The essay explores the relations between legal change and legal education in an attempt to shed new light on the first common-law law textbook, William Blackstone’s Commentaries on the Laws of England. When it comes to examining the rise of the primer as a new legal textual genre, however, the potential of comparative law, in general, and of law and humanities, in particular, is scarcely employed. Scholars usually focus on Blackstone’s influence on the evolution of common-law institutions and legal literature, without ascertaining how eighteenth-century England influenced the structure and contents of the Commentaries. The essay delivers a multidisciplinary assessment of Blackstone’s Commentaries by exploring the educative ambitions of comp...
The judges of the Supreme Court of Louisiana issued a court order, in the year 1840, mandating a req...
The success of Blackstone’s Commentaries is usually attributed to the ambition of his project: to gi...
The research presented in this article has been supported by the European Research Council, through ...
Blackstone’s inclination to academic studies, the application of the Ab ovo doctrine to legal educat...
Legal and literary scholars have acknowledged that Blackstone invented a new legal textual genre: th...
Law Books in Action: Essays on the Anglo-American Legal Treatise explores the history of the legal t...
“The main purpose in giving to the public a new edition of the Commentaries of Blackstone, was to pr...
The reception of common law in the United States was stimulated by a very popular and influential tr...
Throughout the Commentaries, Blackstone repeatedly availed himself of comparative legal history. Com...
This chapter discusses the fourth volume of Blackstone's Commentaries (1769), asking what contributi...
Thomas M. Cooley\u27s editions of Blackstone\u27s Commentaries were the 19th century\u27s standard ...
The European legal tradition has handed down to us the cliché of a marked contrast between common la...
This article contextualizes the contribution of Blackstone’s Tower within the discipline of law, arg...
The European legal tradition has handed down to us the cliché of a marked contrast between common la...
In an article published in November, 1922, in the American Bar Association Journal on the Power and...
The judges of the Supreme Court of Louisiana issued a court order, in the year 1840, mandating a req...
The success of Blackstone’s Commentaries is usually attributed to the ambition of his project: to gi...
The research presented in this article has been supported by the European Research Council, through ...
Blackstone’s inclination to academic studies, the application of the Ab ovo doctrine to legal educat...
Legal and literary scholars have acknowledged that Blackstone invented a new legal textual genre: th...
Law Books in Action: Essays on the Anglo-American Legal Treatise explores the history of the legal t...
“The main purpose in giving to the public a new edition of the Commentaries of Blackstone, was to pr...
The reception of common law in the United States was stimulated by a very popular and influential tr...
Throughout the Commentaries, Blackstone repeatedly availed himself of comparative legal history. Com...
This chapter discusses the fourth volume of Blackstone's Commentaries (1769), asking what contributi...
Thomas M. Cooley\u27s editions of Blackstone\u27s Commentaries were the 19th century\u27s standard ...
The European legal tradition has handed down to us the cliché of a marked contrast between common la...
This article contextualizes the contribution of Blackstone’s Tower within the discipline of law, arg...
The European legal tradition has handed down to us the cliché of a marked contrast between common la...
In an article published in November, 1922, in the American Bar Association Journal on the Power and...
The judges of the Supreme Court of Louisiana issued a court order, in the year 1840, mandating a req...
The success of Blackstone’s Commentaries is usually attributed to the ambition of his project: to gi...
The research presented in this article has been supported by the European Research Council, through ...