Abstract
The birth of the common law in medieval England
has given rise to a long paternity suit. Too often
most of the credit is given to Henry II and his
advisers burning the midnight oil crafting assizes
for the governance of the realm. Here, the king
created something new: a system of royal justice,
namely the king's court at the Exchequer and the
eyre, in which justices passed judgment based on
common rules and kept records of their
proceedings. The problem with this picture is that
it forgets that, when Henry and those advisers
sprang to the task at hand, constructing a royal
law for the entire realm, the tools they needed
for the task were already in their hands. The
county courts, for example, on which Henry II's
extension of royal jurisdiction over seigneurial
courts depended, were in place and eager to
administer royal laws. The Anglo-Saxons had set up
these shire, as well as hundred and wapentake,
courts long before, in the tenth and eleventh
centuries. Almost as important, the literacy that
Henry must have relied on to communicate his
orders to the Exchequer, eyre, counties, hundreds,
and wapentakes was ready and waiting. This legal
literacy, in fact, should be considered the sine
qua non of the common law, for without it, the
centralization of the courts, which was the
catalyst for the emergence of the common law,
would have remained a royal fantasy. From where
did the extensive literacy of the late
twelfth-century kingdom come? Without an answer to
the question of how the late twelfth-century
kingdom had become so literate, the explanation of
the development of the common law, dependent as it
was on its rolls and writs, is sadly
incomplete.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
8 articles.
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