Book contents
- Collected Papers on English Legal History: Volume I
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledments
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction
- PART I The Legal Profession
- PART II The Inns of Court and Chancery
- PART III Legal Education
- PART IV Courts and Jurisdictions
- Collected Papers on English Legal History: Volume II
- Contents
- PART V Legal Literature
- 29 The Three Languages of the Common Law
- 30 Case-Law in Medieval England
- 31 Dr Thomas Fastolf and the History of Law Reporting
- 32 John Bryt's Reports and the Year Books of Henry IV
- 33 Case-Law in England and Continental Europe
- 34 The Books of the Common Law 1400–1557
- 35 English Law Books and Legal Publishing 1557–1695
- 36 Books of Entries
- 37 Manuscripts in the Inner Temple
- 38 Common Lawyers' Libraries 1450–1650
- 39 John Rastell and the Terms of the Law
- 40 Coke's Notebooks and the Sources of his Reports
- 41 John Selden and English Legal History
- 42 The Newe Littleton
- 43 Sir Thomas Robinson's Notebooks
- PART VI Legal Antiquities
- PART VII Public Law and Individual Status
- PART VIII Criminal Justice
- Collected Papers on English Legal History: Volume III
- Contents
- PART IX Private Law
- PART X General
- Bibliography of the Published Works of Sir John Baker
- Index
38 - Common Lawyers' Libraries 1450–1650
from PART V - Legal Literature
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 December 2014
- Collected Papers on English Legal History: Volume I
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledments
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction
- PART I The Legal Profession
- PART II The Inns of Court and Chancery
- PART III Legal Education
- PART IV Courts and Jurisdictions
- Collected Papers on English Legal History: Volume II
- Contents
- PART V Legal Literature
- 29 The Three Languages of the Common Law
- 30 Case-Law in Medieval England
- 31 Dr Thomas Fastolf and the History of Law Reporting
- 32 John Bryt's Reports and the Year Books of Henry IV
- 33 Case-Law in England and Continental Europe
- 34 The Books of the Common Law 1400–1557
- 35 English Law Books and Legal Publishing 1557–1695
- 36 Books of Entries
- 37 Manuscripts in the Inner Temple
- 38 Common Lawyers' Libraries 1450–1650
- 39 John Rastell and the Terms of the Law
- 40 Coke's Notebooks and the Sources of his Reports
- 41 John Selden and English Legal History
- 42 The Newe Littleton
- 43 Sir Thomas Robinson's Notebooks
- PART VI Legal Antiquities
- PART VII Public Law and Individual Status
- PART VIII Criminal Justice
- Collected Papers on English Legal History: Volume III
- Contents
- PART IX Private Law
- PART X General
- Bibliography of the Published Works of Sir John Baker
- Index
Summary
Law is a profession which still requires its leading specialists to own large collections of books, and this was equally true before our period, when Chaucer's serjeant had ‘cas and doomes alle | That from the tyme of kyng William were falle’. Indeed, at the start of our period these private libraries were the only libraries of the common law in being, and they could hardly have constituted more than a shelf- or case-full, even for a judge. By 1600 the typical library would have been much larger, and Sears Jayne has been deservedly criticised for not recognising lawyers as a book-owning class in the Renaissance period.
Personal Libraries
We do not have any reliably complete inventories of lawyers' libraries before the Stuart period, and there are not many even then. There are plenty of mentions of law books in wills, but these seem to be selective. It was only necessary to make specific bequests of the more valuable or splendid contents of the library, and the workaday volumes were either left generically to a relative who seemed inclined to the law or passed over in silence.
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- Information
- Collected Papers on English Legal History , pp. 707 - 718Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2013