Matches in Harvard for { <http://id.lib.harvard.edu/aleph/000864331/catalog> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 41 of
41
with 100 items per page.
- catalog contributor b1400963.
- catalog coverage "England Civilization 1066-1485.".
- catalog coverage "Great Britain Politics and government To 1485.".
- catalog created "c1980.".
- catalog date "1980".
- catalog date "c1980.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "c1980.".
- catalog description "1. Parliament: a representative institution -- 2. The House of Lords -- 3. The House of Commons -- 4. The electoral system -- 5. The powers of parliament -- 6. Privilege and procedure -- 7. Conclusions -- Bibliography -- Part Six. The Houses of Lancaster and York -- XXXV. The sources and history of Lancastrian and Yorkist England -- 1. Nonnarative sources -- 2. Narrative sources -- 3. The reign of Henry IV (1399-1413) -- 4. The reign of Henry V (1413-1422) -- 5. The reign of Henry VI (1422-1461) -- 6. The reign of Edward IV (1461-1483) -- 7. The reign of Richard III (1483-1485) -- XXXVI. Administrative council and parliament -- 1. Kingship -- 2. The administrative council -- 3. Parliament -- 4. Conclusions -- XXXVII. The common law and its elaboration -- 1. The courts -- 2. The legal profession -- 3. Legislation -- 4. Criminal law -- 5. Civil law -- 6. Procedure -- 7. Conclusion -- XXXVIII. The success of English Medieval consitutionalism -- Bibliography -- Index".
- catalog description "1. The continental background -- 2. Wiliam I and church reform -- 3. The investiture struggle -- Bibliography -- Part Three. Henry II and his sons -- XV. The Angevin sources -- 1. Nonnarrative sources -- 2. Narrative sources -- XVI. Angevin England, 1154-1216 -- 1. The reign of Henry II (1154-1189) -- 2. The reign of Richard I (1189-1199) -- 3. The reign of John (1199-1216) -- XVII. Central administration -- 1. Kingship -- 2. Curia regis: the great council -- 3. Curia regis: the small council -- 4. The justiciar -- 5. The household -- XVIII. Angevin finance and military administration -- 1. The exchequer -- 2. The chamber and wardrobe -- 3. Angevin taxation -- 4. The sinews of war -- XIX. Local administration: counties and boroughs -- 1. Counties and sheriffs -- 2. The borough -- XX. Angevin legal innovations -- 1. The royal courts -- 2. The public courts -- 3. The feudal and manorial courts -- 4. Civil procedure -- 5. Criminal procedure -- 6. The coroners -- 7. Conclusions -- ".
- catalog description "7. An Edwardian parliament at work -- 8. The nature of parliament -- XXIX. The age of Bracton -- 1. The common law -- 2. The Common law under Henry III -- 3. The common law under Edward I -- 4. The royal courts -- 5. Civil procedure -- 6. Cimrinal procedure -- 7. Special courts -- XXX. The substance of the law -- 1. The land law -- 2. Personal property and rules of inheritance -- 3. Criminal law -- 4. Conclusions -- Bibliography -- Part Five. Edward II, Edward III, and Richard II -- XXXI. The sources and history of the fourteenth century -- 1. Nonnarrative sources -- 2. Narrative sources -- 3. The reign of Edward II (1307-1327) -- 4. The reign of Edward III (1327-1377) -- 5. The reign of Richard II (1377-1399) -- XXXII. Kingship and council -- 1. Kingship -- 2. The royal council -- 3. Conclusions -- XXXIII. Central and local government -- 1. The central government -- 2. Local government -- XXXIV. The maturing of parliamentary institutions -- ".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographies and index.".
- catalog description "Part Four. Henry III adn Edward I -- XXIII. The thirteenth-century sources -- 1. Nonnarrative sources -- 2. Narrative sources -- XXIV. England under Henry III and Edward I, 1216-1307 -- 1. Henry III (1216-1272) -- 2. Edward I (1272-1307) -- XXV. Central administration -- 1. The King -- 2. The justiciar -- 3. The small council -- 4. The chancery -- 5. The royal household -- 6. Conclusions -- XXVI. Innovation in finance and taxation -- 1. The exchequer -- 2. The wardrobe -- 3. The royal income -- 4. Direct taxation -- 5. Indirect taxation -- 6. Conclusions -- XXVII. Local government by royal command -- 1. The county -- 2. The hundred -- 3. The feudal units of the county -- 4. The borough -- 5. Local self-government by royal command -- XXVIII. The evolution of parliament -- 1. The king's council -- 2. The great council -- 3. The word "parliament" -- 4. The representative element of parliament -- 5. The transitional period of parliament -- 6. Clerical representation -- ".
