Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-vdxz6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-28T06:08:45.548Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

18 - The canon law

from II - PROFESSIONS

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2008

Get access

Summary

This chapter describes what is known about the existence and the use of canon law books in Britain. It may be admitted at the outset that segregation of the literature of the canon law from that of the civil law, covered in the chapter by Alain Wijffels, is somewhat artificial. The two learned laws were combined for many purposes in the European ius commune. Nonetheless, the canon law always maintained a distinct identity. Many books dealt primarily with canonical problems or texts, and the canon law was in a real sense the dominant partner in the ius commune. It is not inappropriate to treat it as a distinct entity.

The canon law’s importance

Together with rules drawn from the Roman law, the canon law provided the principal source of the jurisprudence in the English ecclesiastical courts. These courts, held by every bishop and archdeacon, as well as by many lesser clerics, played a wide and important role in the legal life of medieval England. Indeed, they held significant jurisdiction over the law of marriage, wills and probate, and part of the law of defamation, well into the nineteenth century. In addition, they long exercised a ‘criminal’ jurisdiction over both the clergy and the laity, extending from the sins of the flesh, such as adultery and fornication, to more properly religious offences such as absenting oneself from the parish church or doctrinal dissent.

Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1999

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Allmand, C.T. 1982The civil lawyers’, in Clough, C. H. (ed.), Profession, vocation, and culture in later medieval England: essays dedicated to the memory of A. R. Myers, Liverpool.Google Scholar
Armstrong, E. 1979English purchases of printed books from the Continent 1465–1526’, English Historical Review, 94.Google Scholar
Barry, John C. (ed.) 1967 William Hay’s lectures on marriage, Stair Society 24, Edinburgh.
Barton, J. L. 1986The faculty of law’, in HUO, III.Google Scholar
Bateson, M. 1898 Catalogue of the library of Syon Monastery, Isleworth, Cambridge.
Bell, D. N. 1992 An index of authors and works in Cistercian libraries in Great Britain, Kalamazoo MI.
Bennett, H. S. 1952 English books and readers 1475 to 1557, Cambridge (rpt 1969).
Boyle, L. E. 1955The Oculus sacerdotis and some other works of William of Pagula’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 5th ser., 5.Google Scholar
Boyle, L. E. 1965The Summa summarum and some other English works of canon law’, in Kuttner, S. and Ryan, J. J. (eds.), Proceedings of the second international congress of medieval canon law, Vatican City.Google Scholar
Bradshaw, H. 1889 Collected papers, Cambridge.
Browne, M. P. (ed.) 1826 Decisions of the Court of Session … 1766–1791, collected by Sir David Dalrymple of Hailes … sel. by M. P. Browne, 2 vols., Edinburgh.
Cheney, C. R. 1961William Lyndwood’s Provinciale’, Jurist, 21 (rpt Cheney, , Medieval texts and studies, Oxford, 1973).Google Scholar
Chobham, T. 1968 Thomae de Chobham Summa confessorum, ed. Broomfield, F., Louvain and Paris.
Cobban, A. B. 1969 The King’s Hall within the university of Cambridge in the later Middle Ages, Studies in medieval life and thought, 3rd ser., 1, Cambridge.
Craster, E. 1971 The history of All Souls College library, ed. Jacob, E. F., London.
Cross, M. C. 1989A medieval Yorkshire library’, Northern History, 25.Google Scholar
Darlington, I. (ed.) 1967 London Consistory Courtwills 1492–1574, London Record Soc. 3, London.
Davis, H. W. C. 1914The canon law in England’, Zeitschrift der Savigny-Stiftung für Rechtsgeschichte, 34.Google Scholar
