Academic literature on the topic 'Feudal law (Saxon law)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Feudal law (Saxon law)"

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Heirbaut, Dirk. "Le Miroir des Saxons : un texte remarquable, mais presque inconnu dans l’historiographie française." Tijdschrift voor rechtsgeschiedenis 84, no. 3-4 (December 9, 2016): 401–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15718190-08434p02.

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The ‘Saxon Mirror’ was one of the most important books of medieval law, but literature on it in other Western European languages than German, remains scarce. This article therefore wants to present the Saxon Mirror to French readers by studying its author Eike von Repgow and its content, characteristics and influence. The author also puts forward his own hypotheses concerning the Saxon Mirror. The Saxon Mirror has to be studied together with other texts which used the same material, more in particular the Auctor vetus de beneficiis, and the law book of Görlitz. Making a comparison with texts of feudal law elsewhere, it becomes clear that the Saxon Mirror was based on notes taken by practitioners, which could be compilated in different ways. The differences between the longer and the shorter versions of the Saxon Mirror may be explained by the groups behind them. Specialists of feudal law were responsible for the shorter version, whereas the longer version was the work of aldermen. In this context, it is not unlikely that Eike von Repgow may have been a pleader in feudal courts rather than an alderman.
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GOLDIE, MARK. "THE ANCIENT CONSTITUTION AND THE LANGUAGES OF POLITICAL THOUGHT." Historical Journal 62, no. 1 (November 5, 2018): 3–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x18000328.

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AbstractHistorians of political thought speak of ‘languages’ of politics. A language provides a lexicon, an available resource for legitimating positions. It is looser than a ‘theory’, because protean, and not predictive of particular doctrines. Some languages attract considerable scholarly attention, while others languish, for all that they were ambient in past cultures. In recent scholarship on early modern European thought, natural law and civic humanism have dominated. Yet prescriptive appeals to national historiographies were equally pervasive. Many European cultures appealed to Tacitean mythologies of a Gothic ur-constitution. The Anglophone variant dwelt on putative Saxon freedoms, the status of the Norman ‘Conquest’, whether feudalism ruptured the Gothic inheritance, and how common law related to ‘reason’, natural law, and divine law. Whigs rooted parliaments in the Saxonwitenagemot; though, by the eighteenth century, ‘modern’ Whigs discerned liberty as the fruit of recent socio-economic change. Levellers and Chartists alike talked of liberation from the ‘Norman Yoke’. These themes were explored from the 1940s onwards under the stimulus of Herbert Butterfield; one result was J. G. A. Pocock's classicAncient constitution and the feudal law(1957).
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Katančević, Andreja. "Legal regime of land in the mining areas of medieval Serbia." Zbornik radova Pravnog fakulteta, Novi Sad 54, no. 3 (2020): 1065–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.5937/zrpfns54-29388.

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The aim of the research is to cast light on the legal regime of the mining area land in medieval Serbia and to answer to what extent Saxon customary mining law was accepted in this aspect and what the ratio legis of article 123 of Dušan's Code was? It seems likely that until the enactment of Dušan's Code it was possible to occupy land cleared for mining purposes and to acquire property of the mining area, which was previously res nullius. However, Dušan's Code changed this rule prescribing only the possibility of acquiring the time limited mining concession, which was motived by possible permanent monopolization of the land in the mining areas. At the same time, the Code proclaimed the right of ore search and exploration on the feudal lords' land. Similarities to the older Hungarian and Czech law indicates legal transplantation. The mining concession was regulated in Despot Stefan's Mining Code for Novo Brdo, which prescribed detailed rules for losing the concession in the case of neglecting the mining activity. Based on similarities one can assume that these rules were mostly the reception of the Saxon customary mining law, also written in late medieval mining laws of Hungary and Czechia. However, the small differences may show that after one and a half century the Serbian mining community introduced its own unique rules. Research is based on linguistic, systematic and historical analysis of the sources as well as the regressive analysis and comparative method.
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Cvorovic, Zoran. "Contemporary reform of the criminal proceedings in the Republic of Serbia: Legal history view." Zbornik Matice srpske za drustvene nauke, no. 154 (2016): 19–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/zmsdn1654019c.

