Fr. 81.00

Cultures of Law in Urban Northern Europe - Scotland and Its Neighbours C.1350c.1650

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Drawing together an international team of historians, lawyers and historical sociolinguists, this volume investigates urban cultures of law in Scotland, with a special focus on Aberdeen and its rich civic archive, the Low Countries, Norway, Germany and Poland from c. 1350 to c. 1650.

In these essays, the contributors seek to understand how law works in its cultural and social contexts by focusing specifically on the urban experience and, to a great extent, on urban records. The contributions are concerned with understanding late medieval and early modern legal experts as well as the users of courts and legal services, the languages and records of law, and legal activities occurring inside and outside of official legal fora. This volume considers what the expectations of people at different status levels were for the use of the law, what perceptions of justice and authority existed among different groups, and what their knowledge was of law and legal procedure. By examining how different aspects of legal culture came to be recorded in writing, the contributors reveal how that writing itself then became part of a culture of law.

Cultures of Law in Urban Northern Europe: Scotland and its Neighbours c.1350-c.1650 combines the historical study of law, towns, language and politics in a way that will be accessible and compelling for advanced level undergraduates and postgraduate to postdoctoral researchers and academics in medieval and early modern, urban, legal, political and linguistic history.

List of contents

INTRODUCTION: Investigating cultures of law in urban northern Europe  PART I: Telling tales  1. Telling tales: maritime law in Aberdeen in the early sixteenth century  PART II: Communication of law  2. Common books in Aberdeen, c. 1398-c. 1511  3. The language of medieval legal record as a complex multilingual code  4. The vernacularisation of the Aberdeen Council Registers (1398-1511)  PART III: Jurisdiction and conflict  5. Urban law in Norwegian market towns: legal culture in a long fourteenth century  6. The burgh and the forest: burgesses and officers in fifteenth-century Scotland  7. Pax urbana. The use of law for the achievement of political goals  8. Recalcitrant brides and grooms. jurisdiction, marriage, and conflicts with parents in fifteenth-century Ghent PART IV: Law in practice, in and out of court  9. Legal business outside the courts: private and public houses as spaces of law in the fifteenth century  10. Conflicts about property: ships and inheritances in Danzig and in the Hanse area (fifteenth to sixteenth centuries)  11. 'Malice' and motivation for hostility in the burgh courts of late medieval Aberdeen  PART V: Men of law in Scotland  12. Bells, clocks and the beginnings of 'lawyer time' in late medieval Scotland  13. Andrew Alanson: man of law in the Aberdeen Council Register, c. 1440-c. 1475?  14. Notaries and advocates in early modern Aberdeen

About the author

Jackson W. Armstrong is a Senior Lecturer in History at the University of Aberdeen, Scotland. He is the author of England’s Northern Frontier: Conflict and Local Society in the Fifteenth-Century Scottish Marches (2020).
Edda Frankot is Associate Professor in History at Nord University in Bodø, Norway. She specialises in late medieval urban, maritime and legal history. She is the author of ‘Of Laws of Ships and Shipmen’. Medieval Maritime Law and its Practice in Urban Northern Europe (2012).

Summary

Drawing together an international team of historians, lawyers and historical sociolinguists, this volume investigates urban cultures of law in Scotland, with a special focus on Aberdeen and its rich civic archive, the Low Countries, Norway, Germany and Poland from c. 1350 to c. 1650.

Report

John Cairns, The Edinburgh Legal History Blog, on Cultures of Law in Urban Northern Europe - https://www.elhblog.law.ed.ac.uk/2020/11/29/new-innovative-legal-histories-armstrong-frankot-laske/
"This work is a testament to the value of these digital records and the work behind transcribing them. Similarly, it is itself evidence of how a diverse range of voices, accounts, and approaches can all be unified by reference to one particular source. The work not only seeks to understand a historical legal culture but also represents something of a new scholarly culture that highlights the individual and the particular in legal history." Jasmin Hepburn (2021) Comparative Legal History, 9:2, 247-250, DOI: 10.1080/2049677X.2021.1997381.

 

Product details

Authors Jackson W. Frankot Armstrong
Assisted by Jackson W Armstrong (Editor), Jackson W. Armstrong (Editor), Edda Frankot (Editor)
Publisher Taylor & Francis Ltd.
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 25.11.2020
 
EAN 9780367206796
ISBN 978-0-367-20679-6
No. of pages 288
Series Themes in Medieval and Early Modern History
Subject Humanities, art, music > Education > Social education, social work

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