Module Identifier LA33210  
Module Title ORIGINS OF THE COMMON LAW  
Academic Year 2005/2006  
Co-ordinator Mr Richard W Ireland  
Semester Intended for use in future years  
Next year offered N/A  
Next semester offered N/A  
Course delivery Lecture   two one hour lectures per week  
  Seminars / Tutorials   Seminar. four one hour seminars during the semester  
Assessment
Assessment TypeAssessment Length/DetailsProportion
Semester Exam1.5 Hours  50%
Semester Assessment Essay: Assessed essay of 2000 words required by week 11  50%
Professional Exemptions Not Required for Professional Purposes  

Learning outcomes

On successful completion of this module students should be able to:
To gain knowledge of seminal events in the foundation of the English legal system. To analyse factors which are important in the process of legal development and to demonstrate an awareness of and a capacity to engage in legal historical analysis. To acquaint students with the sources of knowledge in this area and problems with their use.

Brief description

This course examines legal history from a jurisprudential rather than simply an antiquarian angle - it aims, that is, to investigate in detail a particular period of legal change and to see the development of rules and institutions as responsive to and generative of wider social development. To examine such events properly we must avoid the temptation of seeing the past simply as a step on the road to the present. To do our predecessors justice we must understand what law meant to them, not what it came to mean to us. Only in this way will our understanding of the role and technique of law in society be broadened. It is a little like trying to work out how an octopus functions - get too close to a live one and you may get disastrously entangled, but look closely at a slice of a dead one and you may learn a lot about what makes them work. Such considerations inform this course. It concentrates on the period from roughly 1066-1307 to examine the events that may be described as "the birth of the common law".
Students will be encouraged to become acquainted with the nature of the legal records of the time (in facsimile!) and to work with primary sources (cases, statutes, treatises) in translation where necessary. "The past is a foreign country" is by now a cliche, but remember that travel broadens the mind. No previous knowledge of history or of language is required to study this course, merely interest, application and imagination. Then you may consider such cases as that of Richard Fitznigel and the scabby monk. The cast list is fabulous, the plots are amazing.

Aims

To consider law from a historical perspective in order to investigate its role in responding to and initiating wider social change. In the light of such consideration a critical and inquiring approach to legal phenomena is developed.

Content

Syllabus:
A. THE BIRTH OF THE COMMON LAW

1. The Court System
Local and central courts, itinerant justices, ecclesiastical courts. The nature, jurisdiction and inter-relationship of these bodies will be considered.

2. Civil Procedures
The writ system, the process before and at trial, pleading, proof (the trials by ordeal, battle and oathhelping, the rise of the jury), execution of judgement.

3. Legal Literature
Treatises, rolls, reports, the nature of, and difficulties with, legal literature of the period and a consideration of its authors and readership.

4. Land Law
The social significance and jurisprudential structure of landholding tenures and incidents, estates and the actions for recovery of real property.

Reading Lists

Books
** Recommended Text
J H Baker Introduction to English Legal History 3rd.
S F C Milson Historical Foundations of the Common Law 2nd.
** Recommended Background
D M Stenton English Society in the Early Middle Ages

Notes

This module is at CQFW Level 6