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Domesday Book and the Law: Society and Legal Custom in Early Medieval England [Kõva köide]

(Boston College, Massachusetts)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 568 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 255x181x32 mm, kaal: 1320 g, 6 Tables, unspecified
  • Ilmumisaeg: 13-Aug-1998
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 052163038X
  • ISBN-13: 9780521630382
  • Formaat: Hardback, 568 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 255x181x32 mm, kaal: 1320 g, 6 Tables, unspecified
  • Ilmumisaeg: 13-Aug-1998
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 052163038X
  • ISBN-13: 9780521630382
The Domesday Book contains a great many things, including the most comprehensive, varied, and monumental legal material to survive from England before the rise of the common law. This book argues that it can - and should - be read as a legal text. When the statistical information present in the great survey is stripped away, there is much material still left, almost all of which stems directly from inquest, testimony given by jurors impanelled in 1086, or from the sworn statements of lords and their men. This information, read in context, can provide a picture of what the law looked like, the ways in which it was changing, and the means whereby the inquest was a central event in the formation of English law. The volume provides translations (with Latin legal terminology included parenthetically) for all of Domesday Book's legal references, each numbered and organised by county, fee, and folio.

Arvustused

"Robin Fleming's lively and engaging examination of Domesday Book makes it clear, nonetheless, that the survey, and the thousands of local insights that informed it, still have a great deal to tell us about the early years of the Norman Conquest. Fleming's work will most certainly generate a `clamour' of its own among scholars. But the book will require all who read it to think much more deeply than they have done to date about the ways in which post-Conquest lords depended on the machinery of Anglo-Saxon local government and the rich legacy of Anglo-Saxon law when they undertook the overthrow of the kingdom that William I won from Harold Godwinson in 1066." Cynthia J. neville, Canadian Journal of History "This is an important and very remarkable book." J.C. Holt, Albion "This work...provides much of interest to social, economic, legal, political, and even religious historians." Katherine Fischer Drew, Journal of Interdisciplinary History "Fleming's discussion...is sensitive, extremely well-informed, and intelligent." Speculum

Muu info

A thorough and complete survey of all the legal actions and references in Domesday Book.
List of figures and tables
xi(1)
Acknowledgments xii(1)
List of abbreviations xiii(3)
Two brief notes on the texts and indexes xvi(1)
Table of F numbers by county
xvii(1)
Frequency of legal information across counties and circuits xviii
Introduction Disputes and the inquest 1(8)
Part I Domesday Book and the law 9(78)
Chapter 1 The inquest and the mechanics of justice
11(25)
Jurors and the inquest
11(6)
Jurors in social and political context
17(11)
Local courts and royal writs
28(6)
Conclusion
34(2)
Chapter 2 Living in the shadow of the law
36(17)
The business of local assemblies
36(9)
The legal lives of lords and their men
45(8)
Chapter 3 Disputes and the Edwardian past
53(15)
Remembering the past in 1086
53(3)
Written evidence and collective memory in legal action
56(10)
Conclusion
66(2)
Chapter 4 Disputes and the Norman present
68(19)
Disputes and the Norman settlement
68(9)
Disputes and the politics of William's reign
77(5)
Conclusion
82(5)
Part II The texts 87(352)
Exchequer Domesday Book
89(186)
Little Domesday Book
275(164)
Part III Indexes 439
Index of names 441(35)
Index of places 476(30)
Subject index 506