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Monuments of Endlesse Labours: English Canonists and their Work, 1300-1900

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Monuments of Endlesse Labours is an account of the evolution of a distinct tradition and literature of English canon law. The study and teaching began in England in the twelfth century, and during the thirteenth a profession of practising canonists arose. Their expertise was not confined to ecclesiastical matters in a narrow sense, but extended into such important fields as marriage and probate.

Taking the work of individual canonists in turn, from William Paull and William Bateman in the fourteenth century to Stephen Lushington and Sir Robert Phillimore in the nineteenth, J.H. Baker assesses the various different contributions to this national tradition made by original thinkers, writers, compilers, editors and judges. The survival for so long of a distinct legal system parallel to the common law, which nevertheless touched in many vital respects the lives of everyone in England, makes the story of English ecclesiastical law an essential part of English legal history.

208 pages, Hardcover

First published November 1, 2003

About the author

Sir John Hamilton Baker is a Professor on the Faculty of Law at the University of Cambridge. He has also been a Barrister (Inner Temple and Gray's Inn) and an Honorary Bencher (Inner Temple).

He writes on English legal history, especially in the early-modern period: history of the legal profession and the inns of court and manuscript law reports and readings.

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