The article challenges the cliché handed down to us by the European legal tradition of a marked contrast between ‘common law’, assumed as case-law/anti-doctrinal law, always opposed to ‘civil law’, seen as doctrinal/non case-law. Focusing on English and Italian legal historiography on the Great Tribunals and the collections of their decisions on both sides of the Channel, the article attempts to show that the traditional paradigm cannot be applied tout court to the medieval and early-modern period. In particular, the article highlights that the European Continental Great Tribunals’ decisiones, credited with binding force by such powerful and authoritative courts, can be considered – in broad sense – nothing else than ‘case-law’
By the end of the middle ages and in early-modern Europe, judges in superior or central courts had r...
In this article the author investigates the errors that can make the judgment null and void and, the...
Against the historical backdrop of the codification debate in nineteenth century Germany, this artic...
The article challenges the cliché handed down to us by the European legal tradition of a marked cont...
In 1981 the Journal of Legal History published the essay “A ‘Revisiting’ of the Comparison between ‘...
The past few decades have witnessed a welcome expansion in historians’ understanding of English lega...
The European legal tradition has handed down to us the cliché of a marked contrast between common la...
This work was supported by the H2020 European Research Council programme under the ERC Advanced Gran...
The European legal tradition has handed down to us the cliché of a marked contrast between common la...
Western legal histories are frequently told as very simplistic and whiggish tales. They highlight co...
European law, including both civil law and common law, has gone through several major phases of expa...
This article investigates two controversies that reveal the deeply intertwined nature of legal strat...
This article argues that Renaissance legal culture provided a robust means of evaluating the epistem...
UID/HIS/00749/2019 CEECIND/01367/2017Fragmentary, complex and in short supply, medieval Portuguese c...
Article looks at a historical problem—the first use of case law by English royal justices in the thi...
By the end of the middle ages and in early-modern Europe, judges in superior or central courts had r...
In this article the author investigates the errors that can make the judgment null and void and, the...
Against the historical backdrop of the codification debate in nineteenth century Germany, this artic...
The article challenges the cliché handed down to us by the European legal tradition of a marked cont...
In 1981 the Journal of Legal History published the essay “A ‘Revisiting’ of the Comparison between ‘...
The past few decades have witnessed a welcome expansion in historians’ understanding of English lega...
The European legal tradition has handed down to us the cliché of a marked contrast between common la...
This work was supported by the H2020 European Research Council programme under the ERC Advanced Gran...
The European legal tradition has handed down to us the cliché of a marked contrast between common la...
Western legal histories are frequently told as very simplistic and whiggish tales. They highlight co...
European law, including both civil law and common law, has gone through several major phases of expa...
This article investigates two controversies that reveal the deeply intertwined nature of legal strat...
This article argues that Renaissance legal culture provided a robust means of evaluating the epistem...
UID/HIS/00749/2019 CEECIND/01367/2017Fragmentary, complex and in short supply, medieval Portuguese c...
Article looks at a historical problem—the first use of case law by English royal justices in the thi...
By the end of the middle ages and in early-modern Europe, judges in superior or central courts had r...
In this article the author investigates the errors that can make the judgment null and void and, the...
Against the historical backdrop of the codification debate in nineteenth century Germany, this artic...