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Volumn 17, Issue 3, 1999, Pages 537-590

Vicinage and the Antecedents of the Jury

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EID: 85010755214     PISSN: 07382480     EISSN: 19399022     Source Type: Journal    
DOI: 10.2307/744381     Document Type: Article
Times cited : (51)

References (213)
  • 1
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    • Die Entstehung der Schwurgerichte (Berlin: Weidman, 1872), chap. 1. The debate following Brunner's arguments is discussed by R. C. van Caenegem, Royal Writs in England from the Conquest to Glanvill (Selden Society, 1959), 57-61, and R. V. Turner, “The Origins of the Medieval English Jury: Frankish, English or Scandinavian?” Journal of British Studies 7, no. 2 : 1-10 (reprinted in idem, Judges, Administrators and the Common Law in Angevin England (London: Hambledon Press, 1994), chap. 3
    • The literature up to that date is listed and discussed in Heinrich Bmnner, Die Entstehung der Schwurgerichte (Berlin: Weidman, 1872), chap. 1. The debate following Brunner's arguments is discussed by R. C. van Caenegem, Royal Writs in England from the Conquest to Glanvill (Selden Society, vol. 77, 1959), 57-61, and R. V. Turner, “The Origins of the Medieval English Jury: Frankish, English or Scandinavian?” Journal of British Studies 7, no. 2 (1968): 1-10 (reprinted in idem, Judges, Administrators and the Common Law in Angevin England (London: Hambledon Press, 1994), chap. 3
    • (1968) The literature up to that date is listed and discussed in Heinrich Bmnner , vol.77
  • 2
    • 85022802578 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • see J. P. Dawson, A History of Lay Judges (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1960), 35-118; Wendy Davies and Paul Fouracre, eds., The Settlement of Disputes in Early Medieval Europe (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1986). For specific discussion of eleventh-century English practice, see Paul Brand, The Origins of the English Legal Profession (Oxford: Blackwell, 1992), chap. 1; John Hudson, The Formation of the English Common Law (London: Longman) chaps.
    • For general discussion, see J. P. Dawson, A History of Lay Judges (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1960), 35-118; Wendy Davies and Paul Fouracre, eds., The Settlement of Disputes in Early Medieval Europe (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1986). For specific discussion of eleventh-century English practice, see Paul Brand, The Origins of the English Legal Profession (Oxford: Blackwell, 1992), chap. 1; John Hudson, The Formation of the English Common Law (London: Longman, 1996) chaps. 1-4.
    • (1996) For general discussion , pp. 1-4
  • 3
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    • 819 c. 2, in Monumenta Germaniae Historica… (various dates and places of publication) [MGH] Capitularia vol. 1, ed. A. Boretius, 289; my translation. The crossreference is to Cap. 816 c. 1, id. 268 (see below, note 125 and text there). For other instances, Brunner, Schwurgerichte, 88, cites from Capitularia Regum Francorum, MGH, Leges (folio), Cap. miss. 803 p. 115; Resp. misso cuidam data 819 p. 227; Cap. miss. 829 p. 354; Resp. misso cuid. data 819 p. 227; Cap. missor. Aquisgr. 817 p. 226 (217). For other listings of the relevant sources, see F. L. Ganshof, “La Preuve dans le droit franc,” Receuils de la Societe Jean Bodin 17 : 92-98, and J. F. Niermeyer and C. van de Kieft, Mediae Latinitatis Lexicon Minus (Leiden: Brill, 1976) [hereinafter Lexicon Minus], s.v. inquaestio, inquirere, inquisitio, veritas.
    • Cap. miss. 819 c. 2, in Monumenta Germaniae Historica… (various dates and places of publication) [MGH] Capitularia vol. 1, ed. A. Boretius, 289; my translation. The crossreference is to Cap. 816 c. 1, id. 268 (see below, note 125 and text there). For other instances, Brunner, Schwurgerichte, 88, cites from Capitularia Regum Francorum, MGH, Leges (folio) vol. 1, Cap. miss. 803 p. 115; Resp. misso cuidam data 819 p. 227; Cap. miss. 829 p. 354; Resp. misso cuid. data 819 p. 227; Cap. missor. Aquisgr. 817 p. 226 (217). For other listings of the relevant sources, see F. L. Ganshof, “La Preuve dans le droit franc,” Receuils de la Societe Jean Bodin 17 (1965): 92-98, and J. F. Niermeyer and C. van de Kieft, Mediae Latinitatis Lexicon Minus (Leiden: Brill, 1976) [hereinafter Lexicon Minus], s.v. inquaestio, inquirere, inquisitio, veritas.
    • (1965) Cap. miss , vol.1
  • 4
    • 85022875361 scopus 로고
    • Schwurgerichte, 87, n. 1, cites the Code of Theodosius [hereinafter CTh] 10.10.11, which provides for an enquiry in which private individuals are to be given an opportunity to make claims to bona vacantia, 10.8.2, which provides for inventories of bona vacantia to be returned including information about claims, and 10.10.29, which makes incidental use of the phrase “inquisitio palatina,” and cross-refers to CTh 10.10.7, which bars informers from access to the court (i.e., to claim forfeited goods) until after a judicial examination. CTh 10.8.5, in the same context, is worth direct quotation: “… certi palatini electi et jurejurando obstricti mittantur, ut eorum instantia v[ir] s[pectabilis] proconsul praesentae fisci patrono diligenter i n q u i r a t… “ (“trustworthy palatines shall be selected, bound by an oath, and sent to the place, in order that at their instance the respectable proconsul… may diligently inquire… “). (Text from Theodor Mommsen, Paul Meyer, and Paul Krueger, eds., Theodosiani Libri XVI, [reprint, Berlin: Weidman, 1962]; translation from Clyde Pharr, ed., The Theodosian Code [Princeton: Princeton University Press,].) Here the palatines, to be sent to the place (i.e., the province) to get the proconsul to enquire, appear analogous to Carolingian missi or English eyre justices.
    • Brunner, Schwurgerichte, 87, n. 1, cites the Code of Theodosius [hereinafter CTh] 10.10.11, which provides for an enquiry in which private individuals are to be given an opportunity to make claims to bona vacantia, 10.8.2, which provides for inventories of bona vacantia to be returned including information about claims, and 10.10.29, which makes incidental use of the phrase “inquisitio palatina,” and cross-refers to CTh 10.10.7, which bars informers from access to the court (i.e., to claim forfeited goods) until after a judicial examination. CTh 10.8.5, in the same context, is worth direct quotation: “… certi palatini electi et jurejurando obstricti mittantur, ut eorum instantia v[ir] s[pectabilis] proconsul praesentae fisci patrono diligenter i n q u i r a t… “ (“trustworthy palatines shall be selected, bound by an oath, and sent to the place, in order that at their instance the respectable proconsul… may diligently inquire… “). (Text from Theodor Mommsen, Paul Meyer, and Paul Krueger, eds., Theodosiani Libri XVI, vol. 1 [reprint, Berlin: Weidman, 1962]; translation from Clyde Pharr, ed., The Theodosian Code [Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1952].) Here the palatines, to be sent to the place (i.e., the province) to get the proconsul to enquire, appear analogous to Carolingian missi or English eyre justices.
    • (1952) Brunner , vol.1
  • 5
    • 79956460773 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • chap. 10; van Caenegem, Royal Writs in England
    • Brunner, Schwurgerichte, chap. 10; van Caenegem, Royal Writs in England, 61-68.
    • Schwurgerichte , pp. 61-68
    • Brunner1
  • 6
    • 33644897693 scopus 로고
    • ed. and trans. G. D. G. Hall, (London: Nelson) [hereinafter Glanvill], xii, 25, Hall p. 148: “tune enim ista recognitio sicut quelibet alia in curia domini regis debet tractari” (“for then this recognition must, like all others, be dealt with in the court of the lord king”).
    • The Treatise on the Laws and Customs of the Realm of England Commonly called Glanvill, ed. and trans. G. D. G. Hall, (London: Nelson, 1965) [hereinafter Glanvill], xii, 25, Hall p. 148: “tune enim ista recognitio sicut quelibet alia in curia domini regis debet tractari” (“for then this recognition must, like all others, be dealt with in the court of the lord king”).
    • (1965) The Treatise on the Laws and Customs of the Realm of England Commonly called Glanvill
  • 7
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    • (1898; reprint, New York: A. M. Kelley, 1969), 47-65; Sir Frederick Pollock and F. W. Maitland, The History of English Law before the Time of Edward I, 2d ed., reissued with a new introduction and select bibliography by S. F. C. Milsom (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1968), 1:138-44; Sir William Holdsworth, A History of English Law (16 vols., London: Methuen, 1922-66), 1:312-15; John P. Dawson, A History of Lay Judges (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1960), 118-21; J. H. Baker, An Introduction to English Legal History, 3d ed. (London: Butterworths, 1990)
    • J. B. Thayer, A Preliminary Treatise on Evidence at the Common Law (1898; reprint, New York: A. M. Kelley, 1969), 47-65; Sir Frederick Pollock and F. W. Maitland, The History of English Law before the Time of Edward I, 2d ed. (1898), reissued with a new introduction and select bibliography by S. F. C. Milsom (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1968), 1:138-44; Sir William Holdsworth, A History of English Law (16 vols., London: Methuen, 1922-66), 1:312-15; John P. Dawson, A History of Lay Judges (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1960), 118-21; J. H. Baker, An Introduction to English Legal History, 3d ed. (London: Butterworths, 1990), 86-87.
    • (1898) A Preliminary Treatise on Evidence at the Common Law , pp. 86-87
    • Thayer, J.B.1
  • 8
    • 85022824977 scopus 로고
    • ” 5, cites M. de Bouard, “De La Neustrie Carolingienne a la Normandie feodale: continuity ou discontinuite,” Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research 21 (1955): 1-14, and D. Douglas, “The Rise of Normandy,” Proceedings of the British Academy 33 : 101-31, for lack of continuity. In contrast, David Bates, Normandy before 1066 (London: Longman, 1982), in agreement with more recent French scholarship, argues for an exceptionally high degree of continuity of Carolingian institutions in Normandy down to c. 1020. Bates does, however, argue for a major crisis of ducal authority and recasting of Norman society into a more or less “feudal” shape in the period 1020-1050, and that William the Conqueror's revival of ducal power “had to operate within a changed social framework.” A Preliminary Treatise on Evidence at the Common Law.
    • Turner, “The Origins of the Medieval English Jury,” 5, cites M. de Bouard, “De La Neustrie Carolingienne a la Normandie feodale: continuity ou discontinuite,” Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research 21 (1955): 1-14, and D. Douglas, “The Rise of Normandy,” Proceedings of the British Academy 33 (1947): 101-31, for lack of continuity. In contrast, David Bates, Normandy before 1066 (London: Longman, 1982), in agreement with more recent French scholarship, argues for an exceptionally high degree of continuity of Carolingian institutions in Normandy down to c. 1020. Bates does, however, argue for a major crisis of ducal authority and recasting of Norman society into a more or less “feudal” shape in the period 1020-1050, and that William the Conqueror's revival of ducal power “had to operate within a changed social framework.” A Preliminary Treatise on Evidence at the Common Law., 178.
    • (1947) “The Origins of the Medieval English Jury , pp. 178
    • Turner1
  • 9
    • 77954372001 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • 57, n. 2, and idem, The Birth of the English Common Law, 2d ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press)
    • van Caenegem, Royal Writs in England, 57, n. 2, and idem, The Birth of the English Common Law, 2d ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988), 74-75.
    • (1988) Royal Writs in England , pp. 74-75
    • van Caenegem1
  • 12
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    • ” English Historical Review 56 : 374-410, developing less detailed suggestions by Stubbs and Vinogradoff; criticized by van Caenegem, “Public Prosecution of Crime in Twelfth-Century England,” in idem, Legal History: A European Perspective (London: Hambledon Press, 1991), chap. 1.
    • N. D. Hurnard, “The Jury of Presentment and the Assize of Clarendon,” English Historical Review 56 (1941): 374-410, developing less detailed suggestions by Stubbs and Vinogradoff; criticized by van Caenegem, “Public Prosecution of Crime in Twelfth-Century England,” in idem, Legal History: A European Perspective (London: Hambledon Press, 1991), chap. 1.
    • (1941) “The Jury of Presentment and the Assize of Clarendon
    • Hurnard, N.D.1
  • 13
    • 85022856273 scopus 로고
    • ” in The History of English Law: Centenary Essays on “Pollock and Maitland,” ed. John Hudson (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996), 10-12; Brunner, Schwurgerichte, chap. 25. This seems to represent a shift from Wormald's earlier argument that traces of fiscal inquisitio procedure can be found elsewhere in Aethelred's legislation and the twelve thegns of the Wantage Code are therefore to be understood in these terms. See Wormald, “Aethelred the Lawmaker,” in Ethelred the Unready, ed. David Hill. British Archeological Reports, British Series 59 (Oxford)
    • Patrick Wormald, “Maitland and Anglo-Saxon Law: Beyond Domesday Book,” in The History of English Law: Centenary Essays on “Pollock and Maitland,” ed. John Hudson (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996), 10-12; Brunner, Schwurgerichte, chap. 25. This seems to represent a shift from Wormald's earlier argument that traces of fiscal inquisitio procedure can be found elsewhere in Aethelred's legislation and the twelve thegns of the Wantage Code are therefore to be understood in these terms. See Wormald, “Aethelred the Lawmaker,” in Ethelred the Unready, ed. David Hill. British Archeological Reports, British Series 59 (Oxford, 1978), 66-69.
    • (1978) “Maitland and Anglo-Saxon Law: Beyond Domesday Book , pp. 66-69
    • Wormald, P.1
  • 14
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    • English Justice between the Norman Conquest and the Great Charter, 1066-1215 (London: G. Allen and Unwin), chap
    • This point is forcefully argued by D. M. Stenton, English Justice between the Norman Conquest and the Great Charter, 1066-1215 (London: G. Allen and Unwin, 1965), chap 1.
    • (1965) This point is forcefully argued by D. M. Stenton , pp. 1
  • 15
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    • 1:142; C. H. Haskins, Norman Institutions (; reprint, New York, 1960), 227; van Caenegem, “Public Prosecution.”
    • Pollock and Maitland, History of English Law, 1:142; C. H. Haskins, Norman Institutions (1918; reprint, New York, 1960), 227; van Caenegem, “Public Prosecution.”
    • (1918) History of English Law
    • Maitland, P.1
  • 18
    • 85022806138 scopus 로고
    • 58; “Methods of Proof in Western Mediaeval Law,” in Legal History: A European Perspective (London: Hambledon Press, 1994), 95-97 (English translation of “La Preuve dans le droit du moyen age occidental,” Receuils de la Societe Jean Bodin 17 [1965]: 691-753); “The Law of Evidence in the Twelfth Century: European Perspective and Intellectual Background,” in Proceedings of the Second International Congress of Mediaeval Canon Law, ed. Stephan Kuttner and J. J. Ryan. Monumenta iuris canonici, ser. C, vol. 1 (1965): 298-99; “History of European Civil Procedure,” in International Encyclopaedia of Comparative Law, ed. M. Cappalletti, ch. 2: “Civil Procedure,”, 8-9, 33, 39-40, 43, 47, 48; The Birth of the English Common Law, chap. 3.
    • van Caenegem, Royal “Writs in England, 58; “Methods of Proof in Western Mediaeval Law,” in Legal History: A European Perspective (London: Hambledon Press, 1994), 95-97 (English translation of “La Preuve dans le droit du moyen age occidental,” Receuils de la Societe Jean Bodin 17 [1965]: 691-753); “The Law of Evidence in the Twelfth Century: European Perspective and Intellectual Background,” in Proceedings of the Second International Congress of Mediaeval Canon Law, ed. Stephan Kuttner and J. J. Ryan. Monumenta iuris canonici, ser. C, vol. 1 (1965): 298-99; “History of European Civil Procedure,” in International Encyclopaedia of Comparative Law, ed. M. Cappalletti, vol. 16, ch. 2: “Civil Procedure,” (1972), 8-9, 33, 39-40, 43, 47, 48; The Birth of the English Common Law, chap. 3.
    • (1972) Royal “Writs in England , vol.16
    • van Caenegem1
  • 19
    • 85022835296 scopus 로고
    • ’ Revue historique de droit francais et etranger, 4th ser., 28 (1950): 183-212, and idem, “La Degenerescence des caracteres Normands des preuves dans la procedure civile du Duche’ apres la Redaction du Grand Coutumier,” Revue historique de droit francais et etranger, 4th ser., 37
    • R. Besnier, “'Inquisitiones’ et ‘Recognitiones': Le nouveau systeme des preuves a l'epoque des Coutumiers Norraands,’ Revue historique de droit francais et etranger, 4th ser., 28 (1950): 183-212, and idem, “La Degenerescence des caracteres Normands des preuves dans la procedure civile du Duche’ apres la Redaction du Grand Coutumier,” Revue historique de droit francais et etranger, 4th ser., 37 (1959): 52-59.
    • (1959) “'Inquisitiones’ et ‘Recognitiones': Le nouveau systeme des preuves a l'epoque des Coutumiers Norraands , pp. 52-59
    • Besnier, R.1
  • 22
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    • ” Settlement of Disputes, 221. The authors undertook to produce a collective view. In the preface to the book, they comment that “we eventually arrived at a common view for Introduction and Conclusion… the pieces stand as an expression of the group approach” (ix).
    • “Conclusion,” Settlement of Disputes, 221. The authors undertook to produce a collective view. In the preface to the book, they comment that “we eventually arrived at a common view for Introduction and Conclusion… the pieces stand as an expression of the group approach” (ix).
    • “Conclusion
  • 23
    • 85022871491 scopus 로고
    • Kingdoms and Communities, 23-34; “Conclusion,” Settlement of Disputes, 220-21. Compare also van Caenegem, “L'histoire du droit et la chronologie. Reflexions sur la formation du ‘Common Law’ et la procedure Romano-canonique,” in Etudes d'histoire du Droit Canonique dediees a Gabriel le Bras (Paris: Sirey)
    • Reynolds, Kingdoms and Communities, 23-34; “Conclusion,” Settlement of Disputes, 220-21. Compare also van Caenegem, “L'histoire du droit et la chronologie. Reflexions sur la formation du ‘Common Law’ et la procedure Romano-canonique,” in Etudes d'histoire du Droit Canonique dediees a Gabriel le Bras (Paris: Sirey, 1965), 2:1459-65.
