This thesis examines the Somerset Case of 1772 and considers it within its immediate social, political, and legal landscape. Legal and political reform and imperial debate ensured that the case would be important for the understanding of core English ideals such as property, slavery, liberty, humanity and natural rights. These issues coalesced in 1772 and provided the background against which Lord Mansfield reached his famous decision. Instead of contributing to the ongoing economic versus humanitarian debate in recent scholarship, this thesis seeks to uncover the genesis of these humanitarian sentiments, and show how humanist arguments became useful and important in late-eighteenth century legal and abolitionist thought. Popular political ...
This thesis examines the relationship between law and politics during the decades of constitutional ...
I write this after re-reading Steven M Wise\u27s Though the Heavens May Fall. My argument, if convin...
The principal aim of this thesis is to examine the ideas that were held on the subject of landed pro...
The article offers a look on the Somerset\u27s Case that served as a milestone in the campaign to ab...
This paper considers the issues of villeinage and slavery in England and the British colonies; the d...
On Monday 22 June 1772, the English jurist William Murray, 1st Earl of Mansfield, delivered his oral...
The abolition of British slavery in the 19th century raises the question of how the British achieved...
This essay explores what this environmental conceit meant as a legal fact to the legal professionals...
Canonical cases like Somerset v. Stewart resonate beyond their particular historical context because...
The purpose of the thesis is to explore the conception of natural rights and liberty in late eightee...
Great Britain in place of the former kingdoms of Scotland and England provided expressly for the pre...
With his 1772 decree in Somerset v. Steuart that slavery was ‘so odious that nothing can be suffered...
In 1827, Lord Stowell, the judge of the High Court of Admiralty, was called upon to decide a controv...
Lord Mansfield\u27s influence on slavery in America began on June 22, 1772, when he decided the case...
This thesis examines the relationship between law and politics during the decades of constitutional ...
I write this after re-reading Steven M Wise\u27s Though the Heavens May Fall. My argument, if convin...
The principal aim of this thesis is to examine the ideas that were held on the subject of landed pro...
The article offers a look on the Somerset\u27s Case that served as a milestone in the campaign to ab...
This paper considers the issues of villeinage and slavery in England and the British colonies; the d...
On Monday 22 June 1772, the English jurist William Murray, 1st Earl of Mansfield, delivered his oral...
The abolition of British slavery in the 19th century raises the question of how the British achieved...
This essay explores what this environmental conceit meant as a legal fact to the legal professionals...
Canonical cases like Somerset v. Stewart resonate beyond their particular historical context because...
The purpose of the thesis is to explore the conception of natural rights and liberty in late eightee...
Great Britain in place of the former kingdoms of Scotland and England provided expressly for the pre...
With his 1772 decree in Somerset v. Steuart that slavery was ‘so odious that nothing can be suffered...
In 1827, Lord Stowell, the judge of the High Court of Admiralty, was called upon to decide a controv...
Lord Mansfield\u27s influence on slavery in America began on June 22, 1772, when he decided the case...
This thesis examines the relationship between law and politics during the decades of constitutional ...
I write this after re-reading Steven M Wise\u27s Though the Heavens May Fall. My argument, if convin...
The principal aim of this thesis is to examine the ideas that were held on the subject of landed pro...