15 research outputs found

    A Direction or Preparative to the Study of the Law

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    The LEME Corpus Manual has an editorial introduction, indexes of subjects, proper names, and chronology, a primary bibliography of LEME corpus texts, as well as English language texts not included in the Corpus, a description of the XML encoding and of lemmatization and source analysis tools. The appendix includes lists of language abbreviations and of abbreviations for parts of speech.Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of CanadaCanada Foundation for InnovationUniversity of Toronto LibrariesUniversity of Toronto PressInformation & Instructional Technology, Faculty of Arts and Science, University of Toront

    1602: The Second Part of The Parallele, or, Conference of the Civill Law, the Canon Law, and the Common Law of This Realme of England

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    Fulbecke, William. The Second Part of The Parallele, or, Conference of the Civill Law, the Canon Law, and the Common Law of This Realme of England. London: Printed by Thomas Wight, 1602. William Fulbecke’s (1560-1603?) book follows the structure of philosophical dialogues, in which concepts are discussed by characters embodying certain traits. His fictional dialogue begins with Nomomathes, a well-off gentleman who liked to keep three “learned men” in his company for furthering his own education: Canonologus (Canon law), Codicgnostes (civil law), and Anglonomophylax (common law). They discuss diverse aspects of the law from their respective viewpoints bound by only two rules – all must yield to the better reason, and the three must not compare themselves to one another, but rather think of themselves as either brethren or enemies (depending on their stances). View this book\u27s record in the library catalog.https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/oldelawebookes/1005/thumbnail.jp

    1602: The Second Part of The Parallele, or, Conference of the Civill Law, the Canon Law, and the Common Law of This Realme of England

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    Fulbecke, William. The Second Part of The Parallele, or, Conference of the Civill Law, the Canon Law, and the Common Law of This Realme of England. London: Printed by Thomas Wight, 1602. William Fulbecke’s (1560-1603?) book follows the structure of philosophical dialogues, in which concepts are discussed by characters embodying certain traits. His fictional dialogue begins with Nomomathes, a well-off gentleman who liked to keep three “learned men” in his company for furthering his own education: Canonologus (Canon law), Codicgnostes (civil law), and Anglonomophylax (common law). They discuss diverse aspects of the law from their respective viewpoints bound by only two rules – all must yield to the better reason, and the three must not compare themselves to one another, but rather think of themselves as either brethren or enemies (depending on their stances). View this book\u27s record in the library catalog.https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/oldelawebookes/1005/thumbnail.jp
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