker, J. H. 1994 Reports from the lost notebooks of Sir James Dyer, Selden Society 109–10, London.
Baker, J. H. (ed.) 1977–8 The reports of Sir John Spelman, Selden Society 93–4, London.
Baker, J. H., English legal manuscripts in the United States of America: Part I: Medieval and Renaissance, London 1985.
Baker, J. H., English legal manuscripts, 2 vols., Zug 1975–8.
Barker, N. J. 1972A register of writs and the Scales binder’, Book Collector, 21.Google Scholar
Barker, N. J. 1979The St Albans press: the first punch-cutter in England and the first native typefounder?Transactions of the Cambridge Bibliographical Society, 8.Google Scholar
Beale, J. H. 1926 A bibliography of early English law books, Cambridge MA.
Boersma, F. L. 1981 An introduction to Fitzherbert’s Abridgement, Abingdon.
Byrom, H. J. 1927Richard Tottell: his life and work’, The Library. Transactions of the Bibliographical Society, 4th ser., 8.Google Scholar
Cowley, J. D. 1932 A bibliography of abridgments, digests, dictionaries, and indexes of English law to the year 1800, London.
Elton, G. R. 1978The sessional printing of statutes, 1484 –1547’, in Ives, 1978 (rpt in Elton 1974–83, III).
Fortescue, J. Sir 1942 De laudibus legum Anglie, ed. Chrimes, S. B., Cambridge.
Geritz, A. J. and Laine, A. L. 1983 John Rastell, Boston, MA.
Glazebrook, P. R. 1972 Introduction to Sir Fitzherbert, A., The newe boke of justices of the peas (1538), London.
Graham, H. J. 1954The Rastells and the printed English law book of the Renaissance’, Law Lib. Jnl, 47.Google Scholar
Graham, H. J. 1965The first Englishing and printing of the medieval statutes at large’, UCLA Law Rev, 13.Google Scholar
Graham, H. J. and Heckel, J. W. 1958The Book that “made” the common law’, Law Lib. Jnl, 51.Google Scholar
Henderson, E. G. 1975Legal literature and the impact of printing on the English legal profession’, Law Lib. Jnl, 68.Google Scholar
Inderwick, F. A. 1896–1919 A calendar of the Inner Temple records, 1505–1714, 3 vols., London.
Ives, E. W. 1969A lawyer’s library in 1500’, Law Quarterly Review, 85.Google Scholar
Ives, E. W. 1983 The Common lawyers of pre-Reformation England, Cambridge.
Jacob, E. F. and Johnson, H. C. (eds.) 1938–47 The Register of Henry Chichele, Archbishop of Canterbury 1414–1443, 4 vols., Oxford.
Jayne, S. R. 1983 Library catalogues of the English Renaissance, Berkeley and Los Angeles (1956); rev. rpt Godalming, .
Ker, N. R. 1969–92 Medieval manuscripts in British libraries, 4 vols. (vol. IV with Piper, A. J.), Oxford.
Maggs, , European Bulletin 14 (1988), no. 3 (dated 1468).
Maitland, F. W. 1901 English law and the Renaissance, Cambridge.
Maitland, F. W. (ed.) 1903 Yearbooks of Edward II, I, Surtees Society 17, London.
Moreton, C. E. 1991The “library” of a late-fifteenth-century lawyer’, The Library. Transactions of the Bibliographical Society, 6th ser., 13.Google Scholar
Owen, G. 1892 The Description of Pembrokeshire, 1603, ed. Owen, H., London.
Pantzer, K. 1983Printing the English statutes, 1484–1640: some historical implications’, in Carpenter, K. E. 1983.
Partridge, W. E. 1983The use of William Caxton’s type 3 by John Lettou and William de Machlinia in the printing of their Yearbook 35 Henry VI, c. 1481–1482’, British Library Journal, 9.Google Scholar
Plomer, H. R. 1905Westminster Hall and its booksellers’, The Library. Transactions of the Bibliographical Society, 2nd ser., 6.Google Scholar
Plomer, H. R. 1909Two lawsuits of Richard Pynson’, The Library. Transactions of the Bibliographical Society, 2nd ser., 10.Google Scholar
Plomer, H. R. 1915An inventory of Wynkyn de Worde’s house “The Sun in Fleet Street” in 1553’, The Library. Transactions of the Bibliographical Society, 3rd ser., 6.Google Scholar
Plomer, H. R. 1923Richard Pynson, glover and printer’, The Library. Transactions of the Bibliographical Society, 4th ser., 3.Google Scholar
Plomer, H. R. 1925 Wynkyn de Worde & his contemporaries from the death of Caxton to 1535, London.
Putnam, B. H. 1924 Early treatises on the practices of the Justices of the Peace in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, Oxford.
Reed, A. W. 1926 Early Tudor drama, London (rpt New York, 1969).
Roberts, R. J. 1979John Rastell’s inventory of 1538’, The Library. Transactions of the Bibliographical Society, 6th ser., 1.Google Scholar
Schoeck, R. J. 1962The libraries of common lawyers in the Renaissance’, Manuscripta 6.Google Scholar
Scott, K. L. 1980aAdditions to the oeuvre of the English border artist: the Nova statuta’, in The Mirrour of the Worlde: MS Bodley 283, Roxburghe Club, London.Google Scholar
Scott, K. L. 1980bA late fifteenth-century group of Nova Statuta Manuscripts’, in Mare, and Barker-Benfield, 1980.
Simpson, A. W. B. 1957The circulation of year books in the fifteenth century’, Law Quarterly Review, 73.Google Scholar
Simpson, A. W. B. 1971The source and function of the later year books’, Law Quarterly Review, 87.Google Scholar
Stapleton, T. 1928 The life and illustrious martyrdom of Sir Thomas More, trans. Hallett, P. E., London (rpt 1966).
Winfield, P. 1923Abridgments of the year books’, Harvard Law Rev., 37.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×