The Reinvention of Magna Carta 1216-1616

The Reinvention of Magna Carta 1216-1616 - Cambridge Studies in English Legal History

Hardback (26 Jan 2017)

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Publisher's Synopsis

This new account of the influence of Magna Carta on the development of English public law is based largely on unpublished manuscripts. The story was discontinuous. Between the fourteenth and sixteenth centuries the charter was practically a spent force. Late-medieval law lectures gave no hint of its later importance, and even in the 1550s a commentary on Magna Carta by William Fleetwood was still cast in the late-medieval mould. Constitutional issues rarely surfaced in the courts. But a new impetus was given to chapter 29 in 1581 by the 'Puritan' barrister Robert Snagge, and by the speeches and tracts of his colleagues, and by 1587 it was being exploited by lawyers in a variety of contexts. Edward Coke seized on the new learning at once. He made extensive claims for chapter 29 while at the bar, linking it with habeas corpus, and then as a judge (1606-16) he deployed it with effect in challenging encroachments on the common law. The book ends in 1616 with the lectures of Francis Ashley, summarising the new learning, and (a few weeks later) Coke's dismissal for defending too vigorously the liberty of the subject under the common law.

Book information

ISBN: 9781107187054
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Imprint: Cambridge University Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 342.42029
DEWEY edition: 23
Language: English
Number of pages: xlix, 570
Weight: 1030g
Height: 235mm
Width: 159mm
Spine width: 40mm