    • (1965) Reynolds , vol.2 , pp. 1459-1465
  • 24
    • 85022757190 scopus 로고
    • ” in On the Laws and Customs of England: Essays in Honor of Samuel E. Thome, ed. M. S. Arnold (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1981), 91-126. Compare also idem, “Henry II and Ganelon,” The Syracuse Scholar 4
    • Paul R. Hyams, “Trial by Ordeal: The Key to Proof in the Early Common Law,” in On the Laws and Customs of England: Essays in Honor of Samuel E. Thome, ed. M. S. Arnold (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1981), 91-126. Compare also idem, “Henry II and Ganelon,” The Syracuse Scholar 4 (1983): 26-27.
    • (1983) “Trial by Ordeal: The Key to Proof in the Early Common Law , pp. 26-27
    • Hyams, P.R.1
  • 25
    • 85022741338 scopus 로고
    • 221-23; compare also Robert Bartlett, Trial By Fire and Water: The Medieval Judicial Order (Oxford: Clarendon Press), who argues that the judgment of God was reserved for “hard cases.”
    • See Settlement of Disputes, 221-23; compare also Robert Bartlett, Trial By Fire and Water: The Medieval Judicial Order (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1986), who argues that the judgment of God was reserved for “hard cases.”
    • (1986) Settlement of Disputes
  • 26
    • 85022769264 scopus 로고
    • note 5, and add the Code of Justinian [hereinafter CJ] 10.11.5c, on forfeited goods, in Theodor Mommsen and Paul Krueger, eds., Corpus luris Civilis, 13th ed. (Berlin: Weidman), 2:399 [subsequent citations to the Corpus luris are to this edition unless otherwise indicated], which makes clear that all normal forms of proof may be used in such an inquiry: “Per omnes autem legitimos modos et probationes scriptas sive non scriptas quaestio de rebus fiat, per testes etiam, qui veritatem scire poterunt… ” (in the Latin translation of the original Greek).
    • See the sources cited above, note 5, and add the Code of Justinian [hereinafter CJ] 10.11.5c, on forfeited goods, in Theodor Mommsen and Paul Krueger, eds., Corpus luris Civilis, 13th ed. (Berlin: Weidman, 1963), 2:399 [subsequent citations to the Corpus luris are to this edition unless otherwise indicated], which makes clear that all normal forms of proof may be used in such an inquiry: “Per omnes autem legitimos modos et probationes scriptas sive non scriptas quaestio de rebus fiat, per testes etiam, qui veritatem scire poterunt… ” (in the Latin translation of the original Greek).
    • (1963) the sources cited above
  • 27
    • 85022808161 scopus 로고
    • s.v. inquisitio; Reynolds, Kingdoms and Communities, 29, n. 61; and for the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, see Yvonne Bongert, Recherches sur les cours laiques du Xe au Xllle siecle (Paris: A. and J. Picard, 1949), 261, and L. Waelkens, “L'Origine de l'enquete par turbe,” Tijdschrift voor Rechtsgeschiedenis 57
    • Lexicon Minus, s.v. inquisitio; Reynolds, Kingdoms and Communities, 29, n. 61; and for the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, see Yvonne Bongert, Recherches sur les cours laiques du Xe au Xllle siecle (Paris: A. and J. Picard, 1949), 261, and L. Waelkens, “L'Origine de l'enquete par turbe,” Tijdschrift voor Rechtsgeschiedenis 57 (1985): 338-39.
    • (1985) Lexicon Minus , pp. 338-339
  • 28
    • 85022760416 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • The first is the extent to which juries were expected to pass on normative as well as factual questions, for which the locus classicus is T. A. Green, Verdict According to Conscience: Perspectives on the English Criminal Trial Jury, 1200-1800 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1985); compare also R. C. Palmer, “Conscience and the Law: The English Criminal Jury,” Michigan Law Review 84 (1986): 791-97, and Hyams, “Trial by Ordeal,” 118 and n. 153. The second aspect is the extent to which juries were led by evidence, rather than relying on personal knowledge or locally current hearsay. The literature on this point is conveniently reviewed by George Fisher, “The Jury's Rise as Lie Detector,” Yale Law Journal 107 : 591-94 and notes there.
    • This has two aspects. The first is the extent to which juries were expected to pass on normative as well as factual questions, for which the locus classicus is T. A. Green, Verdict According to Conscience: Perspectives on the English Criminal Trial Jury, 1200-1800 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1985); compare also R. C. Palmer, “Conscience and the Law: The English Criminal Jury,” Michigan Law Review 84 (1986): 791-97, and Hyams, “Trial by Ordeal,” 118 and n. 153. The second aspect is the extent to which juries were led by evidence, rather than relying on personal knowledge or locally current hearsay. The literature on this point is conveniently reviewed by George Fisher, “The Jury's Rise as Lie Detector,” Yale Law Journal 107 (1997): 591-94 and notes there.
    • (1997) This has two aspects
  • 29
    • 85022744049 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ii, 7, Hall's translation.
    • Glanvill, ii, 7, p. 28, Hall's translation.
    • Glanvill , pp. 28
  • 30
    • 85022744049 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • 12, Hall's translation.
    • Glanvill., 12, p. 32, Hall's translation.
    • Glanvill , pp. 32
  • 31
    • 85022826654 scopus 로고
    • ed. G. E. Woodbine and S. E. Thorne, 4 vols. (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press,-77) [hereinafter Bracton], fol. 185, iii 71, (Thome's translation) and Thome's notes there.
    • Bracton De Legibus et Consuetudinibus Angliae, ed. G. E. Woodbine and S. E. Thorne, 4 vols. (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1968-77) [hereinafter Bracton], fol. 185, iii 71, (Thome's translation) and Thome's notes there.
    • (1968) Bracton De Legibus et Consuetudinibus Angliae
  • 32
    • 85022831331 scopus 로고
    • (1191 x 1198). See Ludwig Wahrmund, ed., Quellen zur Geschichte des Romisch-kanonischen Prozesses (-1931; reprint, Aalen: Scientia Verlag, 1962), vol. 5, i, 40-45; the Summa de Ordine ludiciario of Damasus (1210 x 1215), Wahrmund, Quellen, vol. 4, iv at pp. 22-25; and the Summa Aurea of William of Drogheda (1239 x 1245), Wahrmund, Quellen, vol. 2, ii at. (All dates given here for the original texts are those given by Wahrmund.) Thorne, Bracton 3:7 In., cites to William of Drogheda on this point to source part of Bracton'?, treatment of challenges; but it is not clear that this is correct. First, Thorne dates the basic text of Bracton to the 1220s-1230s (Bracton iii, Introduction), while Wahrmund dates Drogheda to between 1239 and 1245 (Quellen, ii at pp. xvi-xviii). Second, Bracton refers explicitly to the grounds of exclusion of witnesses. Finally, the two points for which Thome identifies Drogheda as the source, the exclusion of household members and of advocates, were common to the exclusion of witnesses and the recusation of judges.
    • Listings can be found, among others, in the Ordo “Invocato Christi Nomine” traditionally attributed to Pillius (1191 x 1198). See Ludwig Wahrmund, ed., Quellen zur Geschichte des Romisch-kanonischen Prozesses (1905-1931; reprint, Aalen: Scientia Verlag, 1962), vol. 5, i, 40-45; the Summa de Ordine ludiciario of Damasus (1210 x 1215), Wahrmund, Quellen, vol. 4, iv at pp. 22-25; and the Summa Aurea of William of Drogheda (1239 x 1245), Wahrmund, Quellen, vol. 2, ii at pp. 377-79. (All dates given here for the original texts are those given by Wahrmund.) Thorne, Bracton 3:7 In., cites to William of Drogheda on this point to source part of Bracton'?, treatment of challenges; but it is not clear that this is correct. First, Thorne dates the basic text of Bracton to the 1220s-1230s (Bracton iii, Introduction), while Wahrmund dates Drogheda to between 1239 and 1245 (Quellen, vol. 2, ii at pp. xvi-xviii). Second, Bracton refers explicitly to the grounds of exclusion of witnesses. Finally, the two points for which Thome identifies Drogheda as the source, the exclusion of household members and of advocates, were common to the exclusion of witnesses and the recusation of judges.
    • (1905) Listings can be found, among others, in the Ordo “Invocato Christi Nomine” traditionally attributed to Pillius , vol.2 , pp. 377-379
  • 33
    • 85022759844 scopus 로고
    • see J. C. Holt, Magna Carta, 2d ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), 181-82; the extension in 1275 is by Stat. Westminster I c. 38.
    • For the invention in 1201, see J. C. Holt, Magna Carta, 2d ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992), 181-82; the extension in 1275 is by Stat. Westminster I c. 38.
    • (1992) For the invention in 1201
  • 34
    • 85022760660 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ii, 19, (cf. also Hall p. 36, n. 1 on the distinction between this procedure and the attaint). For detailed discussion of the attaint, see Bracton, fols. 288b-293b, iii
    • Glanvill, ii, 19, pp. 35-36 (cf. also Hall p. 36, n. 1 on the distinction between this procedure and the attaint). For detailed discussion of the attaint, see Bracton, fols. 288b-293b, iii 336-49.
    • Glanvill , pp. 35-36
  • 35
    • 85022846995 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • see Pollock and Maitland, History of English Law, 2:666-68. The discussion in Bracton is at fol. 228b, iii 336-37, and fol. 290b, iii 341. be made in one county and broken in another.42 The rules are therefore
    • For the procedure in and consequences of false judgment proceedings in the early thirteenth century, see Pollock and Maitland, History of English Law, 2:666-68. The discussion in Bracton is at fol. 228b, iii 336-37, and fol. 290b, iii 341. be made in one county and broken in another.42 The rules are therefore
    • For the procedure in and consequences of false judgment proceedings in the early thirteenth century
  • 36
    • 85022810993 scopus 로고
    • A summary account of appeals is given by O. F. Robinson, T. D. Fergus, and W. M. Gordon, (Abingdon: Professional Books), 142-44. Some early examples of discussion by the proceduralists are in the Summa de Ordine ludiciario of Ricardus Anglicus (1196), Wahrmund, Quellen, iii at pp. 81-88, and that of Damasus (see above, note 33)
    • A summary account of appeals is given by O. F. Robinson, T. D. Fergus, and W. M. Gordon, An Introduction to European Legal History (Abingdon: Professional Books, 1985), 142-44. Some early examples of discussion by the proceduralists are in the Summa de Ordine ludiciario of Ricardus Anglicus (1196), Wahrmund, Quellen, vol. 2, iii at pp. 81-88, and that of Damasus (see above, note 33), pp. 59-61.
    • (1985) An Introduction to European Legal History , vol.2 , pp. 59-61
  • 37
    • 85022869352 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • vii, 11, p. 30, Grand Assize, the four knights to elect twelve “de eodem visneto”; ix, 13, p. 115, reasonable boundaries, “per legales homines de visneto”; xiii, 3, Mort d'Ancestor, “liberos et legales homines de visneto”; the same formula is in all the petty assizes.
    • Glanvill, vii, 11, p. 30, Grand Assize, the four knights to elect twelve “de eodem visneto”; ix, 13, p. 115, reasonable boundaries, “per legales homines de visneto”; xiii, 3, p. 150, Mort d'Ancestor, “liberos et legales homines de visneto”; the same formula is in all the petty assizes.
    • Glanvill , pp. 150
  • 38
    • 85022795007 scopus 로고
    • Westminster II 1285 c. 38, and concludes with Somers’ Act, 4 Anne, c. 16 § 6 (1705) for civil proceedings, 6 Geo. 4, c. 50 § 13 for criminal proceedings; intermediate statutes are discussed by Thayer, A Preliminary Treatise
    • The reduction of the vicinage requirement starts with Stat. Westminster II 1285 c. 38, and concludes with Somers’ Act, 4 Anne, c. 16 § 6 (1705) for civil proceedings, 6 Geo. 4, c. 50 § 13 (1826) for criminal proceedings; intermediate statutes are discussed by Thayer, A Preliminary Treatise, 91.
    • (1826) The reduction of the vicinage requirement starts with Stat , pp. 91
  • 39
    • 78751515783 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • (London, 1668) [hereinafter Rolle Abr.], 2:596-624 for issues relating to venue, mostly drawn from medieval cases. I have used Rolle in preference to Sir Anthony Fitzherbert, La Graunde Abridgment (London, 1516), for ease of access to references, since Fitzherbert uses a less sophisticated division of the material.
    • See Henry Rolle, Un Abridgment des Plusieurs Cases et Resolutions del Common Ley (London, 1668) [hereinafter Rolle Abr.], 2:596-624 for issues relating to venue, mostly drawn from medieval cases. I have used Rolle in preference to Sir Anthony Fitzherbert, La Graunde Abridgment (London, 1516), for ease of access to references, since Fitzherbert uses a less sophisticated division of the material.
    • Un Abridgment des Plusieurs Cases et Resolutions del Common Ley
    • Rolle, H.1
  • 40
    • 85022754496 scopus 로고
    • 141, 143; Sir John Fortescue, De Laudibus LegumAngliae, ed. and trans. S. B. Chrimes (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press)
    • Baker, English Legal History, 141, 143; Sir John Fortescue, De Laudibus LegumAngliae, ed. and trans. S. B. Chrimes (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1949), 75-77.
    • (1949) English Legal History , pp. 75-77
    • Baker1
  • 41
    • 85022790026 scopus 로고
    • see the discussion by Susan Reynolds, Fiefs and Vassals: The Medieval Evidence Reinterpreted (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994), 2021, 384, and F. M. Stenton, The First Century of English Feudalism, 1066-1166, 2d ed. (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1961), 61. For the determination of the venue by the facts in issue, see Rolle Abr., 2:596-624. For specific examples of misfeasance liability in assumpsit, see Stratton v. Swanlond (1374) and Skyrne v. Butolf (1388) in J. H. Baker and S. F. C. Milsom, Sources of English Legal History: Private Law to 1750 (London: Butterworth), 360, 362. Both cases are cited by Baker, English Legal History
    • For judgment by locals as a right related to trial by peers, see the discussion by Susan Reynolds, Fiefs and Vassals: The Medieval Evidence Reinterpreted (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994), 2021, 384, and F. M. Stenton, The First Century of English Feudalism, 1066-1166, 2d ed. (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1961), 61. For the determination of the venue by the facts in issue, see Rolle Abr., 2:596-624. For specific examples of misfeasance liability in assumpsit, see Stratton v. Swanlond (1374) and Skyrne v. Butolf (1388) in J. H. Baker and S. F. C. Milsom, Sources of English Legal History: Private Law to 1750 (London: Butterworth, 1986), 360, 362. Both cases are cited by Baker, English Legal History
    • (1986) For judgment by locals as a right related to trial by peers
  • 42
    • 85022755516 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • (1441) in Baker and Milsom, Sources
    • See also Marshal's Case (1441) in Baker and Milsom, Sources, 367.
    • Marshal's Case , pp. 367
  • 43
    • 85022860589 scopus 로고
    • A Preliminary Treatise, 93-94; J. B. Post, “Jury Lists and Juries in the Late Fourteenth Century,” in Twelve Good Men and True: The Criminal Trial Jury in England, 1200-1800, ed. J. S. Cockburn andT. A. Green (Princeton: Princeton University Press), 70; Edward Powell, “Jury Trial at Gaol Delivery in the Late Middle Ages: The Midland Circuit, 1400-1429,” in Marshal's Case., 80; Holdsworth, A History of English Law, 9:212, nn.
    • The examples are taken from Thayer, A Preliminary Treatise, 93-94; J. B. Post, “Jury Lists and Juries in the Late Fourteenth Century,” in Twelve Good Men and True: The Criminal Trial Jury in England, 1200-1800, ed. J. S. Cockburn andT. A. Green (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1988), 70; Edward Powell, “Jury Trial at Gaol Delivery in the Late Middle Ages: The Midland Circuit, 1400-1429,” in Marshal's Case., 80; Holdsworth, A History of English Law, 9:212, nn. 4, 5.
    • (1988) The examples are taken from Thayer , vol.4 , pp. 5
  • 44
    • 85022748936 scopus 로고
    • ” University of Chicago Law Review 50 : 171-72, summarizes criminal and civil uses. There is a striking similarity to the proof mode in the Digest of Justinian, D. 25. 4. 1. De inspiciendo ventre custodiendoque partu. Corpus luris Civilis
    • James C. Oldham, “The Origins of the Special Jury,” University of Chicago Law Review 50 (1983): 171-72, summarizes criminal and civil uses. There is a striking similarity to the proof mode in the Digest of Justinian, D. 25. 4. 1. De inspiciendo ventre custodiendoque partu. Corpus luris Civilis 1:367-68.
    • (1983) “The Origins of the Special Jury , vol.1 , pp. 367-368
    • Oldham, J.C.1
  • 45
    • 85021963359 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • c. 40, p. 36, on counterpleading voucher to warranty in mort d'ancestor and writs of entry: “… & le demaundaunt le contre pleide, & veille averrer par assise, ou par pais, ou en autre manere, si com la Court le Rey agardera… “ See also c. 44, id., allowing challenge of essoins ultra mare: the plaintiff/ demandant”… suie la verrement [sic] par pais, ou sicom la Court le Rey agardera… “
    • c. 40, Statutes of the Realm i, p. 36, on counterpleading voucher to warranty in mort d'ancestor and writs of entry: “… & le demaundaunt le contre pleide, & veille averrer par assise, ou par pais, ou en autre manere, si com la Court le Rey agardera… “ See also c. 44, id. p. 37, allowing challenge of essoins ultra mare: the plaintiff/ demandant”… suie la verrement [sic] par pais, ou sicom la Court le Rey agardera… “
    • Statutes of the Realm i , pp. 37
  • 46
    • 84933483818 scopus 로고
    • x, 17, p. 132: “generali modo probandi in curia, scilicet per scriptum vel per duellum.” Paul R. Hyams, “The Charter as a Source for the Early Common Law,” Journal of Legal History 12 : 180-81, argues that at first only royal charters were acceptable.
