English Law and the Renaissance

audiobook

English Law and the Renaissance

by Frederic William Maitland

EN·~2 hours

Chapters

Description

The work opens with a vivid portrait of the early sixteenth‑century world—Henry VIII on the throne, the great Renaissance flourishing across Europe, and the modest yet influential figure of Sir Robert Rede, a judge whose name now graces a university lecture series. From this backdrop the author asks a striking question: how could English law, rooted in medieval doctrine, stay remarkably intact while art, philosophy and science were being reshaped around it?

Drawing on the writings of Sir Edward Coke, Sir Thomas Littleton and other legal giants, the lecture traces the evolution of legal thought through the reign of James I and beyond. It shows how the common law’s deep‑seated principles survived the era’s intellectual upheavals, offering listeners a clear, engaging narrative that links the continuity of legal practice with the broader currents of Renaissance humanism.

Details

Full title

English Law and the Renaissance The Rede Lecture for 1901

Language

en

Duration

~2 hours (125K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Clarity and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)

Release date

2017-02-27

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Frederic William Maitland

Frederic William Maitland

1850–1906

Often called the father of English legal history, he transformed the study of medieval law by combining a lawyer’s eye for detail with a historian’s gift for storytelling. His books remain central to anyone curious about how English law and institutions took shape.

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