The Haskins Society Journal 16

The Haskins Society Journal 16

Author: Diane Korngiebel

Publisher: Boydell Press

Published: 2006

Total Pages: 166

ISBN-13: 9781843832553

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The Haskins Society presents papers from leading scholars on the political and social history of the Western European world through the Viking times via the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms to the break-up of the Carolingian state in the mid-13th century.


Curia Regis rolls of the reign of Henry III

Curia Regis rolls of the reign of Henry III

Author: England. Curia Regis

Publisher: University of Rochester Press

Published: 1999

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9780851156057

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Transcripts of 13c plea rolls, vital legal, social and economic detail of the time, presented with index and critical introduction.


A Historical Introduction to the Law of Obligations

A Historical Introduction to the Law of Obligations

Author: David J. Ibbetson

Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA

Published: 2001

Total Pages: 356

ISBN-13: 9780198764113

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David Ibbetson exposes the historical layers beneath the modern rules and principles of contract, tort, and unjust enrichment. Small-scale changes caused by lawyers exploiting procedural advantages in their clients' interest are described & analyzed.


Politics and Society in Mid Thirteenth-Century England

Politics and Society in Mid Thirteenth-Century England

Author: Peter Coss

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2024-09-03

Total Pages: 332

ISBN-13: 0198924305

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Despite the multidirectional nature of modern research, the interpretation of the political history of thirteenth-century England has remained locked into a traditional framework bequeathed by the mid-twentieth-century historian, R. F. Treharne, and embellished by the emphases and accentuations of his present-day successors. Characterised by its conception of community, its constitutionalism, its ready identification of a national enterprise, and its predilection for idealism and 'progressive' thinking, this framework remains close to the Whig interpretation of English history. It is reinforced by the continuation of reverence for the baronial leader, Simon de Montfort. In contrast, Peter Coss offers here an alternative approach to the period which is anchored in social mores and cultural values. More emphasis is placed upon the interests, ambitions, and needs of contemporaries, upon social networks of various kinds, and upon how interests both clashed and cohered as people strove to improve or preserve their situations. This was a crisis born of political instability, but in the context of institutional, administrative, and legal growth, that is to say at a particular point in the evolution of the state. Drawing on a wide range of sources, the book reconsiders the generation of the crisis, the factors which influenced its course, and its (partial) resolution. In short, it explores the anatomy and physiology of a troubled realm.