... Vigeois (RHF, xviii, p. 212); Actes de Henri II, no. dcxvii; RH, ii, p. 273; Gesta, p. 291; RT, ii, p. 117.Duke Geoffrey, HenryIIand the Angevin empire131Young King in 1169 and again in January ... if HenryII intended to divide his landsbetween his sons, the intention was that Henry, as eldest, wouldsucceed to the patrimonial lands of England, Normandy and Anjou,Richard to Aquitaine and ... 1186,15RT, ii, p. 10±12; RH, ii, p. 273; Gesta, p. 291; RD, ii, p. 18.16Pipe Roll 29 Henry II, p. 56; EYC, iv, pp. 111±2.Duke Geoffrey, HenryIIand the Angevin empire127Roger of Howden and Gerald...
... inconvenientlylong and ill-de®ned, borders with his continental dominions posed athreat to the security andorder of these regions. Hence, like Wales,Scotland and Ireland, it was suf®cient for Henry II& apos;s ... of independent barons whose loyalty to HenryII could Henry IIand Brittany35to HenryII in England, the king took a rib, which he had encased insilver and sent it back to the abbey of Saint-MeÂen, ... d'Henri II, nos. ccclxviii and ccclxix.74Gesta, p. 101; RH, ii, p. 72; RT, ii, p. 56.75Gesta, p. 194; Actes d'Henri II, nos. dvii, dlxxxv.76There are three contemporary accounts: RH, ii, ...
... was a genuine law that did not at the same (II) : Autonomy and the moral order compatible with a conception of ourselves as “transcendentally free,” and only a self-instituted law that was binding ... to terms withthe “Kantian paradox.” (II) : Autonomy and the moral order With that deft move, Kant proposed not merely a new model of mind and world, and of moral obligation in general. He ... systembased on freedom. One’s capacity to (II) : Autonomy and the moral order present? The most general objective practical laws that we formulate areimperatives, commands of a sort, such as, “if you...
... Labour Law Birkinshaw: European Public law Birkinshaw: Freedom of Information: The Law, the Practice and the IdealCane: Atiyah’s Accidents, Compensation and the Law Clarke & Kohler: Property Law: ... Introduction to Law and RegulationText and MaterialsBronwen Morgan and Karen Yeungsegments of society. Laws of this sort are a product of deliberative processes on thepart of citizens and representatives. ... SenseDiduck: Law s FamiliesElworthy & Holder: Environmental Protection: Text and MaterialsFortin: Children’s Rights and the Developing Law Glover-Thomas: Reconstructing Mental Health Lawand PolicyGobert...
... systems specifically accepted by Tamanaha as law are state law, customary law, religious law, international law, transnational law, indigenous lawand natural law (pp. 224–30).52Tamanaha, General ... Order: The Reconciliation of Lawand Religion (Atlanta:Scholars Press, 1993), ch. 13.60See Berman, Lawand Revolution; and more recently, his Lawand Revolution, II: the Impact ofthe Protestant ... ‘Globalisation and Comparative Law in David Nelkin and Elsin Orucu (eds.), Comparative Law: A Hart Handbook (Oxford: HartPublishing, forthcoming).59See Harold J. Berman, Faith and Order: The...
... in Queen Maud Land; see W. M. Bush, Antarctica and International Law: A Collection of Inter-State and National Documents, Vol. III (London:Oceana Publications, 1988), pp. 171 and 195.37See ... pre-UNCLOS III law of the seaThe law of the sea is inherently global. The International Law Com-mission assumed as much in its codification of the subject in the 1950s; and thewords ‘region’ and ‘regional’ ... book. See also L. M. Alexander, ‘Regionalism and the Law ofthe Sea: The Case of Semi-Enclosed Seas’, Ocean Development and International Law, Vol. 2, 1974,p. 151; and Vallega, ‘The Regional...
... command. We might depict this rolefor law with the image of law as umpire.This brings to the fore the expressive facet of our depiction of the law s role,which also draws on the images of law ... by the image of law as threat. In the second, law facilitates the interactionof state and market, and thereby contributes to delineating the boundary betweenthem. In so doing, law enables transactions ... The law s facilitative and expressive dimensions areboth discussed in Chapters 4 to 6 when considering the law s respective roles inregulatory enforcement, legitimacy and accountability, and...
... Nantes and of63KerherveÂ, L'Etat breton, i, pp. 41±2.The government of Brittany under Henry II 913THE GOVERNMENT OF BRITTANYUNDER HENRY II The characteristic feature of Henry II& apos;s ... rebellion marked a turning-point. WhenDol and Combour were back in Henry II& apos;s hands and peace wasrestored, Hasculf de Subligny and Isolde were married and allowed toenter Isolde's inheritance. ... probably ordered by HenryII before50Pipe Roll 23 Henry II, p.180. See also W. Farrer, Feudal Cambridgeshire (Cambridge, 1920), p. 225.51Itinerary, p. 91.52Pipe Roll 18 Henry II, p. 78.53Itinerary,...
... across private law ingeneral, laws against unfair competition, protection of industrial and commer-cial property, company law, stock-market law, banking law, insurance law and labour law. 58The ... History (Sydney: Law Book Co, 1957), p. 176.116J. H. Baker, ‘The Law Merchant and the Common Law Before 1700’ (1979) 38 Cambridge Law Journal 295–322, 306.17Berman, Lawand Revolution, p. ... commercial lawand private governanceInternational Law 129–91, 132, and his Dalhuisen on International Commercial, Financial and Trade Law (Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2nd edn 2004), esp. pp. 193–4, and...
... about authority as ‘the right to command, and 75 Lawand authority in space and time105Max Weber, On Law in Economy and Society, trans. Max Rheinstein and Edward Shils [1925](New York: Simon ... time162Allott, Eunomia, [19.1].63Rosenstock-Huessy, Speech and Reality, p. 18.164See Berman, Lawand Revolution, pp. 15–18 and his Lawand Revolution, II: The Impact of theProtestant Reformations on ... formed by asociety about the relationship of its social order to divine order, sovereignty of law, natural cosmic order and/ or natural social order, 10all of which are conceptswhich presuppose...
... such as ‘public and private, criminal and civil, real and personal, property and possession, contract and delict, among other exam-ples’, borrowed from Roman civil lawand canon law taught in ... historical globalisation and law precedents such as the interaction of European common laws and more localparticular laws. Lawyers are instrumental in achieving the diffusion of law, withdifferent ... natural law, although this law of nations could be equal with natural law if natural law wereconsidered as divine positive law – that is, as willed law. This distinctionbetween reason and will...
... amongst divine law (including biblical laws), natural law, human law, church law, princely law, enacted lawand customary law wereexplored, and the sources of law arranged in hierarchical order. 26These ... duties,issuing orders to revenue collectors and judges, and dealing directly withprelates and barons administering internal orderand security against externalthreats.63Pope Boniface VIII’s 1302 ... reconciled morally felt laws with politically imposed laws.Systematisations spread from canon law to territorial laws, including English,French, Italian and German systems. Lawand legal authority...
... Just rising from her hands and knees on the brink of the water hole was Josefa O'Donnell. She had been drinking water, and she brushed the sand from the palms of her hands. Ten yards away, ... STORY BY O HENRY The Princess And The Puma There had to be a king and queen, of course. The king was a terrible old man who wore six-shooters and spurs, and shouted in such a tremendous ... horse and bed for himself. Givens staked his horse, and spread out his saddle blankets to dry. He sat down with his back against a tree and rolled a cigarette. From SHORT STORY BY O’HENRY...