Through an analysis of three masques presented at the Inns of Court between 1561 and 1613, this article examines the relationship between the Crown and the common law, and the competing claims of each to represent and embody the incontestable source of constitutional supremacy. An examination of the texts of these masques reveals the nature of the ideal constitution sought by common lawyers, and the role envisaged for the monarch within this Utopian state. He/She is depicted as the iconic symbol of English nationhood and unity. But the overriding theme of the masques is that the common law has existed since time immemorial and is endowed with divine authority. Consequently its sovereignty cannot be challenged by any earthly king or queen
In Henry IV, Parts 1 and 2 Shakespeare provides an image of the unifying function of law in a disjoi...
The relations between politics, law and literature in the last decade of Elizabethan rule, the prais...
The Common Law is a body of law, developed over time from the decisions and practices of courts, upo...
This book offers an interesting interpretation of the hidden culture of the early modern legal profe...
This article considers the development of the individual subject of law and his constitutional statu...
The Constitutions of Clarendon are presented as an illustration of the common-law character of Engli...
Through an examination of five plays by Shakespeare, Paul Raffield analyses the contiguous developme...
This article argues that a) constitutional supremacy is affected by the legal tradition, which impli...
Analysis and critique of underlying principles of the theory of common law constitutionalism from an...
This article argues that a) constitutional supremacy is affected by the legal tradition, which impli...
Starting with the Middle Ages, the system of writs (forms of actions) began to dominate the English ...
This article addresses the architecture of the four Inns of Court inLondon as repositories for the b...
The development of a secular legal profession in the 16th century compromised the sacerdotal role en...
The paper represents the structured reflection on the images/conceptions of a crown interwoven with ...
In an attempt to connect legal, cultural, and intellectual approaches to the history of late medieva...
In Henry IV, Parts 1 and 2 Shakespeare provides an image of the unifying function of law in a disjoi...
The relations between politics, law and literature in the last decade of Elizabethan rule, the prais...
The Common Law is a body of law, developed over time from the decisions and practices of courts, upo...
This book offers an interesting interpretation of the hidden culture of the early modern legal profe...
This article considers the development of the individual subject of law and his constitutional statu...
The Constitutions of Clarendon are presented as an illustration of the common-law character of Engli...
Through an examination of five plays by Shakespeare, Paul Raffield analyses the contiguous developme...
This article argues that a) constitutional supremacy is affected by the legal tradition, which impli...
Analysis and critique of underlying principles of the theory of common law constitutionalism from an...
This article argues that a) constitutional supremacy is affected by the legal tradition, which impli...
Starting with the Middle Ages, the system of writs (forms of actions) began to dominate the English ...
This article addresses the architecture of the four Inns of Court inLondon as repositories for the b...
The development of a secular legal profession in the 16th century compromised the sacerdotal role en...
The paper represents the structured reflection on the images/conceptions of a crown interwoven with ...
In an attempt to connect legal, cultural, and intellectual approaches to the history of late medieva...
In Henry IV, Parts 1 and 2 Shakespeare provides an image of the unifying function of law in a disjoi...
The relations between politics, law and literature in the last decade of Elizabethan rule, the prais...
The Common Law is a body of law, developed over time from the decisions and practices of courts, upo...