D.G. Bell has observed that the torrent of historical writing on Canadian legal education has yet to be matched by intensive study of the legal profession itself. The aim of the present paper is to demonstrate that, for eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century Nova Scotia, the development of the legal profession was so closely linked to the evolution of the superior courts, especially the Court of Chancery, that the former cannot be studied in isolation from the latter. By the time Halifax was founded in 1749, the attorney at law and solicitor in equity had not only been statutorily entrenched as the ministerial part of the English legal profession, but had also been successfully translated to the colonial legal profession. The union of...
The English Inns of Court in London had ceased to perform their educational functions in the middle ...
The conference program describes the legal history of Nova Scotia as terra incognita. Whether this i...
Focusing on the tenure (1854-1857) of William Young, this article examines the legal work of ninetee...
D.G. Bell has observed that the torrent of historical writing on Canadian legal education has yet t...
The evolution of the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia has been well described elsewhere.\u27 This paper ...
Historians are apt to be omnivorous animals, and they can be nourished by all kinds of research. Thi...
Expressed in simplest terms Nova Scotia law, generally speaking, is an amalgamation of English commo...
The subject of the present inquiry, is to point out the origin and sources of the laws in force in N...
The performance of Nova Scotia\u27s thirty-seven attorneys general in the 234 years between 1749 and...
The Court of Chancery in Nova Scotia enjoyed a history that may best be described as a progression f...
This paper frames the study of lawyers in Canadian history against major interpretations of the le...
The Canadian legal profession emerged from the confluence of two distinct traditions: the American a...
Legal education has been subjected to greater scrutiny in common law jurisdictions since the publica...
When the British acquired Canada in 1763, there were immediate schemes for the rapid anglicization o...
The establishment of the Admiralty Court , which was formally known as the Nova Scotia Court of Vic...
The English Inns of Court in London had ceased to perform their educational functions in the middle ...
The conference program describes the legal history of Nova Scotia as terra incognita. Whether this i...
Focusing on the tenure (1854-1857) of William Young, this article examines the legal work of ninetee...
D.G. Bell has observed that the torrent of historical writing on Canadian legal education has yet t...
The evolution of the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia has been well described elsewhere.\u27 This paper ...
Historians are apt to be omnivorous animals, and they can be nourished by all kinds of research. Thi...
Expressed in simplest terms Nova Scotia law, generally speaking, is an amalgamation of English commo...
The subject of the present inquiry, is to point out the origin and sources of the laws in force in N...
The performance of Nova Scotia\u27s thirty-seven attorneys general in the 234 years between 1749 and...
The Court of Chancery in Nova Scotia enjoyed a history that may best be described as a progression f...
This paper frames the study of lawyers in Canadian history against major interpretations of the le...
The Canadian legal profession emerged from the confluence of two distinct traditions: the American a...
Legal education has been subjected to greater scrutiny in common law jurisdictions since the publica...
When the British acquired Canada in 1763, there were immediate schemes for the rapid anglicization o...
The establishment of the Admiralty Court , which was formally known as the Nova Scotia Court of Vic...
The English Inns of Court in London had ceased to perform their educational functions in the middle ...
The conference program describes the legal history of Nova Scotia as terra incognita. Whether this i...
Focusing on the tenure (1854-1857) of William Young, this article examines the legal work of ninetee...