Book contents
- Networks and Connections in Legal History
- Networks and Connections in Legal History
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Networks and Influences
- 3 Men of Law and Legal Networks in Aberdeen, Principally in 1600–1650
- 4 Calling Time at the Bar
- 5 The Thistle, the Rose, and the Palm
- 6 ‘The Bengal Boiler’
- 7 The White Ensign on Land
- 8 A Broker’s Advice
- 9 Trans-Atlantic Connections
- 10 Interpretatio ex aequo et bono
- 11 Shakespeare and the European ius commune
- 12 Law Reporting and Law-Making
- 13 John Taylor Coleridge and English Criminal Law
- Index
5 - The Thistle, the Rose, and the Palm
Scottish and English Judges in British East Florida
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 August 2020
- Networks and Connections in Legal History
- Networks and Connections in Legal History
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Networks and Influences
- 3 Men of Law and Legal Networks in Aberdeen, Principally in 1600–1650
- 4 Calling Time at the Bar
- 5 The Thistle, the Rose, and the Palm
- 6 ‘The Bengal Boiler’
- 7 The White Ensign on Land
- 8 A Broker’s Advice
- 9 Trans-Atlantic Connections
- 10 Interpretatio ex aequo et bono
- 11 Shakespeare and the European ius commune
- 12 Law Reporting and Law-Making
- 13 John Taylor Coleridge and English Criminal Law
- Index
Summary
The National Archives (Kew) contain a small trove of court records from the province of East Florida. These records indicate at least eight separate courts were in operation during the British period from 1763 to 1784. Until now, these legal papers were thought to have been lost or destroyed. They reveal an unexplored world of British and colonial American legal history. St Augustine, East Florida, was a southern colonial legal hub in the British Empire before, during, and after North American independence. This chapter examines the judges of the province and their links to Scotland, England, and British colonies to the north of the province. Allocation of legal positions in East Florida reflected extant Scottish and English networks and connections found throughout the Empire.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Networks and Connections in Legal History , pp. 88 - 123Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020