The paper analyzes the privilege of sanctuary in English criminal law between the 13th and 16th centuries. The general privilege of sanctuary belonged to all churches, chapels and churchyards. Any felon who had taken sanctuary could remain there for forty days. During that time he had to declare to the coroner whether he would stand trial or abjure the realm. If he chose the latter, he then had to confess his guilt before the coroner, swear to leave the country and never return without the king’s license. He was assigned the nearest port from which he should leave the country. If, during this forty days privilege of sanctuary, or while he was en route to the seaside, he was arrested and arraigned, he might plead the privilege of san...
The last three decades have witnessed tectonic shifts in the doctrine and political valence of laws ...
The paper analyses the admissibility of the right to counsel of the accused in the English criminal ...
Religion meant far more in early modern England than church on Sundays, a baptism, a funeral or a we...
On the eve of the sixteenth century, sanctuary in England operated under the common law in much the ...
Through an examination of St. Martin Le Grand, a privileged territory in the heart of late medieval ...
This Article discusses the institution of sanctuary that was recognized under the Common Law of Engl...
Patrick Wormald’s handlist of Anglo-Saxon lawsuits begins its gesta and miracula evi-dence with thre...
This project will argue that the symbolic significance of sanctuary, which demonstrated undeniably t...
This article explores the ideas and values which underpinned legally recognized practices of providi...
In scholarly debate, the beneficiaries of the institution of sanctuary in medieval England are usual...
I argue that the symbolic significance of sanctuary, which demonstrated undeniably the Church\u27s p...
Sanctuary Seekers in England is a spreadsheet presenting all the instances of sanctuary-seeking in E...
The development of the common law in medievalEnglandwas one of the most important forces driving the...
This thesis considers the English parliamentary privilege of freedom from arrest (and other legal pr...
Artykuł recenzowany / peer-reviewed articleThe event from 1700 presented in the article was describe...
The last three decades have witnessed tectonic shifts in the doctrine and political valence of laws ...
The paper analyses the admissibility of the right to counsel of the accused in the English criminal ...
Religion meant far more in early modern England than church on Sundays, a baptism, a funeral or a we...
On the eve of the sixteenth century, sanctuary in England operated under the common law in much the ...
Through an examination of St. Martin Le Grand, a privileged territory in the heart of late medieval ...
This Article discusses the institution of sanctuary that was recognized under the Common Law of Engl...
Patrick Wormald’s handlist of Anglo-Saxon lawsuits begins its gesta and miracula evi-dence with thre...
This project will argue that the symbolic significance of sanctuary, which demonstrated undeniably t...
This article explores the ideas and values which underpinned legally recognized practices of providi...
In scholarly debate, the beneficiaries of the institution of sanctuary in medieval England are usual...
I argue that the symbolic significance of sanctuary, which demonstrated undeniably the Church\u27s p...
Sanctuary Seekers in England is a spreadsheet presenting all the instances of sanctuary-seeking in E...
The development of the common law in medievalEnglandwas one of the most important forces driving the...
This thesis considers the English parliamentary privilege of freedom from arrest (and other legal pr...
Artykuł recenzowany / peer-reviewed articleThe event from 1700 presented in the article was describe...
The last three decades have witnessed tectonic shifts in the doctrine and political valence of laws ...
The paper analyses the admissibility of the right to counsel of the accused in the English criminal ...
Religion meant far more in early modern England than church on Sundays, a baptism, a funeral or a we...