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This article aims to review some solutions in the Criminal Procedure Code (CPC) from 2011, which represents breaking with former Serbian and Yugoslav tradition in criminal proceedings. These are, primarily, novelties related to opportunism in prosecution, plea bargaining and presentation of evidence by parties that all devalue principles of material truth determination in proceedings. This work establishes connection between the aforementioned solutions of Serbian legislator and the development of continental European criminal proceeding over centuries. Comparative historical legal analysis of these norms in the Serbian CPC begins with the key turning point in the development of the continental European criminal proceedings - suppression of the adversarial system by the inquisitorial proceedings in the XVI and XVII centuries. As this change has been closely related to the transition of, up to then, dominant type of states (feudal mosaic states to absolute monarchies), these modern changes in criminal proceedings are analyzed not only from the point of view of criminal procedure evolution, but also from the point of view of the evolution of states. In England, country of origin of Anglo-Saxon civilization, the old adversarial system was not transformed into inquisitorial, contrary to the development of the continental criminal proceedings. This transformation was prevented by Puritan revolution, similarly as it prevented the transformation of English state into absolute monarchy. Continental and Anglo-Saxon criminal proceedings have developed as two completely separate systems since then. This article further elaborates some of the key criminal law traditions in continental criminal proceedings and substantive criminal law which resulted from the introduction of the inquisitorial proceedings: development of complicity and guilt as institutes, final suppression of self-representation, incrimination of false testimony and perjury. These are directly related to the active role assigned to court in inquisitorial proceedings, and to court?s obligation to determine material truth. Changes in the role of court also result from the change of states; while weak feudal states were satisfied with passive courts, powerful absolute monarchies demanded courts with active role in all phases of proceedings. Modern Americanization of some European proceeding regulations, as it is the case in Serbia, brings discontinuation in legal proceeding tradition of these states, but also, necessarily, influences regression into domination of adversarial proceedings character?ized by passive court. In continental tradition it also consequently indicates a weak state.
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Wormald, Patrick. "Anglo-Saxon Law and Scots Law." Scottish Historical Review 88, no. 2 (October 2009): 192–206. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/e0036924109000857.

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Patrick Wormald used legal material buried deep in volume i of the Acts of the Parliaments of Scotland to argue for a comparatively maximalist view of early Scottish royal government. The paper compares this Scottish legal material to two Old English codes to show that there existed in Scotland structures of social organisation similar to that in Anglo-Saxon England and a comparable level of royal control over crime by the early eleventh century. The model of a strong judicial regime in the Anglo-Saxon kingdom, put forward fully by Wormald in volume i of The Making of English Law, suggests that the kingdom of the Scots could have been inspired by (or followed a parallel trajectory to) its Anglo-Saxon neighbour in its government's assumption of rights of amendment previously controlled by kin-groups. English influence on Scottish legal and constitutional development can therefore be seen in the tenth and eleventh centuries as much as it can in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. The paper also suggests methods of examining the legal material in volume i of the Acts of the Parliaments of Scotland and effectively clears the way for further study of this neglected corpus of evidence.
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Fleming, C. J. W. "Feudal Dues in Lundazi." Journal of African Law 30, no. 2 (1986): 175–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021855300006549.

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The late Professor Gluckman adumbrated on the customary dues formerly made to the King in Barotseland. It might be of interest to consider similar imposts required on the other side of Zambia in the Lundazi District, and to note in particular that the distinction that is made in Barotseland between what Gluckman calls “Kingly things” and tribute also obtained in Lundazi as well.Feudal dues in Lundazi before the occupation fell roughly into four categories, “Kingly things”, here called regalia or the local vernacular word for them, vya chalo, things pertaining to the land; mithulo or tribute; msonko or land tax and chiŵeta or tribute labour.The vya chalo, as the name signifies, were things pertaining to the land which belonged to the chief in his capacity as the titular head of a land-owning clan and might not be taken or used by anyone else except with permission. Properly speaking vya chalo appear to have consisted only of the skins, with claws intact, of the larger carnivora, lion, leopard and cheetah, the skins of hartebeest and the plumage of the Livingstone Lourie.
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Radović, Mirjana. "Influence of Anglo-Saxon law on Serbian company law." Strani pravni zivot, no. 2 (2019): 33–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.5937/spz63-22552.

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Suzuki, Seiichi. "KALUZA’S LAW IN THE OLD SAXON." Amsterdamer Beiträge zur älteren Germanistik 68, no. 1 (2011): 27–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789401207003_003.

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Winkler, John Frederick. "Roman law in Anglo‐Saxon England." Journal of Legal History 13, no. 2 (August 1992): 101–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01440369208531053.

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Černý, Miroslav. "Libri Feudorum und Ihr Ort in der Mittelalterlichen Rechtsgeschichte." Krakowskie Studia z Historii Państwa i Prawa 6, no. 4 (2013): 341–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.4467/20844131ks.13.021.1696.

