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Bracton’s Note Book
A Collection of Cases Decided in the King’s Courts during the Reign of Henry the Third

A collection of 2,000 legal cases from the thirteenth century which form the first example of English case law.

Henry de Bracton (Author), Frederic William Maitland (Edited by)

9781108010801, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 31 October 2010

732 pages
21.6 x 4.1 x 14 cm, 0.92 kg

Henry of Bracton (or Bratton) (c. 1210–1268) was a jurist who worked as a Justice of Assize in the south-west of England, and was the author of the first systematic discussion of English common law. The manuscripts which form Bracton's Note Book were discovered in the British Museum in 1884 by Vinogradoff, and were edited in three volumes in 1887 by Maitland. These volumes contain a collection of over 2,000 lawsuits from the thirteenth century, each with a description of how the law should be applied to the particular circumstances of each case. This is the first example of case law in English legal writing, and its usefulness as a record of legal precedent probably led to the creation of Year Rolls (official records of court cases) from 1268. Volume 3 contains the texts of Pleas in the Bench and before the King from 1224 to 1240.

Pleas in the Bench
Pleas before the King
Pleas in the Bench
Pleas from the Eyres
Appendix.

Subject Areas: Early history: c 500 to c 1450/1500 [HBLC]

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