Drummond, H. J. H. 1979 A short-title catalogue of books printed on the continent of Europe, 1501–1600, in Aberdeen University Library, Oxford and New York.
Duck, A. Sir 1668 De usu et authoritate juris civilis Romanorum in dominiis principum Christianorum, Leipzig (rpt Vienna and Cologne 1990).
Duggan, C. 1963 Twelfth-century decretal collections and their importance in English history, London.
Durkan, J. 1961aAn Arbroath book inventory of 1473’, Bibliotheck, 3.Google Scholar
Durkan, J. and Ross, A. 1961 Early Scottish libraries, Glasgow. (Supplements: Durkan, J., Bibliothek, 4 (1963); 9 (1978); 10 (1981); 11 (1982); 12 (1985).)
Elvey, E. M. (ed.) 1975 Courts of the Archdeaconry of Buckingham, 1483–1528, Buckinghamshire Record Soc. 19, London.
Ferme, B. 1989The testamentary executor in Lyndwood’s Provinciale’, Jurist, 49.Google Scholar
Fletcher, J. M. and McConica, J. K. 1961A sixteenth-century inventory of the libraryof Corpus Christi College, Cambridge’, Transactions of the Cambridge Bibliographical Society, 3, 33.Google Scholar
Fuller, T. 1840 History of the University of Cambridge, ed. Prickett, M. and Wright, T., Cambridge.
Harper-Bill, C. (ed.) 1987–91 The Register of John Morton, Archbishop of Canterbury 1486–1500, 2 vols., Canterbury and York Society, London.
Helmholz, R. H. 1990 Roman canon law in Reformation England, Cambridge.
Helmholz, R. H. 1992Canon law in post-Reformation England’, in Canon law in Protestant lands, Berlin.Google Scholar
Hunter, J. 1831 English monastic libraries, London.
Ives, E. W. 1969A lawyer’s library in 1500’, Law Quarterly Review, 85.Google Scholar
Jacob, E. F. 1971Panormitanus and the council of Basel’, in Kuttner, S. (ed.), Proceedings of the third international Congress of medieval canon law, Vatican City.Google Scholar
Jacob, E. F. and Johnson, H. C. (eds.) 1938–47 The Register of Henry Chichele, Archbishop of Canterbury 1414–1443, 4 vols., Oxford.
James, M. R. 1903 The ancient libraries of Canterbury and Dover, Cambridge.
James, M. R. 1909The catalogue of the library of the Augustinian friars at York’, Fasciculus Ioanni Willis Clark dicatus, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Jayne, S. R. 1983 Library catalogues of the English Renaissance, Berkeley and Los Angeles (1956); rev. rpt Godalming, .
Ker, N. R. 1969–92 Medieval manuscripts in British libraries, 4 vols. (vol. IV with Piper, A. J.), Oxford.
Ker, N. R. 1971 Records of All Souls College Library 1437–1600, Oxford Bibliographical Society Publications, n.s., 16, Oxford.
Ker, N. R. 1978Oxford college libraries before 1500’, in IJsewijn, J. and Paquet, J. (eds.), The universities in the late Middle Ages, Louvain.Google Scholar
Ker, N. R. 1985 Books, collectors and libraries: collected studies, ed. Watson, A. G., London and Ronceverte WV.
Ker, N. R. and Watson, A. G. 1964–87 Medieval libraries of Great Britain: a list of surviving books, 2nd edn, Royal Historical Society, London 1964 (Ker, ); Supplement to the second edn, Royal Historical Society, London 1987 (ed. Watson, ).
Kuttner, S. and Rathbone, E. 1951Anglo-Norman canonists of the twelfth century’, Traditio, 7.Google Scholar
Leach, A.F. 1896Wyckham’s books at New College’, in Burrows, M. (ed.), Collectanea, 3rd ser., Oxford Historical Society 32.Google Scholar
Leach, A.F. 1903 Early Yorkshire schools, 2 vols., Yorkshire Archaeological Society Record Series 33, Leeds.
Leedham-Green, E. S. 1986 Books in Cambridge inventories: book-lists from Vice-Chancellor’s Court probate inventories in the Tudor and Stuart periods, 2 vols., Cambridge.
Leedham-Green, E. S., Rhodes, D. E. and Stubbings, F. H. (eds.) 1992 Garrett Godfrey’s accounts, c. 1527–1533, Cambridge Bibliographical Society Monograph 12, Cambridge.