    • Glanvill, x, 17, p. 132: “generali modo probandi in curia, scilicet per scriptum vel per duellum.” Paul R. Hyams, “The Charter as a Source for the Early Common Law,” Journal of Legal History 12 (1991): 180-81, argues that at first only royal charters were acceptable.
    • (1991) Glanvill
  • 47
    • 85022865517 scopus 로고
    • Le Gouvernement d'Henri II Plantagenet (Paris: Librarie d'Argences), 292, n. 1. For England, Glanvill, xiii, 11, says that a royal charter specially or expressly confirming land to the tenant stops the assize; see also Donald W. Sutherland, The Assize of Novel Disseisin (Oxford: Clarendon Press), 20, n. 1, and Holdsworth, A History of English Law, 9:148 and 166, and authorities cited there.
    • This is attested from Normandy in two darrein presentment cases of 1185, cited by Jacques Boussard, Le Gouvernement d'Henri II Plantagenet (Paris: Librarie d'Argences, 1956), 292, n. 1. For England, Glanvill, xiii, 11, pp. 154-55, says that a royal charter specially or expressly confirming land to the tenant stops the assize; see also Donald W. Sutherland, The Assize of Novel Disseisin (Oxford: Clarendon Press), 20, n. 1, and Holdsworth, A History of English Law, 9:148 and 166, and authorities cited there.
    • (1956) This is attested from Normandy in two darrein presentment cases of 1185, cited by Jacques Boussard , pp. 154-155
  • 48
    • 85022901541 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • see Holdsworth, A History of English Law, 9:147-54 and sources cited there; later medieval instances of trial by the record are collected in Rolle Abr.
    • For summary discussion of estoppel by record, see Holdsworth, A History of English Law, 9:147-54 and sources cited there; later medieval instances of trial by the record are collected in Rolle Abr., 2:574-76.
    • For summary discussion of estoppel by record , vol.2 , pp. 574-576
  • 49
    • 85022753099 scopus 로고
    • See Thayer, A Preliminary Treatise, 13-14 and 104-6; J. H. Wigmore, A Treatise on the Anglo-American System of Evidence in Trials at Common Law, 3d ed. (Boston: Little, Brown, 1940), iv, § 1177 at and Holdsworth, A History of English Law, 9:167-68. Many cases on the law in this area can be found in the tables to Maynard's edition of the Year Books (London, 1679; reprint) under the title Monstrans de Faits. For proof by comparison of seals, see Glanvill, x, 12, p. 127; Bracton, fol. 398b, iv
    • Inspection to disprove was the procedure of profert and oyer. See Thayer, A Preliminary Treatise, 13-14 and 104-6; J. H. Wigmore, A Treatise on the Anglo-American System of Evidence in Trials at Common Law, 3d ed. (Boston: Little, Brown, 1940), iv, § 1177 at pp. 409-411; and Holdsworth, A History of English Law, 9:167-68. Many cases on the law in this area can be found in the tables to Maynard's edition of the Year Books (London, 1679; reprint, 1981) under the title Monstrans de Faits. For proof by comparison of seals, see Glanvill, x, 12, p. 127; Bracton, fol. 398b, iv 242-43.
    • (1981) Inspection to disprove was the procedure of profert and oyer , pp. 409-411
  • 52
    • 85022868064 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • 3, Lib. Ass. pi. 16, p. 35; YB 26 Edw. 3, Lib. Ass. pi. 2, p. 119; YB 28 Edw. 3, Lib. Ass. pi. 3, p. 145; YB 7 Hen. 5, pi. 3, Ms. 5-9; Littleton, Tenures § 366, in Sir Edward Coke, The First Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England, or, a Commentary upon Littleton, 1 lth ed. (London, 1719), 226a-227a.
    • YB 12 Edw. 3, Lib. Ass. pi. 16, p. 35; YB 26 Edw. 3, Lib. Ass. pi. 2, p. 119; YB 28 Edw. 3, Lib. Ass. pi. 3, p. 145; YB 7 Hen. 5, pi. 3, Ms. 5-9; Littleton, Tenures § 366, in Sir Edward Coke, The First Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England, or, a Commentary upon Littleton, 1 lth ed. (London, 1719), 226a-227a.
    • YB 12 Edw
  • 54
    • 85022885726 scopus 로고
    • Lawsuits (=English Lawsuits from William 1 to Richard I, ed. R. C. van Caenegem [Selden Society, vols. 106 and 107, 1990-1991]) has only one instance, no. 656, dated 1190 x 1200. The earliest uses given by R. E. Latham, Revised Medieval Latin Word-list from British and Irish Sources (reprint with supplement, London: British Academy) are from 1196, s.v. sec/ta, and c. 1190, s.v. secutio, sequela. Nor does Lexicon Minus give any earlier or non-British uses. The argument of Thayer, A Preliminary Treatise, 10-16, followed by Maitland, Pollock and Maitland, History of English Law, 2:606-10, that suit is an early medieval preliminary to proof rather than a proof itself, is therefore probably impermissible; it appears to be a late twelfth-century derogatory term for simple proof by witnesses.
    • There is no mention in the Leges Henrici Primi. Lawsuits (=English Lawsuits from William 1 to Richard I, ed. R. C. van Caenegem [Selden Society, vols. 106 and 107, 1990-1991]) has only one instance, no. 656, dated 1190 x 1200. The earliest uses given by R. E. Latham, Revised Medieval Latin Word-list from British and Irish Sources (reprint with supplement, London: British Academy, 1980) are from 1196, s.v. sec/ta, and c. 1190, s.v. secutio, sequela. Nor does Lexicon Minus give any earlier or non-British uses. The argument of Thayer, A Preliminary Treatise, 10-16, followed by Maitland, Pollock and Maitland, History of English Law, 2:606-10, that suit is an early medieval preliminary to proof rather than a proof itself, is therefore probably impermissible; it appears to be a late twelfth-century derogatory term for simple proof by witnesses.
    • (1980) There is no mention in the Leges Henrici Primi
  • 55
    • 85022824721 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • fol. 400b, iv 248, says that suit does not amount to proof, but merely raises a praesumptio levis that is destroyed by contrary proof or wager of law, because it can be made by familiares and domestici, i.e., suspect witnesses. Suit are also described as testes in Magna Carta c. 38, and Bracton, fol. 438, iv 360, describes persons who are clearly witnesses to the live birth of a child who determine the case a s… secta. Compare also the discussion of the relationship of suit to proof by witnesses in Beatrice Queen of Germany v. Edmund Earl of Cornwall (1274). See Paul Brand, ed., The Earliest English Law Reports, vol. 1 (Selden Society, l l), 21-22, no. 1274.2 (described as suite in the French report), 22-23 (described as testes in the Latin report) and in the record, 24-27 (an attempt is made by the defendant to distinguish the effect of testes and of secta; the plaintiff argues that proof of this type is disallowed by Magna Carta).
    • Bracton, fol. 400b, iv 248, says that suit does not amount to proof, but merely raises a praesumptio levis that is destroyed by contrary proof or wager of law, because it can be made by familiares and domestici, i.e., suspect witnesses. Suit are also described as testes in Magna Carta c. 38, and Bracton, fol. 438, iv 360, describes persons who are clearly witnesses to the live birth of a child who determine the case a s… secta. Compare also the discussion of the relationship of suit to proof by witnesses in Beatrice Queen of Germany v. Edmund Earl of Cornwall (1274). See Paul Brand, ed., The Earliest English Law Reports, vol. 1 (Selden Society, vol. I l l, 1996), 21-22, no. 1274.2 (described as suite in the French report), 22-23 (described as testes in the Latin report) and in the record, 24-27 (an attempt is made by the defendant to distinguish the effect of testes and of secta; the plaintiff argues that proof of this type is disallowed by Magna Carta).
    • (1996) Bracton , vol.I
  • 56
    • 0042154430 scopus 로고
    • ” English Historical Review 89 : 722-30, summarized in idem, King, Lords and Peasants in Medieval England (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1980)
    • Paul R. Hyams, “The Proof of Villein Status in the Common Law,” English Historical Review 89 (1974): 722-30, summarized in idem, King, Lords and Peasants in Medieval England (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1980), 173-751
    • (1974) “The Proof of Villein Status in the Common Law , pp. 173-751
    • Hyams, P.R.1
  • 57
    • 85022803136 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • see Simpson, The Common Law of Contract, 137; Anon v. Warren (1343) YB 17 & 18 Edw. 3, Rolls Series, p. 73 (translation in Baker and Milsom, Sources, 212). For compurgation as, in effect, a single decisory oath and its continued use into the early modern period, see Baker, English Legal History
    • For suit as a matter of form, see Simpson, The Common Law of Contract, 137; Anon v. Warren (1343) YB 17 & 18 Edw. 3, Rolls Series, p. 73 (translation in Baker and Milsom, Sources, 212). For compurgation as, in effect, a single decisory oath and its continued use into the early modern period, see Baker, English Legal History, 87-88.
    • For suit as a matter of form , pp. 87-88
  • 58
    • 85022870369 scopus 로고
    • William Craddock Bolland, ed., Year Books of Edward II, vol. 16, 7 Edward II, AD 1313-1314, Selden Society, vol. 39 (London: Bernard Quaritch, 1922), 104; Oxford v. Baillart (1318), John P. Collas and Theodore F. T. Plucknett, eds., Year Books of Edward II, vol. 23, 12 Edward II, Michaelmas AD 1318, Selden Society, vol. 65 (London: Bernard Quaritch, 1950), 7; Beaumont v. Kydale (1319), John P. Collas and Theodore F. T. Plucknett, eds., Year Books of Edward II, vol. 24,12 Edward II, Hilary and Part of Easter 1319, Selden Society, vol. 70 (London: Bernard Quaritch, 1953), 146; Le Taillour v. atte Medwe (1320), S. J. Stoljar and L. J. Downer, eds., Year Books of Edward II, vol. 27, 14 Edward II, Michaelmas 1320, Selden Society, vol. 104 (London: Selden Society, 1988), 39; and Anon (1320), For suit as a matter of form., 42, all cited and discussed by Stoljar and Downer, Selden Society, vol. 104, xiii-xiv; and Perton v. Tumby (1317), M. Dominica Legge and Sir William Holdsworth, eds., Year Books of Edward II, vol. 21, 10 Edward II, AD 1316-1317, Selden Society, (London: Bernard Quaritch), 109, Baker and Milsom, Sources
    • Braund v. Friday (1314), William Craddock Bolland, ed., Year Books of Edward II, vol. 16, 7 Edward II, AD 1313-1314, Selden Society, vol. 39 (London: Bernard Quaritch, 1922), 104; Oxford v. Baillart (1318), John P. Collas and Theodore F. T. Plucknett, eds., Year Books of Edward II, vol. 23, 12 Edward II, Michaelmas AD 1318, Selden Society, vol. 65 (London: Bernard Quaritch, 1950), 7; Beaumont v. Kydale (1319), John P. Collas and Theodore F. T. Plucknett, eds., Year Books of Edward II, vol. 24,12 Edward II, Hilary and Part of Easter 1319, Selden Society, vol. 70 (London: Bernard Quaritch, 1953), 146; Le Taillour v. atte Medwe (1320), S. J. Stoljar and L. J. Downer, eds., Year Books of Edward II, vol. 27, 14 Edward II, Michaelmas 1320, Selden Society, vol. 104 (London: Selden Society, 1988), 39; and Anon (1320), For suit as a matter of form., 42, all cited and discussed by Stoljar and Downer, Selden Society, vol. 104, xiii-xiv; and Perton v. Tumby (1317), M. Dominica Legge and Sir William Holdsworth, eds., Year Books of Edward II, vol. 21, 10 Edward II, AD 1316-1317, Selden Society, vol. 54 (London: Bernard Quaritch, 1935), 109, Baker and Milsom, Sources, 289.
    • (1935) Braund v. Friday (1314) , vol.54 , pp. 289
  • 59
    • 85022796506 scopus 로고
    • 142-3, and cf. Dunman v. Weldon (1329), Donald W. Sutherland, ed., The Eyre of Northamptonshire: 3t Edward III, AD 1329-1330, vol. 1, Selden Society, (London: Selden Society), 476, Baker and Milsom, Sources, 210; Anon (1356), YB 30 Edw. 3, Michs. fol. 18, Baker and Milsom, Sources, 213; Reading on Magna Carta c. 38, Baker and Milsom, Sources
    • Simpson, The Common Law of Contract, 142-3, and cf. Dunman v. Weldon (1329), Donald W. Sutherland, ed., The Eyre of Northamptonshire: 3t Edward III, AD 1329-1330, vol. 1, Selden Society, vol. 97 (London: Selden Society, 1983), 476, Baker and Milsom, Sources, 210; Anon (1356), YB 30 Edw. 3, Michs. fol. 18, Baker and Milsom, Sources, 213; Reading on Magna Carta c. 38, Baker and Milsom, Sources, 214.
    • (1983) The Common Law of Contract , vol.97 , pp. 214
    • Simpson1
  • 60
    • 85022774166 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • History of English Law
    • Pollock and Maitland, History of English Law, 2:634-35.
    • Pollock and Maitland , vol.2 , pp. 634-635
  • 61
    • 11944254390 scopus 로고
    • see above, note 56. P. Philbin sees the introduction of the requirement of a deed in covenant as motivated by evidentiary concerns of this type. See Philbin, “Proving the Will of Another: The Specialty Requirement in Covenant,” Harvard Law Review 105 : 2001-20; but that the result was a change in proof rules is still consistent with the different arguments of Robert C. Palmer and D. J. Ibbetson (reviewed in Philbin's article).
    • For reducing suit to a formality, see above, note 56. P. Philbin sees the introduction of the requirement of a deed in covenant as motivated by evidentiary concerns of this type. See Philbin, “Proving the Will of Another: The Specialty Requirement in Covenant,” Harvard Law Review 105 (1992): 2001-20; but that the result was a change in proof rules is still consistent with the different arguments of Robert C. Palmer and D. J. Ibbetson (reviewed in Philbin's article).
    • (1992) For reducing suit to a formality
  • 62
    • 85022853784 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • A Treatise on Evidence, iii, § 1154, some later ones in Rolle Abr., 2:572-73. Some fourteenthcentury cases of the examination of wounds are collected in Rolle Abr., 2:578, Per le Court pis.
    • Some early cases of determination of age by inspection are collected by Wigmore, A Treatise on Evidence, iii, § 1154, some later ones in Rolle Abr., 2:572-73. Some fourteenthcentury cases of the examination of wounds are collected in Rolle Abr., 2:578, Per le Court pis. 1-4.
    • Some early cases of determination of age by inspection are collected by Wigmore , pp. 1-4
  • 63
    • 85022830949 scopus 로고
    • 2:577, citing: life of the husband in Dower, YB 17 Edw. 3, Michs pi. 18 at fol. 49b, pi. 22, fol. 50b; YB 8 Hen. 6, Hil. pi. 7, p. 21 at 23; death of the husband in a foreign county in an assize, YB 39 Edw. 3, Lib. Ass. pi. 9 p. 234, though contra life of the husband to abate the wife's writ is triable by the assize, YB 30 Edw. 3, Lib. Ass. pi. 26, p. 178, secus if the allegation is that the husband is alive in a foreign county, YB 36 Edw. 3, Lib. Ass. pi. 5, p. 215, but contra if P has not alleged marriage and the death of her husband (Some early cases of determination of age by inspection are collected by Wigmore.); life of the husband/ victim in a foreign county in the widow's appeal for his killing, YB 41 Edw. 3, Lib. Ass. pi. 5, p. 252, YB 43 Edw. 3, Lib. Ass. pi. 26, Thayer, A Preliminary Treatise, 23, and Pollock and Maitland, History of English Law, 2:638, were therefore wrong to suppose that the rule is peculiar to Dower; the cases in the Liber Assisarum indicate that a critical issue is whether the life or death is alleged to be in a foreign county, so that the jury cannot have local knowledge of the fact. Cf. also Croxby v. Tdebroc (1219), Doris Mary Stenton, ed., Rolls of the Justices in Eyre: Being the Rolls of Pleas and Assizes for Lincolnshire 1218-19 and Worcestershire 1221, Selden Society, (; reprint, Abingdon: Professional Books, 1978), 315, pi. 655, and Baker and Milsom, Sources, 23 (death, where the party was alleged to be alive in Jerusalem, to be proved by suit present at the death). testimony often poses difficulties; and, though this is very late evidence, in Thome v. Rolff (1560), Moo. K.B. 14, 2 Dy. 185a, presumptive evidence of death from the husband's absence overseas for seven years was accepted in this form of trial.
    • See Rolle Abr., 2:577, citing: life of the husband in Dower, YB 17 Edw. 3, Michs pi. 18 at fol. 49b, pi. 22, fol. 50b; YB 8 Hen. 6, Hil. pi. 7, p. 21 at 23; death of the husband in a foreign county in an assize, YB 39 Edw. 3, Lib. Ass. pi. 9 p. 234, though contra life of the husband to abate the wife's writ is triable by the assize, YB 30 Edw. 3, Lib. Ass. pi. 26, p. 178, secus if the allegation is that the husband is alive in a foreign county, YB 36 Edw. 3, Lib. Ass. pi. 5, p. 215, but contra if P has not alleged marriage and the death of her husband (Some early cases of determination of age by inspection are collected by Wigmore.); life of the husband/ victim in a foreign county in the widow's appeal for his killing, YB 41 Edw. 3, Lib. Ass. pi. 5, p. 252, YB 43 Edw. 3, Lib. Ass. pi. 26, p. 273. Thayer, A Preliminary Treatise, 23, and Pollock and Maitland, History of English Law, 2:638, were therefore wrong to suppose that the rule is peculiar to Dower; the cases in the Liber Assisarum indicate that a critical issue is whether the life or death is alleged to be in a foreign county, so that the jury cannot have local knowledge of the fact. Cf. also Croxby v. Tdebroc (1219), Doris Mary Stenton, ed., Rolls of the Justices in Eyre: Being the Rolls of Pleas and Assizes for Lincolnshire 1218-19 and Worcestershire 1221, Selden Society, vol. 53 (1934; reprint, Abingdon: Professional Books, 1978), 315, pi. 655, and Baker and Milsom, Sources, 23 (death, where the party was alleged to be alive in Jerusalem, to be proved by suit present at the death). testimony often poses difficulties; and, though this is very late evidence, in Thome v. Rolff (1560), Moo. K.B. 14, 2 Dy. 185a, presumptive evidence of death from the husband's absence overseas for seven years was accepted in this form of trial.
