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The Canonists and the Mediaeval State
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2009
Extract
Maitland once observed that, in the Middle Ages, “Law was the point where life and logic met.” This aphorism of the master must serve as my apology for including in one essay two topics so diverse, according to some opinions, as abstract political theory and concrete constitutional problems. It may be that the mediaeval jurists can provide a link between the two spheres, for their reflections on mediaeval government were not mere philosophical abstractions. They were rooted in real life. An essential ingredient of the jurists' raw material was a practical experience of the workings of mediaeval society. It is not surprising, therefore, that eminent historians on both sides of the Atlantic have called attention to the need for legal studies as a basis for further advance in mediaeval constitutional research, and that, in recent years, we have heard a great deal about the importance of feudal law and folk law, of Roman law and English common law in the formation of mediaeval ideas and institutions. My task will be to state briefly the case for the canonists.
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- Copyright © University of Notre Dame 1953
References
1 This paper was originally read at the annual meeting of the American Historical Association, December, 1952.
2 Clarke, M. V., Medieval Representation and Consent (London, 1936)Google Scholar, Barker, E., The Dominican Order and Convocation (Oxford, 1913)Google Scholar. For a survey of subsequent opinions on the whole subject see Templeman, G., “The history of Parliament to 1400 in the light of modern research,” University of Birmingham Historical Journal, vol. I (1948), pp. 202–231Google Scholar (reprinted in Schuyler, R. L. and Ausubel, H., The Making of English History (New York, 1952) pp. 109–127)Google Scholar
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12 Supra, n. 8.
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