When the middle of the century is past the signs that English law has a new lease of life become many. The medieval books poured from the press, new books were written, the decisions of the courts were more diligently reported, the lawyers were boasting... English Law and the Renaissance: With Some Notes - Página 29por Frederic William Maitland - 1901 - 98 páginasVista completa - Acerca de este libro
| Frederic William Maitland - 1901 - 136 páginas
...reported, the lawyers were boasting of the independence and extreme antiquity of their system 62 . We were having a little Renaissance of our own: or...degree: Dr Adelmare, known to Englishmen as Sir Julius Caesar 63 . That wonderful Edward Coke was loose. The medieval tradition was more than safe in his... | |
| Association of American Law Schools - 1907 - 890 páginas
...eloquentiae splendorem. Eorum oratio est Anglicana quidem, sed non sordida, non inquinata, non triviof living law. Even for the purposes of purely scientific...of our own : or a gothic revival if you please. The alis, gravis nonnunquam et copiosa, saepe urbana et faceta, non destituta similitudinum et exemplorum... | |
| Albert Beebe White - 1908 - 458 páginas
...diligently reported, the lawyers were boasting of the independence and extreme antiquity of their system. We were having a little Renaissance of our own: or a gothic revival if you please. . . . That wonderful Edward Coke was loose. The medieval tradition was more than safe in his hands."... | |
| Albert Beebe White - 1908 - 452 páginas
...diligently reported, the lawyers were boasting of the independence and extreme antiquity of their system. We were having a little Renaissance of our own: or a gothic revival if you please. . . • . That wonderful Edward Coke was loose. The medieval tradition was more than safe in his hands."... | |
| George Park Fisher, George Burton Adams, Henry Walcott Farnam, Arthur Twining Hadley, John Christopher Schwab, William Fremont Blackman, Edward Gaylord Bourne, Irving Fisher, Henry Crosby Emery, Wilbur Lucius Cross - 1909 - 490 páginas
...dog, certainly its extremities are represented as growing cold, and of this revival he says : "We are having a little Renaissance of our own ; or a gothic revival, if you please." After an essay by TE Scrutton on the influence of the Roman Law upon English Law, which is largely... | |
| Elizabeth L. Eisenstein - 1993 - 316 páginas
...in vernacular literatures were scarcely less common in learned circles than the cult of antiquity. "We were having a little Renaissance of our own; or a Gothic revival if you please." Maitland's comment seems to apply, beyond developments in Tudor and Stuart England, to the contemporaneous... | |
| J. G. A. Pocock - 1987 - 428 páginas
...Anti-Tribonian, pp. 101-2. 3 HD Hazeltine, lac. at., termed this reaction that of the 'national jurists'. 4 'We were having a little Renaissance of our own; or a Gothic revival, if you please ' ; Maitland (in English Law and the Renaissance) on the renewal of common-law studies, which took... | |
| Frederic William Maitland - 1901 - 116 páginas
...say that Robert Rede was not only an English judge but ' what is more ' a reader in English law. Deus bone! exclaimed Professor Smith in his inaugural lecture,...degree : Dr Adelmare, known to Englishmen as Sir Julius Caesar53. That wonderful Edward Coke was loose. The medieval tradition was more than safe in his hands.... | |
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