    • (1934) Rolle Abr , vol.53 , pp. 273
  • 64
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    • 3, Lib. Ass. pi. 6, p. 185 (extendors, joined to the jury); cases cited Rolle Abr., 2:581-82 (summoners, pernors, veiors, bailiffs and escheators); Rider v. Strode (1382), Samuel E. Thome, Michael E. Hager, Margaret MacVeagh Thorne, and Charles Donahue, Jr., eds., Year Books of Richard II: 6 Richard II (Cambridge, Mass.: The Ames Foundation) 11 (summoners, the record showing the procedure); see also comment by Donahue, Rolle Abr.
    • YB 31 Edw. 3, Lib. Ass. pi. 6, p. 185 (extendors, joined to the jury); cases cited Rolle Abr., 2:581-82 (summoners, pernors, veiors, bailiffs and escheators); Rider v. Strode (1382), Samuel E. Thome, Michael E. Hager, Margaret MacVeagh Thorne, and Charles Donahue, Jr., eds., Year Books of Richard II: 6 Richard II (Cambridge, Mass.: The Ames Foundation, 1996) 11 (summoners, the record showing the procedure); see also comment by Donahue, Rolle Abr., 37.
    • (1996) YB 31 Edw , pp. 37
  • 65
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    • ii, 6, p. 27 (as will appear below, this practice in the form stated by Glanvill is probably drawn from the canon law); Bracton, fol. 438, iv. p. 360; and cf. also Carlisle v. Boythorpe (1218-19), Doris Mary Stenton, ed., Rolls of the Justices in Eyre: Being the Rolls of Pleas and Assizes for Yorkshire in 3 Henry III (1218-19), Selden Society, (; reprint, Abingdon: Professional Books, 1978), 7, pi. 22, Baker and Milsom Sources, 40; Maitland, Pollock and Maitland, History of English Law
    • Glanvill, ii, 6, p. 27 (as will appear below, this practice in the form stated by Glanvill is probably drawn from the canon law); Bracton, fol. 438, iv. p. 360; and cf. also Carlisle v. Boythorpe (1218-19), Doris Mary Stenton, ed., Rolls of the Justices in Eyre: Being the Rolls of Pleas and Assizes for Yorkshire in 3 Henry III (1218-19), Selden Society, vol. 56 (1937; reprint, Abingdon: Professional Books, 1978), 7, pi. 22, Baker and Milsom Sources, 40; Maitland, Pollock and Maitland, History of English Law, 2:637-39.
    • (1937) Glanvill , vol.56 , pp. 637-639
  • 67
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    • Brunner, Schwurgerichte, 386-92, and, following him, Rene Filhol, “La Preuve de la coutume dans l'ancien droit francais,” Receuils de la Societe Jean Bodin 17 : 360-61, saw this institution as derived from the Carolingian inquisitio via Norman practice. In contrast, Waelkens, “L'Origine,” argues that the procedure was created by an ordinance of 1270 and based on the application of the Romano-canonical doctrine of notoriety. Filhol, “La Preuve,” 362-71, gives the later history.
    • This is not cited by van Caenegem, presumably because technically it is used for proof of law rather than of facts. Brunner, Schwurgerichte, 386-92, and, following him, Rene Filhol, “La Preuve de la coutume dans l'ancien droit francais,” Receuils de la Societe Jean Bodin 17 (1965): 360-61, saw this institution as derived from the Carolingian inquisitio via Norman practice. In contrast, Waelkens, “L'Origine,” argues that the procedure was created by an ordinance of 1270 and based on the application of the Romano-canonical doctrine of notoriety. Filhol, “La Preuve,” 362-71, gives the later history.
    • (1965) This is not cited by van Caenegem, presumably because technically it is used for proof of law rather than of facts
  • 70
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    • (Cologne: Bohlau), 371-75 (cited by van Caenegem, “History of European Civil Procedure,” 42); we are concerned here with what Schlosser calls the “nichtrichterliche Kundschaft.”
    • Hans Schlosser, Spdtmittelalterlicher Zivilprozess nach bayerischen Quellen: Gerichtsverfassung und Rechtsgang (Cologne: Bohlau, 1971), 371-75 (cited by van Caenegem, “History of European Civil Procedure,” 42); we are concerned here with what Schlosser calls the “nichtrichterliche Kundschaft.”
    • (1971) Spdtmittelalterlicher Zivilprozess nach bayerischen Quellen: Gerichtsverfassung und Rechtsgang
    • Schlosser, H.1
  • 72
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    • ” Receuils de la Societe Jean Bodin 17 : 662-75. Stojcevic cites other uses of the porota, which correspond much more closely to compurgation, and an evolution in and subsequent to the Code of Dusan (1349-54) toward a quasi-judicial role of an arbitral character.
    • Dragomir Stojcevic, “La Preuve dans le droit serbe,” Receuils de la Societe Jean Bodin 17 (1965): 662-75. Stojcevic cites other uses of the porota, which correspond much more closely to compurgation, and an evolution in and subsequent to the Code of Dusan (1349-54) toward a quasi-judicial role of an arbitral character.
    • (1965) “La Preuve dans le droit serbe
    • Stojcevic, D.1
  • 73
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    • Boussard, Gouvernement, 292-93, gives some instances of inquisitio procedure from Aquitaine at around 1100. Since, however, Boussard's view is that the Angevin jury is merely an inquisitorial mode of proof by witnesses, a precursor of the later French enquete, it may be that these are in fact merely instances of proof by witnesses, rather than of the genuine inquisitio. For Tuscany, Antonio Pertile, Storia del diritto italiano (Turin: Unione tipografico-editrice), 6:391, cites a case dated to
    • For Aquitaine, Boussard, Gouvernement, 292-93, gives some instances of inquisitio procedure from Aquitaine at around 1100. Since, however, Boussard's view is that the Angevin jury is merely an inquisitorial mode of proof by witnesses, a precursor of the later French enquete, it may be that these are in fact merely instances of proof by witnesses, rather than of the genuine inquisitio. For Tuscany, Antonio Pertile, Storia del diritto italiano (Turin: Unione tipografico-editrice, 1900), 6:391, cites a case dated to 1114.
    • (1900) For Aquitaine , pp. 1114
  • 74
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    • (London, 1765-69; reprint, Chicago: University of Chicago Press)
    • William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (London, 1765-69; reprint, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1979), 3:294-95.
    • (1979) Commentaries on the Laws of England , vol.3 , pp. 294-295
    • Blackstone, W.1
  • 76
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    • A convenient discussion of mancipatio is in J. A. C. Thomas, (Amsterdam: North-Holland)
    • A convenient discussion of mancipatio is in J. A. C. Thomas, Textbook of Roman Law (Amsterdam: North-Holland, 1976), 152-55.
    • (1976) Textbook of Roman Law , pp. 152-155
  • 77
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    • “Conveyances of Land and Professional Standards in the Later Empire,” in New Perspectives in the Roman Law of Property, ed. Peter Birks (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1989), 137-49, drawing on W. E. Voss, Recht und Rhetorik in den Kaisergesetzen der Spdtantike: Eine Untersuchung zum nachklassischen Kauf-und ubereignungsrecht (Frankfurt: Lowenklau).
    • See the discussion by Tony Honore, “Conveyances of Land and Professional Standards in the Later Empire,” in New Perspectives in the Roman Law of Property, ed. Peter Birks (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1989), 137-49, drawing on W. E. Voss, Recht und Rhetorik in den Kaisergesetzen der Spdtantike: Eine Untersuchung zum nachklassischen Kauf-und ubereignungsrecht (Frankfurt: Lowenklau, 1982).
    • (1982) the discussion by Tony Honore
  • 79
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    • 4, in Salvatore Riccobono et al., eds., Fontes Iuris Romani Antejustiniani (Florence: S. A. G. Barbera), 2:470. Translation down to I is from Honore, “Conveyances of Land,” 144; thereafter is my (as far as possible) literal translation; Honore's paraphrase of the second part reads proprietas as “boundaries.” The editors of Fontes and those of the Theodosian Code (see above, note 5) date this law to 337; Honore, “Conveyances of Land,” 142, n. 27, however, says that Voss dates it to
    • Fragmenta Quae Dicitur Vaticana 35, 4, in Salvatore Riccobono et al., eds., Fontes Iuris Romani Antejustiniani (Florence: S. A. G. Barbera, 1964), 2:470. Translation down to I is from Honore, “Conveyances of Land,” 144; thereafter is my (as far as possible) literal translation; Honore's paraphrase of the second part reads proprietas as “boundaries.” The editors of Fontes and those of the Theodosian Code (see above, note 5) date this law to 337; Honore, “Conveyances of Land,” 142, n. 27, however, says that Voss dates it to 313.
    • (1964) Fragmenta Quae Dicitur Vaticana 35 , pp. 313
  • 80
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    • ” 139 (boundaries and neighbors), 140-41 (constructive delivery).
    • See Honore, “Conveyances of Land,” 139 (boundaries and neighbors), 140-41 (constructive delivery).
    • “Conveyances of Land
    • Honore1
  • 82
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    • CTh 3.1.2: “Id etiam placuit neminem ad venditionem rei cuiuslibet accedere, nisi eo tempore, quo inter venditorem et emptorem contractus solemniter explicatur, certa et vera proprietas a vicinis demonstretur:… Nee inter emptorem et venditorem solemnia in cuniculis celebrentur, sed fraudulenta venditio penitus sepulta depereat.” The change from “praesentis vicinis demonstretur” to “a vicinis demonstretur” supports Archi's argument that they speak to the vendor or donor's title. But since the Interpretatio in the Breviary of Alaric and the epitomized versions (see below, notes 86-87) follow the line that the vicini are to be witnesses to the instant conveyance, it may be merely an error in the manuscript tradition. Gifts, CTh 8.12.1.2: “et corporalis traditio subsequatur ad excludendam vim atque inruptionem advocata vicinitate omnibus arbitris adhibitis, quorum postea fide probabitur donatam rem… “
    • Sales, CTh 3.1.2: “Id etiam placuit neminem ad venditionem rei cuiuslibet accedere, nisi eo tempore, quo inter venditorem et emptorem contractus solemniter explicatur, certa et vera proprietas a vicinis demonstretur:… Nee inter emptorem et venditorem solemnia in cuniculis celebrentur, sed fraudulenta venditio penitus sepulta depereat.” The change from “praesentis vicinis demonstretur” to “a vicinis demonstretur” supports Archi's argument that they speak to the vendor or donor's title. But since the Interpretatio in the Breviary of Alaric and the epitomized versions (see below, notes 86-87) follow the line that the vicini are to be witnesses to the instant conveyance, it may be merely an error in the manuscript tradition. Gifts, CTh 8.12.1.2: “et corporalis traditio subsequatur ad excludendam vim atque inruptionem advocata vicinitate omnibus arbitris adhibitis, quorum postea fide probabitur donatam rem… “
    • Sales
  • 83
    • 77954361210 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • CJ 8.53.25.1; and cf. Krueger's notes, 2:363, n. 14, and 364, n. 12.
    • CJ 8.53.25.1; and cf. Krueger's notes, Corpus Iuris Civilis, 2:363, n. 14, and 364, n. 12.
    • Corpus Iuris Civilis
  • 84
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    • CJ 8.53.31; The law goes on to validate informally created gifts. The registration system continued after the fall of the western empire in at least southern France and Italy. See Ian Wood, “Disputes in Late Fifth-and Sixth-Century Gaul: Some Problems,” in Settlement of Disputes
    • CJ 8.53.31; ray translation and emphases. The law goes on to validate informally created gifts. The registration system continued after the fall of the western empire in at least southern France and Italy. See Ian Wood, “Disputes in Late Fifth-and Sixth-Century Gaul: Some Problems,” in Settlement of Disputes, 12-14.
    • ray translation and emphases , pp. 12-14
  • 85
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    • (fol) V, c. 53, p. 157: “De traditione vero quam semper in locis secundum leges fieri necesse est, si magistratus, defensor, aut duumviri quinquenniales forte defuerint, ad conficienda introductionum gesta tres sufficiant curiales; dummodo vicinis scientibus impleatur corporalis introductionis effectus” (my emphasis). The debate on the attribution of this text is conveniently summarized by P. Amory, People and Identity in Ostrogothic Italy 489-554 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997), 78-79, n. 187, preferring the Ostrogothic identification, as does S. J. Barnish, Cassiodorus: Variae (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press), 22-23, n. 30.
    • P. Pithoeus and F. Bluhme, eds., MGH, Leges (fol) V, c. 53, p. 157: “De traditione vero quam semper in locis secundum leges fieri necesse est, si magistratus, defensor, aut duumviri quinquenniales forte defuerint, ad conficienda introductionum gesta tres sufficiant curiales; dummodo vicinis scientibus impleatur corporalis introductionis effectus” (my emphasis). The debate on the attribution of this text is conveniently summarized by P. Amory, People and Identity in Ostrogothic Italy 489-554 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997), 78-79, n. 187, preferring the Ostrogothic identification, as does S. J. Barnish, Cassiodorus: Variae (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1992), 22-23, n. 30.
    • (1992) MGH, Leges
    • Pithoeus, P.1    Bluhme, F.2
  • 86
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    • 72; translation from Pharr, The Theodosian Code
    • G. F. Haenel, ed., Lex Romana Visigothorum (1869), 72; translation from Pharr, The Theodosian Code, 63.
    • (1869) Lex Romana Visigothorum , pp. 63
    • Haenel, G.F.1
  • 87
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    • Epitome Guelphyterbiani: “vicinis praesentibus, vindiccionem fieri.” Epitome Monachi: “Omnis venditio etiam de mediocribus rebus in praesentia fiat vicinorum.” Epitome St. Gall: “Nam quicumque homo in qualecumque loco terram conparere voluerit vicinus [sic] loci illius in suo testimonio rogit esse ne alterius facultatem aut terram conparet.” For the circulation of the Breviary, see Ian Wood, “The Code in Merovingian Gaul,” in The Theodosian Code, ed. Jill Harries and Ian Wood (Ithaca: Cornell University Press)
    • Lex Romana Visigothorum at 3.1.2, p. 73. Epitome Guelphyterbiani: “vicinis praesentibus, vindiccionem fieri.” Epitome Monachi: “Omnis venditio etiam de mediocribus rebus in praesentia fiat vicinorum.” Epitome St. Gall: “Nam quicumque homo in qualecumque loco terram conparere voluerit vicinus [sic] loci illius in suo testimonio rogit esse ne alterius facultatem aut terram conparet.” For the circulation of the Breviary, see Ian Wood, “The Code in Merovingian Gaul,” in The Theodosian Code, ed. Jill Harries and Ian Wood (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1993), 162-66.
    • (1993) Lex Romana Visigothorum at 3.1.2 , pp. 73
  • 88
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    • (fol) V Bk 3 c. 1 [s 2], p. 327: “Nam quicumque homo in qualecumque loco terram conparere voluerit, vicinus [vicinis in one MS] loci illius in suo testimonio roget esse, ne alterius facultatem aut terram conparet.”
    • K. Zeumer, ed., MGH Leges (fol) V Bk 3 c. 1 [s 2], p. 327: “Nam quicumque homo in qualecumque loco terram conparere voluerit, vicinus [vicinis in one MS] loci illius in suo testimonio roget esse, ne alterius facultatem aut terram conparet.”
    • MGH Leges
    • Zeumer, K.1
  • 89
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    • MGH, Leges Burgundionum, ed. L. R. von Salis, p. 113: “[1] Si quis manicipium aut agrum aut vineam aut aream vel domum factam in quocumque loco comparaverit, iubemus, ut, si non fuerit firmata aut subscripta, pretium perdat; certe si loci illius consistentibus scriptura ipsa subscripta aut signata non fuerit, aut septem aut quinque testibus. [2] Certe si quinque testes ad praesens inventi non fuerint, tres idoneos testes loci illius consistentes, quorum fama numquam maculata est, praecipimus subscribendos; certe si non, invalidam scripturam iubemus esse.” K. F. Drew, in the introduction to her translation, The Burgundian Code (; reprint, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1972), 5-7, dates this part of the Code to 524-32 or later.
    • Liber Constitutionem c. 99, MGH, Leges Burgundionum, ed. L. R. von Salis, p. 113: “[1] Si quis manicipium aut agrum aut vineam aut aream vel domum factam in quocumque loco comparaverit, iubemus, ut, si non fuerit firmata aut subscripta, pretium perdat; certe si loci illius consistentibus scriptura ipsa subscripta aut signata non fuerit, aut septem aut quinque testibus. [2] Certe si quinque testes ad praesens inventi non fuerint, tres idoneos testes loci illius consistentes, quorum fama numquam maculata est, praecipimus subscribendos; certe si non, invalidam scripturam iubemus esse.” K. F. Drew, in the introduction to her translation, The Burgundian Code (1949; reprint, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1972), 5-7, dates this part of the Code to 524-32 or later.
    • (1949) Liber Constitutionem c. 99
  • 90
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    • 35 De Vinditionibus [sic] [2.], MGH, Leges Burgundionum, The editor says that the Roman source of this passage is unknown.
    • Lex Romana Burgundionum tit. 35 De Vinditionibus [sic] [2.], MGH, Leges Burgundionum, p. 152. The editor says that the Roman source of this passage is unknown.
    • Lex Romana Burgundionum tit , pp. 152
  • 91
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    • CTh 3.9.1; De Venditionibus, c. 286, MGH, Leges Visigothorum, ed. K. Zeumer, 11; LVis 5, 4, 3, id.
    • CTh 3.9.1; Codex Eurici tit. De Venditionibus, c. 286, MGH, Leges Visigothorum, ed. K. Zeumer, 11; LVis 5, 4, 3, id., 218-19.
    • Codex Eurici tit , pp. 218-219
  • 92
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    • (14)., A. Boretius, ed., Liber Legis Langobardorum Papiensis, MGH, Leges Langobardorum 526: “In hoc capitulo legitur: ‘legitimam traditionem facere studeat,’ id est vadat super terram et eum inde investiat, sicut in lege Romanorum precipitur, et in presentia testium fiat.”