Liddell, J. R. 1937–8The library of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, in the sixteenth century’, The Library. Transactions of the Bibliographical Society, 4th ser., 18.Google Scholar
Luxton, I. 1977The Reformation and popular culture’, in Heal, F. and O’Day, R. (eds.), Church and society in England: Henry VIII to James I, London.Google Scholar
Lyndewood, W. 1679 Provinciale seu constitutiones Anglie, Oxford (rpt 1968).
(Madan, ); and ‘Notes on the former edition’, Oxford Historical Society 16 (= Collectanea, 2nd ser.), 1890 (Bradshaw, ).Google Scholar
Madan, F. and Bradshaw, H. (eds.) 1885–90The Day-Book of John Dorne, bookseller in Oxford A. D. 1520’, Oxford Historical Society 5 (= Collectanea, 1st ser.), 1885, and ‘Corrections and additions ….Google Scholar
Malden, H. F. 1902 Trinity Hall, London.
McKitterick, D. J. 1978Two sixteenth-century catalogues of St John’s College library’, Transactions of the Cambridge Bibliographical Society, 7, 2.Google Scholar
Mullinger, J. B. 1873 The University of Cambridge from the earliest times to the royal injunctions of 1535, Cambridge.
Munby, A. N. L. 1951Notes on King’s College Library in the fifteenth century’, Transactions of the Cambridge Bibliographical Society, I, 3.Google Scholar
Oates, J. C. T. 1954 A catalogue of the fifteenth-century printed books in the University Library Cambridge, Cambridge.
Osler, D. 1988Towards a legal-historical bibliography: a census of 16th-century legal imprints’, Ius commune, 15.Google Scholar
Owen, D. M. 1985Two medieval parish books from the diocese of Ely: New College MS. 98 and Wisbech Museum MS. 1’, in Barber, M. et al. (eds.), East Anglian and other studies presented to Barbara Dodwell: Reading Medieval Stud., 11.Google Scholar
Owen, D. M. 1990 The medieval canon law: teaching, literature and transmission, Cambridge.
Piccope, G. J. (ed.) 1857 Lancashire and Cheshire wills and inventories from the ecclesiastical court, Chetham Society 33, Manchester.
Rex, R. 1991 The theology of John Fisher, Cambridge.
Savage, E. A. 1911 Old English libraries. The making, collection, and use of books during the Middle Ages, New York and London (rpt 1970).
Schrage, E. J. H. 1992 Utrumque ius: eine Einführung in das Studium der Quellen des mittel-alterlichen gelehrten Rechts, Berlin.
Searle, W. G. 1864Catalogue of the library of Queens’ College, 1472’, Antiquarian Communications: Being Papers Presented at the Meetings of the Cambridge Antiquarian Soc., 2.Google Scholar
Smith, D. B. 1936 Sources and literature of Scots law, Stair Society 1, Edinburgh.
Squibb, G. D. 1977 Doctors’ Commons, Oxford.
Stein, P. G. 1988 The character and influence of the Roman civil law: historical essays, London and Ronceverte, WV.
Tierney, B. 1982 Religion, law, and the growth of constitutional thought 1150–1650, Cambridge.
Von Schulte, J. F. 1875–80 Die Geschichte der Quellen und Literatur des canonischen Rechts, 3 vols., Stuttgart (rpt Graz, 1956).
Wenzel, S. (ed. and trans.) 1989 Fasciculus morum. A fourteenth-century preachers’ handbook, University Park PA.
Wijffels, A. 1992a Late sixteenth-century lists of law books at Merton College, Cambridge.
Wijffels, A. 1992bSir Edward Stanhope’s bequest of books to Trinity College, 1608’, Fehrenbach, R. J. and Leedham-Green, E. S. (eds.), Private libraries in Renaissance England. A collection and catalogue of Tudor and early Stuart book-lists, 4 vols. to date, Binghamton NY and Marlborough, 1992–5, I.Google Scholar
Wijffels, A. 1993aLaw books at Cambridge 1500–1640’, in Birks, P. (ed.), The life of the law: proceedings of the tenth British legal history conference, London.Google Scholar
Williams, T. W. 1908Gloucestershire medieval libraries’, Trans. of the Bristol and Gloucestershire Archaeological Soc., 31.Google Scholar
Woodcock, B. L. 1952 Medieval ecclesiastical courts in the diocese of Canterbury, Oxford.

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×