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Libri Feudorum and Their Meaning in the Medieval Legal History Feudal Law, that was originally divided and fragmented like the entire medieval feudal world in which the law was created from disparate sources, gradually found its stable place alongside rediscovered Roman law and the newly organized canon law. At first, between 1154 and 1158, Obertus dall'Orto, a consul in Milan and expert of practical application of feudal law, wrote two letters to his son, Anselm, in which he summed up the elements of feudal law. This version is known as „Compilatio antiqua”. Around 1240 he was followed by Jacopo d’Ardizzone who wrote Summa feudorum. The last work called the Vulgate or Accursiana, that was divided into two books, was then incorporated in the most privileged place, right in the glossed Justinian legislation, behind the Novellae as the tenth amendment: Collatio. The subjects of these books included feudal relations between individual persons, a description of the investiture, different kinds of fiefs and the possibility of inheriting them. However, while Roman law of glossators was beginning its second life, feudal law represented rather the type of social relationships that (emptied from its original content) was coming to an end.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Feudal law (Saxon law)"

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Sijansky, Adam Wayne. "The Significance of Feudal Law in Thirteenth-Century Law Codes." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2011. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc67948/.

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Although developments in feudal law in the thirteenth century influenced the legal environment of Europe for centuries, much of past and current historical research of feudalism examines the social system anthropologically but neglects an in-depth analysis of feudal law codes. My research combines the social-anthropological approach with relevant customary codes to demonstrate the importance of feudal law to a thirteenth-century society plagued by war, economic and social instability, and competing powers of the monarchy, judiciary, and religion. The assessment of feudal law within each legal code highlights its prominence as an accepted category of jurisprudence. This thesis provides a new perspective on the influence of feudalism in the thirteenth century, demonstrating the significance of feudal law as a mode of maintaining peace and prolonging land tenure.
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Giordanengo, Gérard. "Le Droit féodal dans les pays de droit écrit : l'exemple de la Provence et du Dauphiné : XIIe-début XIVe siècle /." Rome : Paris : École française de Rome ; diff. De Boccard, 1988. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb349479114.

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Yahil, Edna Ruth. "Creating justice in late medieval France the seigneurial court of Saint Germain des Prés /." Diss., Restricted to subscribing institutions, 2004. http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?did=790244841&sid=1&Fmt=2&clientId=1564&RQT=309&VName=PQD.

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Hough, Carole Ann. "Women and the law in early Anglo-Saxon England." Thesis, University of Nottingham, 1993. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.335867.

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MacLeod, Rebecca Frances. "Property law in Jersey." Thesis, University of Edinburgh, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/1842/6299.

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Jersey law, and within it Jersey property law, has received little academic attention. This thesis seeks to examine, and provide a systematic account of, the Jersey law of property. Specific aspects of substantive law are explored. From these, general observations about the nature and structure of property law are made. Unsurprisingly, given the small size of the island, Jersey has a relatively limited amount of indigenous legal material to offer, much of it in French. Inevitably, there are gaps in the sources and some way of addressing these has to be determined before a systematic account of the law is possible. Juristic writing and modern caselaw demonstrate consistent recourse to the laws of other jurisdictions when gaps are encountered. Norman law, modern French law, and English law (to a much lesser extent and mainly where it conforms to Roman law) are used in the cases on property law, and thus also in this thesis. Reference is also made to the law of Guernsey (Jersey’s sister jurisdiction) but the difficulties encountered in researching Jersey law are no less evident there. In areas such as the law of servitudes, Roman law is often referred to explicitly by the Jersey jurists and by the commentators on Norman law. The influence of Roman law is also evident in the division between real rights and personal rights, sometimes barely visible in Jersey law, and is also a general backdrop to the rules on classification of things. Norman feudal law remains vestigially in place but the structure of the law and its individual rules bear many civilian characteristics. For this reason, in addition to Jersey sources, Norman law, modern French law, and any other materials used by the courts, other jurisdictions with civilian systems of property law are also referred to, specifically mixed jurisdictions, of which Jersey is one.
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REISS, MICHEL WENCLAND. "THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT IN THE CONTEXT OF GLOBALIZATION OF LAW: ANALYSES OF THE ROME STATUTE BASED ON ANGLO-SAXON INSPIRATION CRIMINAL LAW, ROMAN-GERMANIC CRIMINAL LAW AND BRAZILIAN CRIMINAL LAW." PONTIFÍCIA UNIVERSIDADE CATÓLICA DO RIO DE JANEIRO, 2017. http://www.maxwell.vrac.puc-rio.br/Busca_etds.php?strSecao=resultado&nrSeq=36273@1.