    • Expositio ad Ludovici Pii 11. (14)., A. Boretius, ed., Liber Legis Langobardorum Papiensis, MGH, Leges Langobardorum 526: “In hoc capitulo legitur: ‘legitimam traditionem facere studeat,’ id est vadat super terram et eum inde investiat, sicut in lege Romanorum precipitur, et in presentia testium fiat.”
    • Expositio ad Ludovici Pii 11
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    • Lex Salica, ed. K. A. Eckhardt. The nearest approach is tit. 10 §§ 3 and 6 and tit. 47 § 1, which concern issues connected with theft and allegedly stolen goods.
    • MGH, Lex Salica, ed. K. A. Eckhardt. The nearest approach is tit. 10 §§ 3 and 6 and tit. 47 § 1, which concern issues connected with theft and allegedly stolen goods.
    • MGH
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    • MGH, Lex Ribuaria, ed. F. Beyerle and R. Buchner, p. 116: “Si quis villam aut vineam vel quamlibet possessiunculam ab alio conparaverit, et testamentum accipere non potuerit, si mediocris res est, cum sex testibus, et si parva, cum tres, quod si magna, cum duodecim ad locum traditionis cum totidem numero pueros accedat, et sic eis praesentibus praetium tradat et possessionem accipiat, et unicuique de parvulis alapas donet et torcet auriculas, ut ei in postmodum testimonium praebant… ” This is an alternative to a preferred procedure under tit. 62, MGH., of transfer by act in the mallus (local public court) with documentation. For the dating, see K. A. Eckhardt, Lex Ribuaria (Gottingen: Musterschmidt, 1959); Ian Wood, The Merovingian Kingdoms, 450-751 (London: Longman)
    • Tit. 63, MGH, Lex Ribuaria, ed. F. Beyerle and R. Buchner, p. 116: “Si quis villam aut vineam vel quamlibet possessiunculam ab alio conparaverit, et testamentum accipere non potuerit, si mediocris res est, cum sex testibus, et si parva, cum tres, quod si magna, cum duodecim ad locum traditionis cum totidem numero pueros accedat, et sic eis praesentibus praetium tradat et possessionem accipiat, et unicuique de parvulis alapas donet et torcet auriculas, ut ei in postmodum testimonium praebant… ” This is an alternative to a preferred procedure under tit. 62, MGH., pp. 114-16, of transfer by act in the mallus (local public court) with documentation. For the dating, see K. A. Eckhardt, Lex Ribuaria (Gottingen: Musterschmidt, 1959); Ian Wood, The Merovingian Kingdoms, 450-751 (London: Longman, 1994), 116.
    • (1994) Tit. 63 , pp. 114-116
  • 95
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    • Leges Alamannorum, ed. K. Lehmann, 1, 1, p. 64 (version A codd. 3-12; the textual variants are not material to the sense, and the edition of K. A. Eckhardt is identical at the points cited here): “et qui voluerit hoc facere, per cartam de rebus suis ad ecclesiam, ubi dare voluerit, firmitatem faciat et testes sex vel septem adhibeat, et nomina eorum ipsa carta contineat, et coram sacerdote, qui ad ecclesiam deservit, super altare ponat…” MGH, Lex Baiwariorum, ed. E. von Schwind, 16, 2, p. 432: “Si quis vendiderit possessionem suam alicui terram cultam non cultam prata vel silvas: post accepto pretio aut per cartam aut per testes conprobetur flrma emptio. / Hie testes per aurem debet esse tractus, quia sic habet lex vestra; duas vel tres vel amplius debent esse testes.”
    • MGH, Leges Alamannorum, ed. K. Lehmann, 1, 1, p. 64 (version A codd. 3-12; the textual variants are not material to the sense, and the edition of K. A. Eckhardt is identical at the points cited here): “et qui voluerit hoc facere, per cartam de rebus suis ad ecclesiam, ubi dare voluerit, firmitatem faciat et testes sex vel septem adhibeat, et nomina eorum ipsa carta contineat, et coram sacerdote, qui ad ecclesiam deservit, super altare ponat…” MGH, Lex Baiwariorum, ed. E. von Schwind, 16, 2, p. 432: “Si quis vendiderit possessionem suam alicui terram cultam non cultam prata vel silvas: post accepto pretio aut per cartam aut per testes conprobetur flrma emptio. / Hie testes per aurem debet esse tractus, quia sic habet lex vestra; duas vel tres vel amplius debent esse testes.”
    • MGH
  • 96
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    • Transfers of Property in Eleventh-Century Norman Law (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press), chap. 7. That they were not required to be vicini does not imply that locals might not be included, and, other things being equal, it is likely that some would.
    • Emily Zack Tabuteau, Transfers of Property in Eleventh-Century Norman Law (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1988), chap. 7. That they were not required to be vicini does not imply that locals might not be included, and, other things being equal, it is likely that some would.
    • (1988) Emily Zack Tabuteau
  • 97
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    • ” Law Quarterly Review 52 : 353-55; Clanchy, From Memory to Written Record, 2d ed. (Oxford: Blackwell, 1993), 254-60; Hudson, Land, Law and Lordship in Anglo-Norman England (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994), 159-64. As will be seen below, there is also evidence of a third model which involves transfer by an act in court.
    • Thorne, “Livery of Seisin,” Law Quarterly Review 52 (1936): 353-55; Clanchy, From Memory to Written Record, 2d ed. (Oxford: Blackwell, 1993), 254-60; Hudson, Land, Law and Lordship in Anglo-Norman England (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994), 159-64. As will be seen below, there is also evidence of a third model which involves transfer by an act in court.
    • (1936) “Livery of Seisin
    • Thorne1
  • 98
    • 85022906971 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ” 356 and following.
    • Thorne, “Livery,” 356 and following.
    • “Livery
    • Thorne1
  • 99
    • 85022781809 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • “Livery., 356-57.
    • “Livery , pp. 356-357
  • 100
    • 85022889895 scopus 로고
    • see above, 556. CTh 2.26; CJ 3.38.3 and following. Cf. the discussion of related Byzantine rules by W. Ashburner “The Farmers’ Law,” Journal of Hellenic Studies 32 : 85-86. The shift to local testimony, though not found in the Farmers’ Law, is found in tenth-century Byzantine practice. See R. Morris, “Dispute Settlement in the Byzantine Provinces in the Tenth Century,” in Settlement of Disputes, 136
    • On pre-Constantinian use of vicini, see above, 556. CTh 2.26; CJ 3.38.3 and following. Cf. the discussion of related Byzantine rules by W. Ashburner “The Farmers’ Law,” Journal of Hellenic Studies 32 (1912): 85-86. The shift to local testimony, though not found in the Farmers’ Law, is found in tenth-century Byzantine practice. See R. Morris, “Dispute Settlement in the Byzantine Provinces in the Tenth Century,” in Settlement of Disputes, 136, 142, 146.
    • (1912) On pre-Constantinian use of vicini , vol.142 , pp. 146
  • 101
    • 85022746711 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Code of Euric [hereinafter CE] tit. 274, MGH Leges Visigothorum, p. 3 [inserted by Zeumer from the Lex Baiwariorum, 12, 1-3]: “Si/ quis autem, dum arat vel planteat vineam,/ terminum casu, non volumtate evellerit,/ vicinis praesentibus restituat terminum/ et nullum damnum patiatur.”
    • Fragmenta Codex Rescripti. Code of Euric [hereinafter CE] tit. 274, MGH Leges Visigothorum, p. 3 [inserted by Zeumer from the Lex Baiwariorum, 12, 1-3]: “Si/ quis autem, dum arat vel planteat vineam,/ terminum casu, non volumtate evellerit,/ vicinis praesentibus restituat terminum/ et nullum damnum patiatur.”
    • Fragmenta Codex Rescripti
  • 102
    • 85022881305 scopus 로고
    • 276, MGH Leges Visigothorum, p. 4. Translation from Walter Goffart, Barbarians and Romans, A.D. 418-584 (Princeton: Princeton University Press), appendix B, The context is not entirely clear; see the review of different approaches, Fragmenta Codex Rescripti.
    • CE tit. 276, MGH Leges Visigothorum, p. 4. Translation from Walter Goffart, Barbarians and Romans, A.D. 418-584 (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1980), appendix B, p. 235. The context is not entirely clear; see the review of different approaches, Fragmenta Codex Rescripti.
    • (1980) CE tit , pp. 235
  • 103
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    • Estudios Visigoticos, El Codigo de Eurico, 21, which is not at this point and for my purposes materially different from that of Zeumer.
    • Goffart quotes the edition of CE of Alvaro d'Ors, Estudios Visigoticos, vol. 2, El Codigo de Eurico (1960), 21, which is not at this point and for my purposes materially different from that of Zeumer.
    • (1960) Goffart quotes the edition of CE of Alvaro d'Ors , vol.2
  • 104
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    • 3, 5, MGH Leges Visigothorum, p. 398; my (rough) translation. Goffart, Barbarians and Romans, 235, reads proprietas as “composition”; cf. Honore's reading of the same word in Fragmenta Vaticana 35, 4 as “boundaries” (“Conveyances of Land,” 144, n. 79).
    • Lex Visigothorum [hereinafter LVis] 10, 3, 5, MGH Leges Visigothorum, p. 398; my (rough) translation. Goffart, Barbarians and Romans, 235, reads proprietas as “composition”; cf. Honore's reading of the same word in Fragmenta Vaticana 35, 4 as “boundaries” (“Conveyances of Land,” 144, n. 79).
    • Lex Visigothorum [hereinafter LVis] 10
  • 105
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    • 6:390, cites several examples; another is the report in C. Cipolla, ed., Codice Diplomatico del monasterio di San Columbano di Bobbio (Rome), 1:146, no. 24, of an inquisitio in 747 “per silvanos nostros” to fix boundaries (cited Lexicon Minus s.v. veritas [2]).
    • Pertile, Storia del Diritto Italiano, 6:390, cites several examples; another is the report in C. Cipolla, ed., Codice Diplomatico del monasterio di San Columbano di Bobbio (Rome, 1918), 1:146, no. 24, of an inquisitio in 747 “per silvanos nostros” to fix boundaries (cited Lexicon Minus s.v. veritas [2]).
    • (1918) Storia del Diritto Italiano
    • Pertile1
  • 106
    • 85022874549 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • (codd. A)/ 84 (codd. B), p. 145 at 146: “Tune spondeant inter se pugna duorum… “; Lex Baiwariorum 12, 8, on cases where there are no marked boundaries. On the other hand, as already indicated, LBai 12, 3 reproduces the Visigothic requirement of restoration of boundaries in the presence of the witnesses. In addition, LBai 12, 4, on cases where boundaries are marked, reproduces part of LVis 10, 3, 3 on the same issue, and two MSS add “Tune iurent tres vicini, quibus notum est, vel plures et ostendant, sicut rectum est.”
    • Leges Alamannorum 81 (codd. A)/ 84 (codd. B), p. 145 at 146: “Tune spondeant inter se pugna duorum… “; Lex Baiwariorum 12, 8, pp. 402-3, on cases where there are no marked boundaries. On the other hand, as already indicated, LBai 12, 3 reproduces the Visigothic requirement of restoration of boundaries in the presence of the witnesses. In addition, LBai 12, 4, on cases where boundaries are marked, reproduces part of LVis 10, 3, 3 on the same issue, and two MSS add “Tune iurent tres vicini, quibus notum est, vel plures et ostendant, sicut rectum est.”
    • Leges Alamannorum 81 , pp. 402-403
  • 107
    • 85022778294 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • in J. P. Migne, ed., Patrologiae Cursus Completus… series Latina [hereinafter PL] 96:1299. Translation from R. Sharpe, “Dispute Settlement in Medieval Ireland,” in Settlement of Disputes, 183; square brackets indicate Sharpe's additions to clarify the sense.
    • Capitula selecta ex Antiqua Canonum Collectione facta in Hibernia Saeculo circa VIII, in J. P. Migne, ed., Patrologiae Cursus Completus… series Latina [hereinafter PL] 96:1299. Translation from R. Sharpe, “Dispute Settlement in Medieval Ireland,” in Settlement of Disputes, 183; square brackets indicate Sharpe's additions to clarify the sense.
    • Capitula selecta ex Antiqua Canonum Collectione facta in Hibernia Saeculo circa VIII
  • 108
    • 85022880562 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Concilia II, i, p. 782 at
    • A. Werminghoff, ed., MGH, Concilia II, i, p. 782 at 783.
    • MGH , pp. 783
    • Werminghoff, A.1
  • 109
    • 84990820537 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Libri Decretorum 3, 22, in PL 140:677. It is not in the MGH, Concilia texts of these synods.
    • Burchard of Worms, Libri Decretorum 3, 22, in PL 140:677. It is not in the MGH, Concilia texts of these synods.
    • Burchard of Worms
  • 110
    • 85022828446 scopus 로고
    • Decretum 3, 27, in PL 161:204. Gratian, C. 16q. 1 c. 54, attributes the canon to one of the Councils of Toledo. Emil Friedberg, ed., Decretum Magistri Gratiani (Leipzig), 778. However, the notes to the Editio Romana comment that it is not found there. Corpus Juris Canonici Emendatum et Notis Illustratum: Gregorii XII Pont. Max. lussu Editum (Lyon, 1606), 738. [Citations to Gratian in conventional form are hereafter to Friedberg's edition unless otherwise indicated.]
    • Ivo of Chartres, Decretum 3, 27, in PL 161:204. Gratian, C. 16q. 1 c. 54, attributes the canon to one of the Councils of Toledo. Emil Friedberg, ed., Decretum Magistri Gratiani (Leipzig, 1879), 778. However, the notes to the Editio Romana comment that it is not found there. Corpus Juris Canonici Emendatum et Notis Illustratum: Gregorii XII Pont. Max. lussu Editum (Lyon, 1606), 738. [Citations to Gratian in conventional form are hereafter to Friedberg's edition unless otherwise indicated.]
    • (1879) Ivo of Chartres
  • 111
    • 85022772034 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • 3, 13, Leges Visigothorum, p. 326: “… ut presentibus his aut vicinis eorum damnum, quod inlatum fuerit, estimetur, et ad campum utreque partes conveniant, ut, postquam damnum inspexerint,… and Ivo of Chartres., 15, p. 327: “Quod si dominus pecorum mittere vel venire noluerit, damnum a vicinis, quod factum est, extimetur… “
    • LVis 8, 3, 13, Leges Visigothorum, p. 326: “… ut presentibus his aut vicinis eorum damnum, quod inlatum fuerit, estimetur, et ad campum utreque partes conveniant, ut, postquam damnum inspexerint,… and Ivo of Chartres., 15, p. 327: “Quod si dominus pecorum mittere vel venire noluerit, damnum a vicinis, quod factum est, extimetur… “
    • LVis 8
  • 112
    • 85022793810 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • 17, MGH, Lex Baiwariorum, : “Ut nemo praesumat alienum animal occidere neque porcum, quamvis in damnum eum invenerit. Sed reclaudat eum, donee domino eius ostendat damnum. Et aliqui de vicinis eorum videant hoc et designent locum qui lesus est, et alia quae intacta sunt usque ad maturitatem… “
    • LBai 14, 17, MGH, Lex Baiwariorum, pp. 419-20: “Ut nemo praesumat alienum animal occidere neque porcum, quamvis in damnum eum invenerit. Sed reclaudat eum, donee domino eius ostendat damnum. Et aliqui de vicinis eorum videant hoc et designent locum qui lesus est, et alia quae intacta sunt usque ad maturitatem… “
    • LBai 14 , pp. 419-420
  • 113
    • 85022855414 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ed. F. Bluhme, MGH Leges Langobardorum, p. 79: “ut damnum quod arbitratum fuerit componatur, aut fabula, quae inter vicinus est.”
    • Edictus Rothari c. 346, ed. F. Bluhme, MGH Leges Langobardorum, p. 79: “ut damnum quod arbitratum fuerit componatur, aut fabula, quae inter vicinus est.”
    • Edictus Rothari c. 346
  • 114
    • 85022855414 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • MGH Leges Langobardorum, : “De incendio Si quis casam alienam asto animo, id est voluntarie, incendit, in treblum restituat ea, quod est sibi tertia, sub extimatione pretii cum omnem intrinsecus, quidquid intus crematus fuit, que vicini bone fidei homines adpraetiaverint, restauret… ”
    • Edictus Rothari c. 146, MGH Leges Langobardorum, pp. 33-34: “De incendio Si quis casam alienam asto animo, id est voluntarie, incendit, in treblum restituat ea, quod est sibi tertia, sub extimatione pretii cum omnem intrinsecus, quidquid intus crematus fuit, que vicini bone fidei homines adpraetiaverint, restauret… ”
    • Edictus Rothari c. 146 , pp. 33-34
  • 115
    • 85022745001 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Letter 167, inquisitio 17, PL 54:1208; Burchard 4, 44, PL 140:735; Ivo, Decretum c. 238, PL 161:117, and Pannormia 1, 94, PL 161:1065-66; Gratian, De consecratione D. 4, c.
    • Leo the Great, Letter 167, inquisitio 17, PL 54:1208; Burchard 4, 44, PL 140:735; Ivo, Decretum c. 238, PL 161:117, and Pannormia 1, 94, PL 161:1065-66; Gratian, De consecratione D. 4, c. 113,.
    • Leo the Great , vol.113
  • 116
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    • c. 8, Concilia II, i, p. 191 at 192. The same rule is found in Leo the Great., prohibiting marriage “antequam presbitero adnuntiet et parentibus suis et vicinis, que eorum possint examinare propinquitatem,” c. 12 of a text that Werminghoff ascribes to a Bavarian Synod of 740 x 750; however, Wilfried Hartmann, Die Synoden der Karolingerzeit im Frankenreich und in Italien (Paderbom: Ferdinand Schoningh), 90, says that it is an episcopal capitulary dating to shortly after
    • c. 8, MGH, Concilia II, i, p. 191 at 192. The same rule is found in Leo the Great., p. 53, prohibiting marriage “antequam presbitero adnuntiet et parentibus suis et vicinis, que eorum possint examinare propinquitatem,” c. 12 of a text that Werminghoff ascribes to a Bavarian Synod of 740 x 750; however, Wilfried Hartmann, Die Synoden der Karolingerzeit im Frankenreich und in Italien (Paderbom: Ferdinand Schoningh, 1989), 90, says that it is an episcopal capitulary dating to shortly after 800.
