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English Law in Ireland 1290–1324
The credit for the creation of a firm basis for alien English Law and legal institutions belongs to King John, when his accession united the Lordship of Ireland with the English Crown.
G. J. Hand (Author)
9780521085380, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 14 October 2008
300 pages
21.6 x 14 x 1.7 cm, 0.41 kg
Although the Englishmen who crossed the Irish Sea from 1169 onward brought with them their own speech and legal code, the credit for the creation of a firm basis for the alien English Law and legal institutions belongs to King John, when his accession united the Lordship of Ireland with the English Crown. Dr Hand begins his study of English Law in Ireland by tracing its development up to 1290. He confines his detailed analysis, however, to the years 1290–1324, considering the influence of statute law and Irish custom on, and the position of the native Irishman under English Law. This period is chosen partly because almost all justiciary rolls surviving until modern times derived from the early fourteenth century, and partly because those years saw the flowering of medieval Anglo-Irish culture.
1. Introduction: The First Century of English Law in Ireland
2. Governors of a Troubled Lordship
3. The Justiciar's Court
4. The Dublin Bench and the Exchequer
5. The General Eyre and other Commissions
6. Liberties and Franchises
7. The Irish Jurisdiction of English Courts
8. Statutes
9. The Custom of the Land of Ireland
10. The Status of the Native Irish at English Law
11. Una et eadem Lex: The Place of Law in the History of the Lordship.
Subject Areas: History [HB]