- catalog description "Part One. The Anglo-Saxon Period -- I. The sources for early English institutions -- 1. Nonnarrative sources -- 2. Narrative sources -- 3. Supplementary sources -- II. Germanic foundations of English institutions -- III. Anglo-Saxon England, 450-1066 -- 1. The Anglo-Saxon conquest (450-600) -- 2. The supremacy of Northumbria and Mercia -- 3. The Viking invasions -- 4. Wessex and the unification of England -- 5. The Danish conquest -- 6. Edward the Confessor and the Norman conquest -- IV. Central administration -- 1. Kingship -- 2. The Witenagemot -- 3. The royal household -- V. Local administration -- 1. The shire -- 2. The hundred -- 3. The borough -- 4. The agrarian community -- VI. Anglo-Saxon society and the law -- 1. The kindred -- 2. Lordship -- 3. Wealth and property -- 4. Classes of men -- 5. The law and its penalities -- 6. The law of property and contract -- 7. Misadventure and responsibility for accident -- 8. Procedure -- Bibliography -- Part Two. The Norman kings -- ".
- catalog description "VII. The Norman sources -- 1. Nonnarrative sources -- 2. Narrative sources -- VIII. Norman England, 1066-1154 -- 1. William the Conqueror (1066-1087) -- 2. William Rufus (1087-1100) -- 3. Henry I (1100-1135) -- 4. Stephen, Matilda, and the anarchy (1135-1154) -- IX. The feudalization of England -- X. Central administration: kingship and curia regis -- 1. Kingship -- 2. The King's Great Council -- 3. The King's Small Council -- 4. Conclusions -- XI. Central administration: justiciar, household, chancery, exchequer, adn the roval income -- 1. The justiciar -- 2. The royal household -- 3. The chancery -- 4. The exchequer -- 5. The roval income -- XII. Local administration: counties, hundreds, manors, and boroughs -- 1. The county and sheriff -- 2. The hundred -- 3. The manor -- 4. The borough -- XIII. Anglo-Norman law -- 1. The coalescence of Anglo-Norman law -- 2. The courts and their jurisdiction -- 3. Process and procedure -- XIV. The Norman church and state -- ".
- catalog description "XXI. Angevin church and state -- 1. Thomas Becket and Henry II -- 2. Richard I and the church -- 3. John and Innocent III -- 4. Conclusions -- XXII. Magna carta and the defeat of Angevin absolutism -- 1. Opinions on magna carta -- 2. The reasons for magna carta -- 3. The content of magna carta -- 4. The value of magna carta -- Bibliography".
- catalog extent "xviii, 669 p. :".
- catalog identifier "0393951324".
- catalog issued "1980".
- catalog issued "c1980.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "New York : Norton,".
- catalog spatial "England Civilization 1066-1485.".
- catalog spatial "England".
- catalog spatial "Great Britain Politics and government To 1485.".
- catalog spatial "Great Britain".
- catalog subject "342/.42/029".
- catalog subject "Constitutional history, Medieval.".
- catalog subject "JN137 .L9 1980".
- catalog subject "Law England History.".
- catalog subject "Law Great Britain History.".
- catalog subject "Law, Medieval.".
- catalog tableOfContents "1. Parliament: a representative institution -- 2. The House of Lords -- 3. The House of Commons -- 4. The electoral system -- 5. The powers of parliament -- 6. Privilege and procedure -- 7. Conclusions -- Bibliography -- Part Six. The Houses of Lancaster and York -- XXXV. The sources and history of Lancastrian and Yorkist England -- 1. Nonnarative sources -- 2. Narrative sources -- 3. The reign of Henry IV (1399-1413) -- 4. The reign of Henry V (1413-1422) -- 5. The reign of Henry VI (1422-1461) -- 6. The reign of Edward IV (1461-1483) -- 7. The reign of Richard III (1483-1485) -- XXXVI. Administrative council and parliament -- 1. Kingship -- 2. The administrative council -- 3. Parliament -- 4. Conclusions -- XXXVII. The common law and its elaboration -- 1. The courts -- 2. The legal profession -- 3. Legislation -- 4. Criminal law -- 5. Civil law -- 6. Procedure -- 7. Conclusion -- XXXVIII. The success of English Medieval consitutionalism -- Bibliography -- Index".