    • (1989) MGH , pp. 53
  • 117
    • 85022858040 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • 21, PL 140:783. As editors of Gratian have noted, there may be a relationship to CTh 9.7.2, a law of Constantine of 326 restricting accusations of adultery to “proximis necessariisque personis… hoc est patrueli consobrino et consanguineo… “ and more particularly the interpretatio of the Breviary on it, “In adulterio extraneam mulierum nullus accuset, sed propinqui, ad quorum notam pertinet,… “; this text looks very like a conflation of this rule with the Synod of Friuli rule about the use of relatives and locals to establish relationship before marriage. Broadly the same text is in Ivo, Decretum, 9, 57, PL 161:670, Pannormia 7, 84, PL 161:1301, and Gratian, C. 35 q. 6 c. 1.
    • Libri Decretorum 7, 21, PL 140:783. As editors of Gratian have noted, there may be a relationship to CTh 9.7.2, a law of Constantine of 326 restricting accusations of adultery to “proximis necessariisque personis… hoc est patrueli consobrino et consanguineo… “ and more particularly the interpretatio of the Breviary on it, “In adulterio extraneam mulierum nullus accuset, sed propinqui, ad quorum notam pertinet,… “; this text looks very like a conflation of this rule with the Synod of Friuli rule about the use of relatives and locals to establish relationship before marriage. Broadly the same text is in Ivo, Decretum, 9, 57, PL 161:670, Pannormia 7, 84, PL 161:1301, and Gratian, C. 35 q. 6 c. 1.
    • Libri Decretorum 7
  • 118
    • 85022858040 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • 25, PL 140:784, also in Regino of Priim, De Disciplina Ecclesiastica 2, 23, PL 132:238, Ivo, Decretum 9, 61, PL 161:670, Pannormia 7, 87, PL 161:1302, and Gratian, Decretum C. 35 q. 6 c. 5.
    • Libri Decretorum 7, 25, PL 140:784, also in Regino of Priim, De Disciplina Ecclesiastica 2, 23, PL 132:238, Ivo, Decretum 9, 61, PL 161:670, Pannormia 7, 87, PL 161:1302, and Gratian, Decretum C. 35 q. 6 c. 5.
    • Libri Decretorum 7
  • 119
    • 85022874296 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • C. 35 q. 6, ed. Friedberg
    • With a good deal of elaboration; C. 35 q. 6, ed. Friedberg, pp. 1277-81.
    • With a good deal of elaboration , pp. 1277-1281
  • 120
    • 85022756070 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ii, 6, p. 27, on a pleading that the grand assize should not proceed because the parties are of common stock under the source of the inheritance; see With a good deal of elaboration;, v, 4, for proof of free or villein status. In both cases the preferred proof is by production of relatives, but if this does not settle the matter, “tune decurrendum est ad visnetum” (27), “ad visnetum erit recuperandum” (55). The visnetum here is a special purpose jury, not the regular assize. It is fairly clear that in Glanvill, parentela has not yet become a term of art in the rules of preference for inheritance, as discussed by Pollock and Maitland, History of English Law, 2:295-302 (cited by Hall, 184), since in the first passage cited the expression used is stipite parentele, while in the second, and in xiii, 11, p. 155, (common stock as bar to the assize mort d'ancestor) it is stipite, unqualified; and in vi, 17, p. 68, parentela is used as a synonym for canonical consanguinity as a bar to marriage.
    • Glanvill, ii, 6, p. 27, on a pleading that the grand assize should not proceed because the parties are of common stock under the source of the inheritance; see With a good deal of elaboration;, v, 4, pp. 55-56, for proof of free or villein status. In both cases the preferred proof is by production of relatives, but if this does not settle the matter, “tune decurrendum est ad visnetum” (27), “ad visnetum erit recuperandum” (55). The visnetum here is a special purpose jury, not the regular assize. It is fairly clear that in Glanvill, parentela has not yet become a term of art in the rules of preference for inheritance, as discussed by Pollock and Maitland, History of English Law, 2:295-302 (cited by Hall, 184), since in the first passage cited the expression used is stipite parentele, while in the second, and in xiii, 11, p. 155, (common stock as bar to the assize mort d'ancestor) it is stipite, unqualified; and in vi, 17, p. 68, parentela is used as a synonym for canonical consanguinity as a bar to marriage.
    • Glanvill , pp. 55-56
  • 121
    • 85022784415 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • and Gordon, European Legal History
    • Cf. Robinson, Fergus, and Gordon, European Legal History, 5-19.
    • Fergus , pp. 5-19
    • Robinson1
  • 122
    • 85022853411 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Lex Ribuaria 61, 1, at “secundum legem Romanam, quam ecclesia vivit.”
    • MGH, Lex Ribuaria 61, 1, pp. 108-9 at 109, “secundum legem Romanam, quam ecclesia vivit.”
    • MGH , pp. 108-109
  • 123
    • 85022825944 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • “Jugement des hommes et jugement de Dieu a l'aube du Moyen Age,” in his edited volume, Lejuge et le jugement dans les traditions juridiques europeennes. Etudes d'histoire comparee (Paris: L.G.D.J), 56, n. 35: Pippini Cap. Italicum (801? 806 x 810) c. 12, MGH, Capitularia i, p. 209; Cap. cum primis const. (808) c. 3, MGH, Capitularia i, p. 139; Cap. de lustitiis faciendis (811 x 813) c. 3, MGH, Capitularia i, p. 176. Though a capitulary of ca. 820-21 restricted inquisitiones to causas… dominicas, i.e., matters of royal interest, an exception was still provided by the same capitulary for the poor: Cap. de lustitiis faciendis (ca. 820), MGH, Capitularia i, p. 295 (cited in Ganshof, “La Preuve dans le droit franc,” 95), and judicial selection of witnesses was made generally available in 832: Hlothari Cap. Papiense (832) c. \\,MGH, Capitularia ii
    • Some general instances are listed by Robert Jacob, “Jugement des hommes et jugement de Dieu a l'aube du Moyen Age,” in his edited volume, Lejuge et le jugement dans les traditions juridiques europeennes. Etudes d'histoire comparee (Paris: L.G.D.J, 1996), 56, n. 35: Pippini Cap. Italicum (801? 806 x 810) c. 12, MGH, Capitularia i, p. 209; Cap. cum primis const. (808) c. 3, MGH, Capitularia i, p. 139; Cap. de lustitiis faciendis (811 x 813) c. 3, MGH, Capitularia i, p. 176. Though a capitulary of ca. 820-21 restricted inquisitiones to causas… dominicas, i.e., matters of royal interest, an exception was still provided by the same capitulary for the poor: Cap. de lustitiis faciendis (ca. 820), MGH, Capitularia i, p. 295 (cited in Ganshof, “La Preuve dans le droit franc,” 95), and judicial selection of witnesses was made generally available in 832: Hlothari Cap. Papiense (832) c. \\,MGH, Capitularia ii, pp. 61-62.
    • (1996) Some general instances are listed by Robert Jacob , pp. 61-62
  • 124
    • 85022899977 scopus 로고
    • see Ganshof, “La Preuve dans le droit franc,” 95; for church influence on Louis the Pious, see J. M. Wallace-Hadrill, The Barbarian West, 3d ed. (London: Hutchison, 1967, reprint)
    • For the preponderance of inquisitio capitularies in the reign of Louis the Pious, see Ganshof, “La Preuve dans le droit franc,” 95; for church influence on Louis the Pious, see J. M. Wallace-Hadrill, The Barbarian West, 3d ed. (London: Hutchison, 1967, reprint, 1972), 140-42.
    • (1972) For the preponderance of inquisitio capitularies in the reign of Louis the Pious , pp. 140-142
  • 125
    • 34447466649 scopus 로고
    • “Europae Pater: Charlemagne and His Achievement in the Light of Recent Scholarship,” English Historical Review 85 : 92-95, postulating a Lombard origin, and J. L. Nelson, “Dispute Settlement in Carolingian West Francia,” in Settlement of Disputes, 60-61. The instances collected in Lexicon Minus and by Ganshof also come primarily from Italy, France south of the Loire, Switzerland and southern Germany. See Lexicon Minus s.v. inquaestio, and Ganshof, “La Preuve dans le droit franc,” 95-96, nn.
    • This point is made by D. A. Bullough, “Europae Pater: Charlemagne and His Achievement in the Light of Recent Scholarship,” English Historical Review 85 (1970): 92-95, postulating a Lombard origin, and J. L. Nelson, “Dispute Settlement in Carolingian West Francia,” in Settlement of Disputes, 60-61. The instances collected in Lexicon Minus and by Ganshof also come primarily from Italy, France south of the Loire, Switzerland and southern Germany. See Lexicon Minus s.v. inquaestio, and Ganshof, “La Preuve dans le droit franc,” 95-96, nn. 53, 54.
    • (1970) This point is made by D. A. Bullough , vol.53 , pp. 54
  • 126
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    • 816 c. 1, MGH, Capitularia i, p. 268; my translation. Cf. also the slightly variant version in Cap. 818-19 c. 10, id. For discussion of the context of these provisions in Carolingian proof procedure in general, see Jacob, “Jugement,” and Nelson, “Dispute Settlement,” 47; a radically different account is given by Gerhard Schmitz, “The Capitulary Legislation of Louis the Pious,” in Charlemagne's Heir: New Perspectives on the Reign of Louis the Pious, ed. Peter Godman and Roger Collins (Oxford: Clarendon Press)
    • Cap. 816 c. 1, MGH, Capitularia i, p. 268; my translation. Cf. also the slightly variant version in Cap. 818-19 c. 10, id. p. 283. For discussion of the context of these provisions in Carolingian proof procedure in general, see Jacob, “Jugement,” and Nelson, “Dispute Settlement,” 47; a radically different account is given by Gerhard Schmitz, “The Capitulary Legislation of Louis the Pious,” in Charlemagne's Heir: New Perspectives on the Reign of Louis the Pious, ed. Peter Godman and Roger Collins (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1990), 434-35.
    • (1990) Cap , pp. 283
  • 128
    • 84947061336 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • no. 212 (1116 x 1118); the larger dispute is no. 254 (1127), which is between the archbishop of Canterbury and the monastery of St. Augustine and concerns tolls, customs, and the right to a ferry at Sandwich.
    • Lawsuits, no. 212 (1116 x 1118); the larger dispute is no. 254 (1127), which is between the archbishop of Canterbury and the monastery of St. Augustine and concerns tolls, customs, and the right to a ferry at Sandwich.
    • Lawsuits
  • 129
    • 85022799822 scopus 로고
    • For the general frequency of disputed titles in Domesday and its possible significance, see Paul R. Hyams, ‘“No Register of Title': The Domesday Inquest and Land Adjudication,” Anglo-Norman Studies 9 : 12712; J. C. Holt, “1086,” in idem, ed., Domesday Studies (Woodbridge, UK: Boydell Press, 1987), 41-64.1 have been unable to consult Patrick Wormald, “Domesday Lawsuits: A Provisional List and Preliminary Comment,” in England in the Eleventh Century, ed. Carola Hicks. Harlaxton Medieval Studies 2 (Stamford, UK: Paul Watkins, 1992), 61-102. Outside of Domesday cases, there are 149 cases up to 1164, of which 92 (62 percent) offer no information as to proof mode; the remaining 57 generate 67 modes of proof. There are 122 cases from 1165-99, of which 64 (52 percent) offer no information as to proof mode; at this period multiple proof modes in a single case seem to disappear, and there are only 58 proof modes shown.
    • Of the Domesday cases, ten do not provide information about the mode of proof; since more than one mode of proof is offered in several cases, this produces a total of 129 proof modes. For the general frequency of disputed titles in Domesday and its possible significance, see Paul R. Hyams, ‘“No Register of Title': The Domesday Inquest and Land Adjudication,” Anglo-Norman Studies 9 (1987): 12712; J. C. Holt, “1086,” in idem, ed., Domesday Studies (Woodbridge, UK: Boydell Press, 1987), 41-64.1 have been unable to consult Patrick Wormald, “Domesday Lawsuits: A Provisional List and Preliminary Comment,” in England in the Eleventh Century, ed. Carola Hicks. Harlaxton Medieval Studies 2 (Stamford, UK: Paul Watkins, 1992), 61-102. Outside of Domesday cases, there are 149 cases up to 1164, of which 92 (62 percent) offer no information as to proof mode; the remaining 57 generate 67 modes of proof. There are 122 cases from 1165-99, of which 64 (52 percent) offer no information as to proof mode; at this period multiple proof modes in a single case seem to disappear, and there are only 58 proof modes shown.
    • (1987) Of the Domesday cases, ten do not provide information about the mode of proof; since more than one mode of proof is offered in several cases, this produces a total of 129 proof modes
  • 130
    • 85022765112 scopus 로고
    • “Oral Testimony and the Domesday Inquest,” Anglo-Norman Studies 17
    • Cf. the discussion by Robin Fleming, “Oral Testimony and the Domesday Inquest,” Anglo-Norman Studies 17 (1995): 101-22.
    • (1995) Cf. the discussion by Robin Fleming , pp. 101-122
  • 131
    • 80053715798 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Law and Lordship, 161, does not draw a distinction between “seising” in this sense, the ceremonies recorded in charters, and the transfer of possession by ceremony on the land that is the later livery and seisin. But the practical arrangements transferor and transferee need to make are very different, and, as already indicated, so are the implications for subsequent proof.
    • Hudson, Land, Law and Lordship, 161, does not draw a distinction between “seising” in this sense, the ceremonies recorded in charters, and the transfer of possession by ceremony on the land that is the later livery and seisin. But the practical arrangements transferor and transferee need to make are very different, and, as already indicated, so are the implications for subsequent proof.
    • Land
    • Hudson1
  • 132
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    • of which 19 (49 percent) provide no information as to proof mode, and a further 3 (8 percent) appear to be canon law proceedings; the remaining 17 produce 21 proof modes. From 1165 on, there are 44 cases, of which 7 provide no information as to proof, and 7 appear to be canon law (together, 32 percent); the remaining 30 each use a single proof mode.
    • Here there are 39 cases before 1164, of which 19 (49 percent) provide no information as to proof mode, and a further 3 (8 percent) appear to be canon law proceedings; the remaining 17 produce 21 proof modes. From 1165 on, there are 44 cases, of which 7 provide no information as to proof, and 7 appear to be canon law (together, 32 percent); the remaining 30 each use a single proof mode.
    • Here there are 39 cases before 1164
  • 133
    • 85022866246 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Nos. 354 and 355 (1156) and no. 365 (1156 x 1157).(1138 x 1139), “hominibus de Luytun,” which could possibly be a local court.
    • Nos. 354 and 355 (1156) and no. 365 (1156 x 1157). The fourth is no. 296 (1138 x 1139), “hominibus de Luytun,” which could possibly be a local court.
    • The fourth is no. 296
  • 134
    • 77954372001 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • 69-71; since this is a dispute between two abbeys about boundaries, it is wholly unsurprising to find the canon law rule applied.
    • van Caenegem, Royal Writs in England, 69-71; since this is a dispute between two abbeys about boundaries, it is wholly unsurprising to find the canon law rule applied.
    • Royal Writs in England
    • van Caenegem1
  • 135
    • 85022812202 scopus 로고
    • and Gordon, European Legal History, 90; the text is printed by Agathon Wunderlich, ed., Anecdota quaeprocessum civile spectant (Gottingen: Vanderhoeck and Ruprecht, 1841) and by Ludwig Wahrmund, Excerpta Legum Edita a Bulgarino Causidico, Quellen 4, i. Wahrmund dates it to before 1148 (Quellen 4, i:xx). The account of the framework of the law of proof here largely follows J.-P. Levy, La Hierarchie des preuves dans le droit savant du Moyen-Age (Paris: Librairie du Recueil Sirey).
    • Robinson, Fergus, and Gordon, European Legal History, 90; the text is printed by Agathon Wunderlich, ed., Anecdota quaeprocessum civile spectant (Gottingen: Vanderhoeck and Ruprecht, 1841) and by Ludwig Wahrmund, Excerpta Legum Edita a Bulgarino Causidico, Quellen 4, i. Wahrmund dates it to before 1148 (Quellen 4, i:xx). The account of the framework of the law of proof here largely follows J.-P. Levy, La Hierarchie des preuves dans le droit savant du Moyen-Age (Paris: Librairie du Recueil Sirey, 1939).
    • (1939) Fergus
    • Robinson1
  • 138
    • 85022819764 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Nam si judicatures est, non admittitur,…” See Wahrmund, Quellen 4, 1:6; the text but not the sense varies slightly in Wunderlich, Anecdota
    • “ad testimonium in iudicio adulterii admittitur praetor non in ea causa iudex. Nam si judicatures est, non admittitur,…” See Wahrmund, Quellen 4, 1:6; the text but not the sense varies slightly in Wunderlich, Anecdota, 20.
    • “ad testimonium in iudicio adulterii admittitur praetor non in ea causa iudex , pp. 20
  • 140
    • 85022805102 scopus 로고
    • “The Establishment of a Rule Against Hearsay in Romano-Canonical Procedure,” Virginia Journal of International Law 36
    • The early history of the ab alio auditu rule is discussed by F. R. Herrmann, “The Establishment of a Rule Against Hearsay in Romano-Canonical Procedure,” Virginia Journal of International Law 36 (1995): 1-51.
    • (1995) The early history of the ab alio auditu rule is discussed by F. R. Herrmann , pp. 1-51
  • 141
    • 85022874943 scopus 로고
    • (CJ 4.20.14) and was adopted in some Carolingian capitularies (Jacob, “Jugement,” 56, n. 35), it was not prominent in early medieval practice. It is not mentioned by Bulgarus and is absent from Gratian's listing of material from the Corpus Iuris in C. 4 q. 2 & 3 c. 3. References to the publication of depositions in the Decretals of Alexander III (1159-81) imply that it must be present by this period: see X. 2. 20. 15, 18, and 19, in E. Friedberg, ed., Decretalium Collectiones (Corpus Iuris Canonici) (Leipzig: Tauchnitz), 2:320, 321 [citations to the Decretals in standard form hereafter are to this edition unless otherwise indicated].
