The Making of Urban Customary Law in Medieval and Reformation England
The Making of Urban Customary Law in Medieval and Reformation England - Esther Liberman  Cuenca Nedostupné

The Making of Urban Customary Law in Medieval and Reformation England

Kniha ( pevná vazba )

    • Produkt je nedostupný.
Gump: Jsme dvojka

Při zaslání zboží balíčkem

K nákupu nad 499 Kč dárek zdarma v hodnotě 299 Kč

Gump: Jsme dvojka

DC COMICS: Absolutně všechno, co musíte vědět

Při zaslání zboží balíčkem

K nákupu nad 2499 Kč dárek zdarma v hodnotě 499 Kč

DC COMICS: Absolutně všechno, co musíte vědět

Drawing on a quantitative analysis of hundreds of printed and archival sources from 77 towns, The Making of Urban Customary Law in Medieval England is the first cross-regional investigation into the history of urban customs since Mary Bateson''s seminal, two-volume work Borough Customs (1904-1906). In contrast to English common law and church… Přejít na celý popis

K tomuto produktu zákazníci kupují

Popis

Drawing on a quantitative analysis of hundreds of printed and archival sources from 77 towns, The Making of Urban Customary Law in Medieval England is the first cross-regional investigation into the history of urban customs since Mary Bateson''s seminal, two-volume work Borough Customs (1904-1906). In contrast to English common law and church law, which both had long institutional and academic traditions devoted to training men in their legal philosophies, customary law constituted local practices that acquired the force of law over time. Urban customary law regulated political officeholding, trade, property holding, and even moral behaviour in English towns. The Making of Urban Customary Law argues that urban customs, which governed the lives of people in English towns, were crucial to the development of a distinct, bourgeois identity in England-an evolution that this new study tracks from the early twelfth to the late sixteenth centuries. In the years following the Black Death, and especially during the Reformation period, this law became more concerned with defining political authority, maintaining morality, and articulating a consensus about the “common good” for townspeople. This book makes two principal claims: First, customary law advanced the business interests of an urban oligarchy. These were urban (male) elites who drafted laws and obtained privileges to enhance their wealth and assert their political independence from local lords, and often made claims about the legitimacy of their privileges or laws by rooted them in history or some kind of ancestral past. These lawmakers also made considerable efforts to establish their identities as morally upright and even-handed patriarchs. In so doing, urban customary law played a central role in the development of a distinct bourgeois identity in medieval and Reformation England. Second, this law lent particular meanings to the “common good” in towns, as it helped these lawmakers articulate policies that cohered to their vision of an ideal civic community.

Sdílet

Nakladatel
Oxford University Press
Rozměr
164 x 240 x 23
jazyk
angličtina
Vazba
pevná vazba
Hmotnost
628 g
isbn
978-0-19-891677-2
Počet stran
288
datum vydání
27.03.2025
ean
9780198916772

Hodnocení a recenze čtenářů Nápověda

0.0 z 5 0 hodnocení čtenářů

5 hvězdiček 4 hvězdičky 3 hvězdičky 2 hvězdičky 1 hvezdička

Přidejte své hodnocení knihy

Vývoj ceny

Vývoj ceny Nápověda

Získejte přehled o vývoji ceny za posledních 60 dní.

Maloobchodní cena Minimální prodejní cena: 0 Kč Nápověda