The Constitutions of Clarendon are presented as an illustration of the common-law character of English charters. Although formally renounced and abrogated shortly after ratification, the Constitutions remain a fundamental basis for the separation of church and state. Analysis of the historical literature reveals that spontaneous order subsumes many kinds of positive law and designed order. The emergence of spontaneous order in common law is described, defined, and contrasted with positive legislation. Spontaneous order allowed secular society to grow and flourish. It is acknowledged that charters played a secondary role in making positive law, and were precursors to modern positive legislation. The implications of positive versus spontaneou...
The municipal Jaw of England is divided into common Jaw and equity. This is so because in the middle...
This book offers an interesting interpretation of the hidden culture of the early modern legal profe...
Chapter I pages 1- 24 Consequent upon the separation of the temporal and ecclesiastical courts by th...
The Common Law is a body of law, developed over time from the decisions and practices of courts, upo...
Though the role of the Church in the creation of Magna Carta remains disputed, it is clear that it w...
Analysis and critique of underlying principles of the theory of common law constitutionalism from an...
[N]or the laws of any Christian kingdom, are so rooted in antiquity. Hence there is no gainsaying no...
The ancient constitution was a fictive corpus of fundamental British laws, of immemorial origin, the...
This article addresses the architecture of the four Inns of Court inLondon as repositories for the b...
The statutes enacted during the reigns of the Yorkist kings, Edward IV (1461-1483) and Richard III (...
Through an analysis of three masques presented at the Inns of Court between 1561 and 1613, this arti...
This thesis proposes that the United Kingdom's constitution is changing so as to incorporate written...
This thesis is a work of constitutional theory focusing on the Bill of Rights [1688]. It posits this...
Magna Carta’s connection to the American constitutional tradition has been traced to Edward Coke’s i...
Article looks at a historical problem—the first use of case law by English royal justices in the thi...
The municipal Jaw of England is divided into common Jaw and equity. This is so because in the middle...
This book offers an interesting interpretation of the hidden culture of the early modern legal profe...
Chapter I pages 1- 24 Consequent upon the separation of the temporal and ecclesiastical courts by th...
The Common Law is a body of law, developed over time from the decisions and practices of courts, upo...
Though the role of the Church in the creation of Magna Carta remains disputed, it is clear that it w...
Analysis and critique of underlying principles of the theory of common law constitutionalism from an...
[N]or the laws of any Christian kingdom, are so rooted in antiquity. Hence there is no gainsaying no...
The ancient constitution was a fictive corpus of fundamental British laws, of immemorial origin, the...
This article addresses the architecture of the four Inns of Court inLondon as repositories for the b...
The statutes enacted during the reigns of the Yorkist kings, Edward IV (1461-1483) and Richard III (...
Through an analysis of three masques presented at the Inns of Court between 1561 and 1613, this arti...
This thesis proposes that the United Kingdom's constitution is changing so as to incorporate written...
This thesis is a work of constitutional theory focusing on the Bill of Rights [1688]. It posits this...
Magna Carta’s connection to the American constitutional tradition has been traced to Edward Coke’s i...
Article looks at a historical problem—the first use of case law by English royal justices in the thi...
The municipal Jaw of England is divided into common Jaw and equity. This is so because in the middle...
This book offers an interesting interpretation of the hidden culture of the early modern legal profe...
Chapter I pages 1- 24 Consequent upon the separation of the temporal and ecclesiastical courts by th...