    • Though this requirement was derived from the Code of Justinian (CJ 4.20.14) and was adopted in some Carolingian capitularies (Jacob, “Jugement,” 56, n. 35), it was not prominent in early medieval practice. It is not mentioned by Bulgarus and is absent from Gratian's listing of material from the Corpus Iuris in C. 4 q. 2 & 3 c. 3. References to the publication of depositions in the Decretals of Alexander III (1159-81) imply that it must be present by this period: see X. 2. 20. 15, 18, and 19, in E. Friedberg, ed., Decretalium Collectiones (Corpus Iuris Canonici) (Leipzig: Tauchnitz, 1879), 2:320, 321 [citations to the Decretals in standard form hereafter are to this edition unless otherwise indicated].
    • (1879) Though this requirement was derived from the Code of Justinian
  • 142
    • 85022794997 scopus 로고
    • 35 q. 6, cited above, n. 118.(Wahrmund, Quellen 2, iii, p. 43) incorporates the terms of the consanguinity oath into the general witness oath (“sed ita se a maioribus accepisse”), though citing to a letter of Eugenius III (1145-53) on consanguinity (printed by Wahrmund, Though this requirement was derived from the Code of Justinian., n. 15, from 1 Comp. 2.13.20, in E. Friedberg, ed., Quinque Compilations Antiquae [Leipzig: Tauchnitz, 1882]). The Ordo Invocato Christi Nomine gives “in parentele casu” as an exception to de visu et auditu, citing C. 35 q. 6 cc. 5 & 8 (Wahrmund, Quellen 5, i, p. 108; F. Bergman, ed., Pillii, Tancredi, Gratiae libri de iudiciorum ordine [Gottingen: Vanderhoeck and Ruprecht,], p. 69). Damasus cites to 1 Comp. 4.15.2, a decretal not received in the Gregorian collection, for the proposition that testimony ab alio auditu is restricted to matrimonial cases and extrajudicial confessions of payment or nonpayment, though he immediately points out that it is also available in the actio aquae pluviae arcendae (Wunderlich, Anecdota, 19-20; Wahrmund, Quellen 2, iii: 52-53).
    • Gratian, C. 35 q. 6, cited above, n. 118. Ricardus Anglicus (Wahrmund, Quellen 2, iii, p. 43) incorporates the terms of the consanguinity oath into the general witness oath (“sed ita se a maioribus accepisse”), though citing to a letter of Eugenius III (1145-53) on consanguinity (printed by Wahrmund, Though this requirement was derived from the Code of Justinian., n. 15, from 1 Comp. 2.13.20, in E. Friedberg, ed., Quinque Compilations Antiquae [Leipzig: Tauchnitz, 1882]). The Ordo Invocato Christi Nomine gives “in parentele casu” as an exception to de visu et auditu, citing C. 35 q. 6 cc. 5 & 8 (Wahrmund, Quellen 5, i, p. 108; F. Bergman, ed., Pillii, Tancredi, Gratiae libri de iudiciorum ordine [Gottingen: Vanderhoeck and Ruprecht, 1842], p. 69). Damasus cites to 1 Comp. 4.15.2, a decretal not received in the Gregorian collection, for the proposition that testimony ab alio auditu is restricted to matrimonial cases and extrajudicial confessions of payment or nonpayment, though he immediately points out that it is also available in the actio aquae pluviae arcendae (Wunderlich, Anecdota, 19-20; Wahrmund, Quellen 2, iii: 52-53).
    • (1842) Ricardus Anglicus
    • Gratian, C.1
  • 143
    • 85022747136 scopus 로고
    • D. 22. 3. 28 and 39. 3. 2. 8; (see Honore in The Digest of Justinian, Latin text ed. Theodore Mommsen and Paul Krueger, English translation ed. Alan Watson [Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press,], 2:648).
    • D. 22. 3. 28 and 39. 3. 2. 8; the quotation is from the translation by Honore of the last sentence of D. 22. 3. 28 (see Honore in The Digest of Justinian, Latin text ed. Theodore Mommsen and Paul Krueger, English translation ed. Alan Watson [Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1985], 2:648).
    • (1985) the quotation is from the translation by Honore of the last sentence of D. 22. 3. 28
  • 144
    • 85022759593 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • 44. However, the Ordo ‘Invocato’ (Pillii Tancredi, 69, Wahrmund, Quellen 5, i: 107-8), Damasus (Wunderlich, Anecdota, 108-9; Wahrmund, Quellen 4, iv: 52-53), and the Ordo ludiciarius of Tancred (1215 x 1216) in Pillii Tancredi, 2390, state the point more narrowly in terms of the actio aquae pluviae arcendae for (in English terms) nuisance by diverting rainwater, the context of the Roman sources.
    • Pillii, Tancredi, 44. However, the Ordo ‘Invocato’ (Pillii Tancredi, 69, Wahrmund, Quellen 5, i: 107-8), Damasus (Wunderlich, Anecdota, 108-9; Wahrmund, Quellen 4, iv: 52-53), and the Ordo ludiciarius of Tancred (1215 x 1216) in Pillii Tancredi, 2390, state the point more narrowly in terms of the actio aquae pluviae arcendae for (in English terms) nuisance by diverting rainwater, the context of the Roman sources.
    • Tancredi
    • Pillii1
  • 145
    • 85022779743 scopus 로고
    • X. 2. 20. 47. This is followed by Tancred, Pillii Tancredi, 236-37. The Ordo Judiciarius “Scientiam” (1235 x 1240) (Wahrmund, Quellen, vol. 2, i, 51) takes the view that the effect of the council's decision is a complete ban on testimony ab alio auditu in this context (“in hoc casu dicitur, quod testimonium de auditu non valet excepta causa matrimonii secundum iura antiqua, sed illud revocatum est per Lateranense concilium”; Wahrmund's notes show some variation between the lines taken by different MSS). Accursius, gloss Audierint to D. 39. 3.2.8 takes the same line (cited here from Accursii Glossa in Digesta Nova. Corpus Glossatorum Juris Civilis, (Turin: ex officina Erasmiana, facsimile reprint of Digestum Novum [Venice; Baptista de Tortis, 1487/8]); on the other hand, the computation of relationships is accepted by Durantis. See Gulielmus Durantis, Speculum luris (Frankfurt, 1592), bk. 1, pt. iv, rubric de teste § 1 opponitur, no.
    • The rules on proof of family relationship were tightened up by the Lateran Council of 1215, requiring minimum standards of credibility in both the witnesses and their sources: X. 2. 20. 47. This is followed by Tancred, Pillii Tancredi, 236-37. The Ordo Judiciarius “Scientiam” (1235 x 1240) (Wahrmund, Quellen, vol. 2, i, 51) takes the view that the effect of the council's decision is a complete ban on testimony ab alio auditu in this context (“in hoc casu dicitur, quod testimonium de auditu non valet excepta causa matrimonii secundum iura antiqua, sed illud revocatum est per Lateranense concilium”; Wahrmund's notes show some variation between the lines taken by different MSS). Accursius, gloss Audierint to D. 39. 3.2.8 takes the same line (cited here from Accursii Glossa in Digesta Nova. Corpus Glossatorum Juris Civilis, vol. 9 (Turin: ex officina Erasmiana, 1968; facsimile reprint of Digestum Novum [Venice; Baptista de Tortis, 1487/8]); on the other hand, the computation of relationships is accepted by Durantis. See Gulielmus Durantis, Speculum luris (Frankfurt, 1592), bk. 1, pt. iv, rubric de teste § 1 opponitur, no. 54, p. 282.
    • (1968) The rules on proof of family relationship were tightened up by the Lateran Council of 1215, requiring minimum standards of credibility in both the witnesses and their sources , vol.9 , pp. 282
  • 146
    • 84895713220 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • bk. 2, pt. ii, rubric probatio § 1, no. 20, p. 267: “Ultimo quaeritur qualiter fiet probatio communis opinionis, vel etiam praescriptionis tanti temporis, cuius memoria non existit… [he then gives an example of a dispute in which a monastery's claim to tithe depended on whether the land was “newly ploughed”]… testes monasterii dicere debent, quod est communis opinio hominum habitantem circa loca, quae monasterium asserit novalia esse, & etiam aliorum, quibus cura est de his quaerere, vel melius hominum, qui circa hoc arbitrantur nullem viventem vidisse, vel audivisse, quando loca ilia culta fuerint.”
    • Durantis, Speculum Iuris, bk. 2, pt. ii, rubric probatio § 1, no. 20, p. 267: “Ultimo quaeritur qualiter fiet probatio communis opinionis, vel etiam praescriptionis tanti temporis, cuius memoria non existit… [he then gives an example of a dispute in which a monastery's claim to tithe depended on whether the land was “newly ploughed”]… testes monasterii dicere debent, quod est communis opinio hominum habitantem circa loca, quae monasterium asserit novalia esse, & etiam aliorum, quibus cura est de his quaerere, vel melius hominum, qui circa hoc arbitrantur nullem viventem vidisse, vel audivisse, quando loca ilia culta fuerint.”
    • Speculum Iuris
    • Durantis1
  • 147
    • 85022894404 scopus 로고
    • 113-17; Francesco Migliorino, Fama e infamia: Problemi della societa medievale nel pensiero guiridico nei secoli XII e XIII (Catania: Giannotta, 1985), 49-72; R. M. Fraher, “Conviction According to Conscience: The Medieval Jurists’ Debate Concerning Judicial Discretion and the Law of Proof,” Law and History Review 1 : 32-40, and literature cited there.
    • See Levy, La Hierarchie des preuves, 113-17; Francesco Migliorino, Fama e infamia: Problemi della societa medievale nel pensiero guiridico nei secoli XII e XIII (Catania: Giannotta, 1985), 49-72; R. M. Fraher, “Conviction According to Conscience: The Medieval Jurists’ Debate Concerning Judicial Discretion and the Law of Proof,” Law and History Review 1 (1989): 32-40, and literature cited there.
    • (1989) La Hierarchie des preuves
    • Levy1
  • 149
    • 85022831009 scopus 로고
    • D. 22. 5. 3. 2: (“sometimes the number of witnesses, sometimes their dignity and authority, at others common knowledge settles the truth of the matter in issue”) (translation by Honore, The Digest of Justinian, 2:650-51). The text is in Gratian at C. 4. q. 2 & 3 c. 3, and in many discussions of proof: e.g., John of Salisbury, Policraticus, bk. 5, c. 14 (ca. 1159), ed. Clement C. J. Webb (Oxford: Clarendon). 1:343.
    • D. 22. 5. 3. 2: “alias numerus testium, alias dignitas et auctoritas, alias veluti consentiens fama confirmat rei de qua quaeritur fidem” (“sometimes the number of witnesses, sometimes their dignity and authority, at others common knowledge settles the truth of the matter in issue”) (translation by Honore, The Digest of Justinian, 2:650-51). The text is in Gratian at C. 4. q. 2 & 3 c. 3, and in many discussions of proof: e.g., John of Salisbury, Policraticus, bk. 5, c. 14 (ca. 1159), ed. Clement C. J. Webb (Oxford: Clarendon, 1909). 1:343.
    • (1909) “alias numerus testium, alias dignitas et auctoritas, alias veluti consentiens fama confirmat rei de qua quaeritur fidem”
  • 150
    • 4243979325 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • chap. 2, esp. 33-43; Migliorino, Fama e infamia
    • Levy, La Hierarchie des preuves, chap. 2, esp. 33-43; Migliorino, Fama e infamia, 49-55.
    • La Hierarchie des preuves , pp. 49-55
    • Levy1
  • 151
    • 85022756888 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • on simony, cited by Levy, La Hierarchie despreuves, 38, n. 31, and
    • X. 5. 3. 13, on simony, cited by Levy, La Hierarchie despreuves, 38, n. 31, and 113-17.
    • X. 5. 3. 13 , pp. 113-117
  • 152
    • 85022792508 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • X. 2. 24. (1216-27), on usury: “Unde expedire videtis, quod exigatur de veritate dicenda a partibus iuramentum, quum ex fama quasi notorium habeatur,” cited by Levy, La Hierarchie des preuves, 38, n. 31.
    • X. 2. 24. 32, decretal of Honorius III (1216-27), on usury: “Unde expedire videtis, quod exigatur de veritate dicenda a partibus iuramentum, quum ex fama quasi notorium habeatur,” cited by Levy, La Hierarchie des preuves, 38, n. 31.
    • 32, decretal of Honorius III
  • 153
    • 85022818747 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Gloss Confirmat to D. 22. 5. 3. 2: Sufficit ergo per se.” The gloss goes on to discuss alternative views, that fama is sufficient where it is consistent with the ordinary course of nature, or that it is only a half proof. Cf. Fraher, “Conviction,”
    • Gloss Confirmat to D. 22. 5. 3. 2: “Dicitur fama confirmare, id est cum alio firmare; non quod per se fama non sufficiat, sed respectu assertionis partis; quam assertionem fama confirmat. Sufficit ergo per se.” The gloss goes on to discuss alternative views, that fama is sufficient where it is consistent with the ordinary course of nature, or that it is only a half proof. Cf. Fraher, “Conviction,” 36-37.
    • “Dicitur fama confirmare, id est cum alio firmare; non quod per se fama non sufficiat, sed respectu assertionis partis; quam assertionem fama confirmat , pp. 36-37
  • 154
    • 84860588182 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Sive Responsorum D. Baldi Ubaldi Perusini… (Frankfurt am Main, 1589), 5 vols. in 1, separately foliated, cited here in the form [vol.], Cons. [Consilium number], no. [section number], fol. [folio number]; iv Cons. 465, no. 10, fol. 96v-97r, on manifest usury: “Et hoc nota vehementiam famae, nam ut eleganter ait Bart, in suis consiliis consi. 27 q. incip. D. Paci. fama potest esse ita vehemens, quod per seipsum sufficit ad solam probationem [citations omitted]. Et potest esse ita debilis quod non faceret etiam indicium secundum Bar. In casu nostro fama vehemens est… ”
    • Baldus, Consiliorum, Sive Responsorum D. Baldi Ubaldi Perusini… (Frankfurt am Main, 1589), 5 vols. in 1, separately foliated, cited here in the form [vol.], Cons. [Consilium number], no. [section number], fol. [folio number]; iv Cons. 465, no. 10, fol. 96v-97r, on manifest usury: “Et hoc nota vehementiam famae, nam ut eleganter ait Bart, in suis consiliis consi. 27 q. incip. D. Paci. fama potest esse ita vehemens, quod per seipsum sufficit ad solam probationem [citations omitted]. Et potest esse ita debilis quod non faceret etiam indicium secundum Bar. In casu nostro fama vehemens est… ”
    • Consiliorum
    • Baldus1
  • 155
    • 85022859076 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • X. 2. 19. 13: Gloss testes, fama (In Decretales D. Gregorii Papae IX… [Rome, 1584], p. 496: “per testes enim antiquos utriusque parochiae probatur hujusmodi divisio 16 q 1. Plures [C. 16. q. 1 c. 54], & rusticis senibus praecipue in antiquis creditur ff de leg. 3 si chorus [D. 32. 1. 79. 1], & fama in talibus praecipue valet, quorum memoria non habetur ff de probatio, si arbiter, ff de aq. plu. arc, in summa, § item Labeo [D. 22. 3. 28 and 39. 3. 2. 8]”.) He goes on to assert that fama is not a full proof.
    • X. 2. 19. 13: “secundum divisiones, quae per libros antiquos vel alio modo melius probantur, necnon et testes, famam et quaecunque alia adminicula.” Gloss testes, fama (In Decretales D. Gregorii Papae IX… [Rome, 1584], p. 496: “per testes enim antiquos utriusque parochiae probatur hujusmodi divisio 16 q 1. Plures [C. 16. q. 1 c. 54], & rusticis senibus praecipue in antiquis creditur ff de leg. 3 si chorus [D. 32. 1. 79. 1], & fama in talibus praecipue valet, quorum memoria non habetur ff de probatio, si arbiter, ff de aq. plu. arc, in summa, § item Labeo [D. 22. 3. 28 and 39. 3. 2. 8]”.) He goes on to assert that fama is not a full proof.
    • “secundum divisiones, quae per libros antiquos vel alio modo melius probantur, necnon et testes, famam et quaecunque alia adminicula.”
  • 156
    • 85022868284 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Cons. 420 no. 1, fo. 124r; ii, Cons. 286 no. 1, fols. 72v-73; iii, Cons. 468, nos. 1-2, fo. 123v; v, Cons. 445, nos. 1 & 4, fols. 107v-108r.
    • Consiliorum i, Cons. 420 no. 1, fo. 124r; ii, Cons. 286 no. 1, fols. 72v-73; iii, Cons. 468, nos. 1-2, fo. 123v; v, Cons. 445, nos. 1 & 4, fols. 107v-108r.
    • Consiliorum i
  • 157
    • 85022868284 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Cons. 89 no. 5, fo. 26r, for proof of ancestral title: “Tertio praemittendum est, quod licet fama non probet verum dominium, nee veram possessionem ex pro pria virtute famae… tamen fama multum [sic] antiqua, & quae transcendit sensum hominum viventium, facit notorium, & probat in vim notorii. Ista est glo. ordi. ff de neg. gest. 1. at qui natura § cum me absente [D. 3. 5. 19. 3, gloss Committat, 2., “Vel erat manifestum per publicam famam… “]… “
    • Consiliorum i, Cons. 89 no. 5, fo. 26r, for proof of ancestral title: “Tertio praemittendum est, quod licet fama non probet verum dominium, nee veram possessionem ex pro pria virtute famae… tamen fama multum [sic] antiqua, & quae transcendit sensum hominum viventium, facit notorium, & probat in vim notorii. Ista est glo. ordi. ff de neg. gest. 1. at qui natura § cum me absente [D. 3. 5. 19. 3, gloss Committat, 2., “Vel erat manifestum per publicam famam… “]… “
    • Consiliorum i
  • 159
    • 85022773768 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • sive Responsorum, Volumen Sextum (Venice, 1602), Cons. 114, at no. 13, general harvest failure, and cf. matters of general history, Levy, La Hierarchie des preuves
    • E.g., Baldus, Baldi Ubaldi Perusini… Consiliorum, sive Responsorum, Volumen Sextum (Venice, 1602), Cons. 114, pp. 219-23, at no. 13, general harvest failure, and cf. matters of general history, Levy, La Hierarchie des preuves, 49.
