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CRAIG ( Sir Thomas ). Jus feudale tribus libris comprehensum. Quibus non solùm consuetudines feudale

Currency:EUR Category:Antiques / Books & Manuscripts Start Price:10.00 EUR Estimated At:150.00 - 180.00 EUR
CRAIG ( Sir Thomas ). Jus feudale tribus libris comprehensum. Quibus non solùm consuetudines feudale

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Auction Date:2012 Oct 20 @ 11:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
CRAIG ( Sir Thomas ). Jus feudale tribus libris comprehensum. Quibus non solùm consuetudines feudales & prædiorum iura, quæ in Scotia, Anglia, & plerisque Galliæ locis obtinent, continentur; sed universum ius Scoticum, et omnes ferè materiæ iuris clarè & dilucidè exponuntur, et ad fontes iuris feudalis & civilis singula reducuntur. Authore clarissimo & doctissimo viro Mro Thoma Cragio de Riccartoun, in senatu Edinburgensi patrono celeberrimo & iurisconsultissimo. Londini [i.e. Edinburgh], impensis Societatis Stationariorum, 1655FIRST EDITION, pages (12), 383, (1, blank), folio, contemporary panelled calf, with red label, gilt : an attractive, unsophisticated copy with the contemporary signature of Robert Scott of Dunninade on title-page. Wing C 6802. Craig (1538?–1608), lawyer and jurist, In 1578 he was appointed a commissioner to consider the laws and also to a committee to consider publication of acts of parliament. Throughout the 16C concern was repeatedly expressed over the state of the law in Scotland, and various attempts were made to collect and publish texts of both customary laws and statutes. This was the context in which Craig's great work of legal history and exegesis, Jus feudale, was created … The culmination of a lifetime's professional involvement in Scots law, it was enriched by frequent allusions to practice. Written in admirably clear Latin (which the poor English translation represents rather miserably), it is a typical humanistic w ork in its classical quotations and references and historical and philological discussions. That it originated in a patriotic concern for Scots law is revealed by Craig's stated Ciceronian aim of reducing that law to an ordered science, thereby making it easier for students to learn. He achieves this admirably, writing an accessible, learned, and well-structured work, in which he stresses the feudal origins of much Scots law (and English law too), and from that basis explains and expounds his subject in a logical fashion. He ultimately validates Scots law and its practices in the law of nature and nations in a way that to some extent anticipates Grotius. Craig gave full weight to the important late medieval commentators Bartolus and Baldus, but the principal intellectual influence on the work is French humanism, particularly the legal writings of the radical protestant François Hotman (with whose political views Craig will have disagreed strongly). Craig's systematic account of feudal land law and its principles influenced numerous later Scottish writers, and in particular Lord Stair in his Institutions, but also had an impact on English legal writers and on English understanding of the history of the common law.” – ODNB.WING; ENGLISH PRE 1701; LAW; ENGLISH PRE 1801; EDINBURGH PRINTED; ; ; ; ; ; ;