- catalog tableOfContents "1. The continental background -- 2. Wiliam I and church reform -- 3. The investiture struggle -- Bibliography -- Part Three. Henry II and his sons -- XV. The Angevin sources -- 1. Nonnarrative sources -- 2. Narrative sources -- XVI. Angevin England, 1154-1216 -- 1. The reign of Henry II (1154-1189) -- 2. The reign of Richard I (1189-1199) -- 3. The reign of John (1199-1216) -- XVII. Central administration -- 1. Kingship -- 2. Curia regis: the great council -- 3. Curia regis: the small council -- 4. The justiciar -- 5. The household -- XVIII. Angevin finance and military administration -- 1. The exchequer -- 2. The chamber and wardrobe -- 3. Angevin taxation -- 4. The sinews of war -- XIX. Local administration: counties and boroughs -- 1. Counties and sheriffs -- 2. The borough -- XX. Angevin legal innovations -- 1. The royal courts -- 2. The public courts -- 3. The feudal and manorial courts -- 4. Civil procedure -- 5. Criminal procedure -- 6. The coroners -- 7. Conclusions -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "7. An Edwardian parliament at work -- 8. The nature of parliament -- XXIX. The age of Bracton -- 1. The common law -- 2. The Common law under Henry III -- 3. The common law under Edward I -- 4. The royal courts -- 5. Civil procedure -- 6. Cimrinal procedure -- 7. Special courts -- XXX. The substance of the law -- 1. The land law -- 2. Personal property and rules of inheritance -- 3. Criminal law -- 4. Conclusions -- Bibliography -- Part Five. Edward II, Edward III, and Richard II -- XXXI. The sources and history of the fourteenth century -- 1. Nonnarrative sources -- 2. Narrative sources -- 3. The reign of Edward II (1307-1327) -- 4. The reign of Edward III (1327-1377) -- 5. The reign of Richard II (1377-1399) -- XXXII. Kingship and council -- 1. Kingship -- 2. The royal council -- 3. Conclusions -- XXXIII. Central and local government -- 1. The central government -- 2. Local government -- XXXIV. The maturing of parliamentary institutions -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "Part Four. Henry III adn Edward I -- XXIII. The thirteenth-century sources -- 1. Nonnarrative sources -- 2. Narrative sources -- XXIV. England under Henry III and Edward I, 1216-1307 -- 1. Henry III (1216-1272) -- 2. Edward I (1272-1307) -- XXV. Central administration -- 1. The King -- 2. The justiciar -- 3. The small council -- 4. The chancery -- 5. The royal household -- 6. Conclusions -- XXVI. Innovation in finance and taxation -- 1. The exchequer -- 2. The wardrobe -- 3. The royal income -- 4. Direct taxation -- 5. Indirect taxation -- 6. Conclusions -- XXVII. Local government by royal command -- 1. The county -- 2. The hundred -- 3. The feudal units of the county -- 4. The borough -- 5. Local self-government by royal command -- XXVIII. The evolution of parliament -- 1. The king's council -- 2. The great council -- 3. The word "parliament" -- 4. The representative element of parliament -- 5. The transitional period of parliament -- 6. Clerical representation -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "Part One. The Anglo-Saxon Period -- I. The sources for early English institutions -- 1. Nonnarrative sources -- 2. Narrative sources -- 3. Supplementary sources -- II. Germanic foundations of English institutions -- III. Anglo-Saxon England, 450-1066 -- 1. The Anglo-Saxon conquest (450-600) -- 2. The supremacy of Northumbria and Mercia -- 3. The Viking invasions -- 4. Wessex and the unification of England -- 5. The Danish conquest -- 6. Edward the Confessor and the Norman conquest -- IV. Central administration -- 1. Kingship -- 2. The Witenagemot -- 3. The royal household -- V. Local administration -- 1. The shire -- 2. The hundred -- 3. The borough -- 4. The agrarian community -- VI. Anglo-Saxon society and the law -- 1. The kindred -- 2. Lordship -- 3. Wealth and property -- 4. Classes of men -- 5. The law and its penalities -- 6. The law of property and contract -- 7. Misadventure and responsibility for accident -- 8. Procedure -- Bibliography -- Part Two. The Norman kings -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "VII. The Norman sources -- 1. Nonnarrative sources -- 2. Narrative sources -- VIII. Norman England, 1066-1154 -- 1. William the Conqueror (1066-1087) -- 2. William Rufus (1087-1100) -- 3. Henry I (1100-1135) -- 4. Stephen, Matilda, and the anarchy (1135-1154) -- IX. The feudalization of England -- X. Central administration: kingship and curia regis -- 1. Kingship -- 2. The King's Great Council -- 3. The King's Small Council -- 4. Conclusions -- XI. Central administration: justiciar, household, chancery, exchequer, adn the roval income -- 1. The justiciar -- 2. The royal household -- 3. The chancery -- 4. The exchequer -- 5. The roval income -- XII. Local administration: counties, hundreds, manors, and boroughs -- 1. The county and sheriff -- 2. The hundred -- 3. The manor -- 4. The borough -- XIII. Anglo-Norman law -- 1. The coalescence of Anglo-Norman law -- 2. The courts and their jurisdiction -- 3. Process and procedure -- XIV. The Norman church and state -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "XXI. Angevin church and state -- 1. Thomas Becket and Henry II -- 2. Richard I and the church -- 3. John and Innocent III -- 4. Conclusions -- XXII. Magna carta and the defeat of Angevin absolutism -- 1. Opinions on magna carta -- 2. The reasons for magna carta -- 3. The content of magna carta -- 4. The value of magna carta -- Bibliography".
- catalog title "A constitutional and legal history of medieval England / Bryce Lyon.".
- catalog type "History. fast".
- catalog type "text".