    • Baldi Ubaldi Perusini… Consiliorum , pp. 219-223
    • Baldus1
  • 162
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    • 50 and especially nn.
    • La Hierarchie des preuves., 50 and especially nn. 48-19.
    • La Hierarchie des preuves , pp. 19-48
  • 163
    • 85022795370 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ” For a rather less precise view, cf. J. Ayliffe, Parergon Iuris Canonici Anglicani (London, 1726)
    • Waelkens, “L'Origine.” For a rather less precise view, cf. J. Ayliffe, Parergon Iuris Canonici Anglicani (London, 1726), 196.
    • “L'Origine , pp. 196
    • Waelkens1
  • 166
    • 85022771435 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • 4 q. 2 & 3 c. 3 [i.e., the consentiens fama text from D. 22. 5. 3. 2], in Decretum Gratiani Emendatum… (Rome, 1584), i p. 723: “… & si iudex dubitat de fama, quaerat a vicinis ff. de magi, conve. 1. 1 § si praeses [D. 27. 8. 1. 3] & magis valeat fama quam unus testis ut extra, de consan. & af. super eo [X. 4. 13. 5 or 4. 14. 2]. Potest autem fama probari per duos testes, ut extra, eo tam litteris.” Cf. also the mid-thirteenth century Summaoi Magister Aegidius, a judge at Bologna, tit. 73, inWahrmund, Quellen, 1, vi, p. 25: “Nota, quod aliquando fiunt inquisitiones et recipiuntur testes sine aliqua accusatione vel denuntiatione super maleficiis, id est super homicidis, furtis et similibus. Et tune tabellio accedat ad locum, ubi maleficium perpetratum est, et a convicinis vel hominibus de incontrata recipiat iuramenta et inquirat de veritate secundum qualitatem delicti… ”
    • Gloss Saepe to C. 4 q. 2 & 3 c. 3 [i.e., the consentiens fama text from D. 22. 5. 3. 2], in Decretum Gratiani Emendatum… (Rome, 1584), i p. 723: “… & si iudex dubitat de fama, quaerat a vicinis ff. de magi, conve. 1. 1 § si praeses [D. 27. 8. 1. 3] & magis valeat fama quam unus testis ut extra, de consan. & af. super eo [X. 4. 13. 5 or 4. 14. 2]. Potest autem fama probari per duos testes, ut extra, eo tam litteris.” Cf. also the mid-thirteenth century Summaoi Magister Aegidius, a judge at Bologna, tit. 73, inWahrmund, Quellen, 1, vi, p. 25: “Nota, quod aliquando fiunt inquisitiones et recipiuntur testes sine aliqua accusatione vel denuntiatione super maleficiis, id est super homicidis, furtis et similibus. Et tune tabellio accedat ad locum, ubi maleficium perpetratum est, et a convicinis vel hominibus de incontrata recipiat iuramenta et inquirat de veritate secundum qualitatem delicti… ”
    • Gloss Saepe to C
  • 167
    • 85022743036 scopus 로고
    • ” 618 ff.; C. Donahue, Jr., “Proof by Witnesses in the Church Courts of Medieval England: An Imperfect Reception of the Learned Law,” in On the Laws and Customs of England: Essays in Honor of Samuel E. Thome, ed. M. S. Arnold et al. (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press), 136-37
    • Helmholz, “Early History,” 618 ff.; C. Donahue, Jr., “Proof by Witnesses in the Church Courts of Medieval England: An Imperfect Reception of the Learned Law,” in On the Laws and Customs of England: Essays in Honor of Samuel E. Thome, ed. M. S. Arnold et al. (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1981), 136-37, 140, 150-51.
    • (1981) “Early History , vol.140 , pp. 150-151
    • Helmholz1
  • 168
    • 85022886433 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • D. 1 c. 46, in Decretum Gratiani Universi Iuris Canonici Pontificas Constitutiones… (Venice, 1567)
    • Gloss Ex vicina to De poen. D. 1 c. 46, in Decretum Gratiani Universi Iuris Canonici Pontificas Constitutiones… (Venice, 1567), p. 1105.
    • Gloss Ex vicina to De poen , pp. 1105
  • 172
    • 85022863358 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • in Decretum Gratiani Universi Iuris Canonici Pontificas Constitutiones… (Venice, 1567)
    • Gloss Nescire to C. 23 q. 1, in Decretum Gratiani Universi Iuris Canonici Pontificas Constitutiones… (Venice, 1567), p. 841.
    • Gloss Nescire to C. 23 q. 1 , pp. 841
  • 175
    • 85022760366 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • notes 171-72
    • See above, notes 171-72, 176-77.
    • above , pp. 176-177
  • 177
    • 85022858271 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • (e.g., nos. 100, 104, 105, 112, 121, 122, 123) and the forms offered are: ordeal 10, ordeal or battle 7, “proof unspecified 5, oath or ordeal 1. In the pre-1164 cases on land there are only three instances of the use or offer of the judgment of God; two cases of battle, one dating to 1154 x 1158, and one of unilateral oath. In contrast, in the post-1165 cases there are 14 instances of the use of the judgment of God, all of the use or offer of battle. The routine use of battle in land cases therefore seems to be an innovation in the reign of Henry II. On criminal cases, see Bartlett, Trial by Fire and Water
    • In the Domesday cases, the judgment of God commonly seems to be offered as a challenge to the testimony of a local court (e.g., nos. 100, 104, 105, 112, 121, 122, 123) and the forms offered are: ordeal 10, ordeal or battle 7, “proof unspecified 5, oath or ordeal 1. In the pre-1164 cases on land there are only three instances of the use or offer of the judgment of God; two cases of battle, one dating to 1154 x 1158, and one of unilateral oath. In contrast, in the post-1165 cases there are 14 instances of the use of the judgment of God, all of the use or offer of battle. The routine use of battle in land cases therefore seems to be an innovation in the reign of Henry II. On criminal cases, see Bartlett, Trial by Fire and Water, 65-68.
    • the Domesday cases, the judgment of God commonly seems to be offered as a challenge to the testimony of a local court , pp. 65-68
  • 178
    • 85022801917 scopus 로고
    • Cambridge Studies in English Legal History (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1976); Palmer, “The Feudal Framework of English Law,” Michigan Law Review 79 (1981): 1130-64; “The Origins of Property in England,” Law and History Review 3
    • Milsom, most fully in The Legal Framework of English Feudalism. Cambridge Studies in English Legal History (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1976); Palmer, “The Feudal Framework of English Law,” Michigan Law Review 79 (1981): 1130-64; “The Origins of Property in England,” Law and History Review 3 (1985): 1-50.
    • (1985) Milsom, most fully in The Legal Framework of English Feudalism , pp. 1-50
  • 179
    • 85022843465 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • see above, note
    • For Hyams, see above, note 25.
    • For Hyams , pp. 25
  • 180
    • 85022784006 scopus 로고
    • see, e.g., Paul Brand, ‘“Multis Vigiliis Excogitatam et Inventam': Henry II and the Creation of the English Common Law,” in idem, The Making of the Common Law (London: Hambledon Press, 1992), 78-102, especially 81-83, and “The Origins of English Land Law: Milsom and After” in For Hyams., 203-25; and cf. R. V. Turner, The English Judiciary in the Age of Glanvill and Bracton, c. 1176-1239 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press). For a critique of the “sovereignty” of feudal courts, see, e.g., Hudson, Land, Law and Lordship, and The Formation of the English Common Law; Reynolds, Fiefs and Vassals
    • For the emphasis on deliberate features, see, e.g., Paul Brand, ‘“Multis Vigiliis Excogitatam et Inventam': Henry II and the Creation of the English Common Law,” in idem, The Making of the Common Law (London: Hambledon Press, 1992), 78-102, especially 81-83, and “The Origins of English Land Law: Milsom and After” in For Hyams., 203-25; and cf. R. V. Turner, The English Judiciary in the Age of Glanvill and Bracton, c. 1176-1239 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985). For a critique of the “sovereignty” of feudal courts, see, e.g., Hudson, Land, Law and Lordship, and The Formation of the English Common Law; Reynolds, Fiefs and Vassals, 374-86.
    • (1985) For the emphasis on deliberate features , pp. 374-386
  • 182
    • 85022898268 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • in Law and Social Change in British History, ed. J. A. Guy and H. G. Beale (London: Royal Historical Society, 1984), 9-26. Relations with the church are also identified as critical to the formation of the common law by Harold J. Berman, Law and Revolution: The Formation of the Western Legal Tradition (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1983), 435-59; T. G. Watkin, “The Political Philosophy of the Lord King,” in Communities and Courts in Britain, 1150-1900, ed. Christopher Brooks and Michael Lobban (London: Hambledon Press, 1997), 6-12; and Bruce O'Brien, “The Becket Conflict and the Invention of the Myth of Lex non scripta” (paper presented at the Thirteenth British Legal History Conference, Cambridge, July).
    • M. G. Cheney, “The Litigation between John Marshal and Thomas Becket in 1164: A Pointer to the Origin of Novel Disseisin?” in Law and Social Change in British History, ed. J. A. Guy and H. G. Beale (London: Royal Historical Society, 1984), 9-26. Relations with the church are also identified as critical to the formation of the common law by Harold J. Berman, Law and Revolution: The Formation of the Western Legal Tradition (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1983), 435-59; T. G. Watkin, “The Political Philosophy of the Lord King,” in Communities and Courts in Britain, 1150-1900, ed. Christopher Brooks and Michael Lobban (London: Hambledon Press, 1997), 6-12; and Bruce O'Brien, “The Becket Conflict and the Invention of the Myth of Lex non scripta” (paper presented at the Thirteenth British Legal History Conference, Cambridge, July 1997).
    • (1997) “The Litigation between John Marshal and Thomas Becket in 1164: A Pointer to the Origin of Novel Disseisin?”
    • Cheney, M.G.1
  • 185
    • 85022769789 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • see “Conclusion,” Settlement of Disputes, 219; their use in twelfth-century England is apparent from Tables 2 and 3 above; and cf. Fleming, “Oral Testimony and the Domesday Inquest,” 111: “In all of Domesday Book, oral testimony never supersedes written testimony.”
    • For the value of documents in early medieval litigation generally, see “Conclusion,” Settlement of Disputes, 219; their use in twelfth-century England is apparent from Tables 2 and 3 above; and cf. Fleming, “Oral Testimony and the Domesday Inquest,” 111: “In all of Domesday Book, oral testimony never supersedes written testimony.”
    • For the value of documents in early medieval litigation generally
  • 188
    • 1842493840 scopus 로고
    • (London: Eyre Methuen), 262-63; Warren argues passim that this aim was the key to Henry's general policy.
    • W. L. Warren, Henry II (London: Eyre Methuen, 1973), 262-63; Warren argues passim that this aim was the key to Henry's general policy.
    • (1973) Henry II
    • Warren, W.L.1
  • 189
    • 0009974920 scopus 로고
    • 9th ed. (rev. H. W. C. Davis, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1929), 122: “et hoc duello fiat, nisi in eis remanserit” (“and this [trial] shall be by battle, unless the parties stop this”). (This translation follows Felix Liebermann, Die Gesetze der Angelsachsen [reprint, Tubingen: Scientia Aalen, 1960], 3:301, 300, Einleitung no. 8, and 2:755, Zweikampfno. 11, in preference to Carl Stephenson and F. G. Marcham, Sources of English Consitutional History [New York: Harper, 1937], 49, no. 24, “unless it is given up through their own fault” and to D. C. Douglas and G. W. Greenaway, English Historical Documents [London,], 2:433, no. 43, “and if it be not there [in the County Court] settled.”)
    • William Stubbs, ed., Select Charters and Other Illustrations of English Constitutional History…, 9th ed. (rev. H. W. C. Davis, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1929), 122: “et hoc duello fiat, nisi in eis remanserit” (“and this [trial] shall be by battle, unless the parties stop this”). (This translation follows Felix Liebermann, Die Gesetze der Angelsachsen [reprint, Tubingen: Scientia Aalen, 1960], 3:301, 300, Einleitung no. 8, and 2:755, Zweikampfno. 11, in preference to Carl Stephenson and F. G. Marcham, Sources of English Consitutional History [New York: Harper, 1937], 49, no. 24, “unless it is given up through their own fault” and to D. C. Douglas and G. W. Greenaway, English Historical Documents [London, 1953], 2:433, no. 43, “and if it be not there [in the County Court] settled.”)
    • (1953) Select Charters and Other Illustrations of English Constitutional History
    • Stubbs, W.1
  • 191
    • 84947061336 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • 250, no. 296. The defendant refuses episcopal jurisdiction; both a mandate from the papal legate, and a royal writ, instruct the recognition to be made.
    • Lawsuits, 250, no. 296. The defendant refuses episcopal jurisdiction; both a mandate from the papal legate, and a royal writ, instruct the recognition to be made.
    • Lawsuits
  • 196
    • 85022769437 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • xiv, 1, is supported on this by the evidence from Lawsuits. See above
    • Glanvill, xiv, 1, is supported on this by the evidence from Lawsuits. See above, 568.
    • Glanvill , pp. 568
  • 197
    • 85022756070 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • xiv, l,p. 171. Hall translates a s “… but the accusation is based only on public notoriety,” and footnotes “i.e. is by presentment.” In spite of the relationship between fama and notoriety in canon law at this period, fama here clearly means fama, not notoriety.
    • Glanvill, xiv, l,p. 171. Hall translates a s “… but the accusation is based only on public notoriety,” and footnotes “i.e. is by presentment.” In spite of the relationship between fama and notoriety in canon law at this period, fama here clearly means fama, not notoriety.
    • Glanvill
  • 199
  • 201
    • 85022789190 scopus 로고
    • ” American Journal of Legal History 27 (1983): 113-4-1; and cf. also M. H. Kerr, “Angevin Reform of the Appeal of Felony,” Law and History Review 13
    • Roger D. Groot, “The Jury in Private Criminal Prosecutions before 1215,” American Journal of Legal History 27 (1983): 113-4-1; and cf. also M. H. Kerr, “Angevin Reform of the Appeal of Felony,” Law and History Review 13 (1995): 369-73.
    • (1995) “The Jury in Private Criminal Prosecutions before 1215 , pp. 369-373
    • Groot, R.D.1
  • 202
    • 85022797697 scopus 로고
    • Selden Society, (1888), pi. 29, cited by Pollock and Maitland, History of English Law, 2:622, n. 3; M. J. Russell, “Trial by Battle and the Appeal of Felony,” Journal of Legal History
    • F. W. Maitland, ed., Select Pleas of the Crown, Selden Society, vol. 1 (1888), pi. 29, cited by Pollock and Maitland, History of English Law, 2:622, n. 3; M. J. Russell, “Trial by Battle and the Appeal of Felony,” Journal of Legal History 1 (1980): 146.
    • (1980) Select Pleas of the Crown , vol.1 , pp. 146
    • Maitland, F.W.1
  • 205
    • 84955875947 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • English Justice, 353, Sutherland, Novel Disseisin, chap. 1, Cheney, “The Litigation,” and Biancalana, “For Want of Justice,” 476-81, as opposed to van Caenegem, Royal Writs in England, 285-303, who is followed by Warren, Henry II, 337-38, and Milsom, Historical Foundations of the Common Law 138-39.The point is not essential to my argument, since the issues were still live through the 1170s.
    • This is the view of Stenton, English Justice, 353, Sutherland, Novel Disseisin, chap. 1, Cheney, “The Litigation,” and Biancalana, “For Want of Justice,” 476-81, as opposed to van Caenegem, Royal Writs in England, 285-303, who is followed by Warren, Henry II, 337-38, and Milsom, Historical Foundations of the Common Law 138-39.The point is not essential to my argument, since the issues were still live through the 1170s.
    • This is the view of Stenton
  • 207
    • 85022818477 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Glanvill, x, 12, p. 127; judgment of a local court, “The Litigation.”., viii
    • Documents, Glanvill, x, 12, p. 127; judgment of a local court, “The Litigation.”., viii, 8, p. 101.
    • Documents , vol.8 , pp. 101
  • 208
    • 85022794738 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • 7, and compare also the general statement that battle and documents are the normal modes of proof in court (Documents., x, 17, p. 132).
    • Glanvill ii, 7, p. 38, and compare also the general statement that battle and documents are the normal modes of proof in court (Documents., x, 17, p. 132).
    • Glanvill ii , pp. 38
  • 210
    • 85022756070 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ii, 10 and 11, On the possible relationship to devolutions of title, compare Warren, Henry II, 349-50; in contrast Hyams, “Trial by Ordeal,” 118, n. 153, identifies the question as normative or mixed.
    • Glanvill, ii, 10 and 11, p. 30. On the possible relationship to devolutions of title, compare Warren, Henry II, 349-50; in contrast Hyams, “Trial by Ordeal,” 118, n. 153, identifies the question as normative or mixed.
    • Glanvill , pp. 30
  • 212
  • 213
    • 85022890817 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • see, e.g., Robert C. Palmer, English Law in the Age of the Black Death (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1993), part 1; W. M. Ormrod, Political Life in Medieval England, 1300-1450 (London: St. Martin, 1995), chap. 6; Anthony Musson, Public Order and Law Enforcement: The Local Administration of Criminal Justice, 1294-1350 (Woodbridge: Boydell Press), chap. 11.
    • For recent discussions of political issues around central and local administration of justice in the fourteenth century, see, e.g., Robert C. Palmer, English Law in the Age of the Black Death (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1993), part 1; W. M. Ormrod, Political Life in Medieval England, 1300-1450 (London: St. Martin, 1995), chap. 6; Anthony Musson, Public Order and Law Enforcement: The Local Administration of Criminal Justice, 1294-1350 (Woodbridge: Boydell Press, 1996), chap. 11.
    • (1996) For recent discussions of political issues around central and local administration of justice in the fourteenth century


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