| H. J. Hanham - History - 1969 - 516 pages
This companion to Elton: The Tudor Constitution, Kenyon: The Stuart Constitution and Williams: The Eighteenth Century Constitution is a collection of documents illustrating ... | |
| Martin Ingram - History - 1990 - 436 pages
This is an in-depth, richly documented study of the sex and marriage business in ecclesiastical courts of Elizabethan and early Stuart England. This study is based on records ... | |
| John K. Brackett - History - 2002 - 178 pages
A study of Florentine criminal justice under the reign of the first three Medici grand dukes. | |
| Malcolm Gaskill - History - 2003 - 400 pages
An exploration of the cultural contexts of law-breaking and criminal prosecution in England, 1550-1750. | |
| Barry M. Shapiro - History - 2002 - 328 pages
This book examines how France's revolutionary authorities handled political opposition in the year following the fall of the Bastille. Though demands for more severe treatment ... | |
| James Clarke Holt - History - 1992 - 590 pages
An expanded edition of a classic study of the Magna Carta interprets the events of 1215 and the Charter itself in the context of the law, politics and administration of England ... | |
| John Bossy - History - 2003 - 312 pages
This collection of essays by British, American and French scholars uses the records of the law in Western Europe from the fall of Rome to the nineteenth century in an attempt ... | |
| R. C. van Caenegem - Law - 1995 - 352 pages
The constitutional question is of paramount importance in the political and nationalist agenda of late twentieth-century Europe. Professor van Caenegem's new book addresses ... | |
| Alan Hunt - Law - 1999 - 294 pages
This book is a broad-ranging history of moral regulation focusing on Britain and the US. | |
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