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PONTIFÍCIA UNIVERSIDADE CATÓLICA DO RIO DE JANEIRO
O trabalho consiste na análise do processo de internacionalização dos Direitos Humanos com base no Direito Internacional Penal. Partindo de abordagens interdisciplinares na criação do Tribunal Penal Internacional, é feita uma leitura jurídico-penal do Estatuto de Roma a partir da aproximação dos conceitos oriundos do Common Law e do Civil Law em busca de um maior aprimoramento na construção de uma Parte Geral do Direito Internacional Penal. Assim, pretende-se contribuir para uma maior preocupação no tocante à responsabilização penal no plano internacional, sempre com o foco voltado para o incremento da proteção internacional dos Direitos Humanos.
The work analyses the process of internationalization of the Human Rights based upon International criminal law. Beginning with an interdisciplinary approach on the creation of the International Criminal Court, the Roman Statute is analyzed through a criminal law reading, that acknowledges an approach between Common Law and Civil Law traditional concepts. Therefore, the work seeks to contribute to an improvement on criminal law enforcement on the international level, always focusing on assuring the international protection of the Human Rights.
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Reynolds, Andrew. "Anglo-Saxon law in the landscape : an archaeological study of the Old English judicial system." Thesis, University College London (University of London), 1999. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.298114.

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Hofmann, Petra. "Infernal imagery in Anglo-Saxon charters." Thesis, St Andrews, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/10023/498.

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Brandenburger, Christine. ""Law in Context - Recht mit seinen internationalen Bezügen zu Technik, Politik und Wirtschaft&quot." Saechsische Landesbibliothek- Staats- und Universitaetsbibliothek Dresden, 2008. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:14-ds-1200394092944-52253.

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Am 14. März 2007 hat der Senat der Technischen Universität der Einführung eines dreijährigen Bachelor-Studienganges „Law in Context – Recht mit seinen internationalen Bezügen zu Technik, Politik und Wirtschaft“ zum Wintersemester 2007/2008 zugestimmt. Mit diesem Beschluss besteht für Studienanfänger die Möglichkeit, seit Oktober 2007 ein dreijähriges Jurastudium mit dem Studienziel „Bachelor of Laws“ (LL.B.) aufzunehmen. Die Technische Universität Dresden erfüllt damit als eine der ersten Universitäten in Deutschland die Anforderungen des Bologna-Prozesses im Bereich Jura.
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Tournier, Louis. "International Financial Regulation and Offshore Financial Centers : the Rise of Soft Law and the Dichotomy Between the Anglo-Saxon Vision and the Continental European Approach." Thesis, Paris 1, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017PA01D012/document.

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En quoi l'absence d'intérêts économiques communs entre les pays membres de l'OCDE affaiblit-elle les nouvelles législations internationales basées sur le Soft Law en vue de lutter contre l'opacité financière et fiscale des centres financiers offshore ? L'optimisation fiscale consiste à utiliser les règles de droit pour réduire en toute légalité sa charge fiscale. Mais la frontière entre l'optimisation fiscale et l'évasion fiscale est ténue pour ne pas dire perméable. De plus en plus, les notions d'optimisation fiscale et de fraude fiscale ne font plus qu'une, tant les règles de droit sont facilement contournables et ses limites aisément franchissables. Ce phénomène est tout particulièrement avéré sur le plan de la fiscalité internationale. La problématique de cette thèse met en lumière les difficultés du Soft Law à réguler les centres financiers offshore, tant l'absence d'intérêts (économiques) communs semble flagrante entre les pays anglo-saxons et l'Europe continentale sur la question. Or l'intérêt commun (qu'il soit économique, culturel, sécuritaire, environnemental) constitue la clef de voûte du succès d'une législation basée sur le Soft Law à l'international. L'intérêt commun paraît inexistant voire inaccessible en matière de lutte contre l'optimisation fiscale, dès lors que celle-ci vise principalement à protéger le modèle social de l'état providence des pays d'Europe continentale. Une dichotomie de taille à l'heure où les pays anglo-saxons s'en écartent toujours plus
How does the lack of shared economic interests among OECD member countries weaken new international laws-which are based on soft law-that aim to contribute to the fight against the financial and fiscal opacity of offshore financial centers? Tax optimization involves using the rules of law to legally reduce a tax burden. But the line that separates tax optimization and tax evasion is tenuous and one could even say porous al best. Increasingly, it indeed appears that the issues of tax optimization and tax-fraud are becoming one, as the rules of law can be easily circumvented and the limits easily crossed. This phenomenon is particularly evident in the field of international taxation. This thesis deals precisely with the issue of difficulties of Soft Law in regulating offshore financial centers. Indeed, the absence of common economic interests is blatant between the Anglo-Saxon countries and continental Europe on this issue, thus finding a common interest (that could be economic, cultural, environmental or security-related) appears to be key to the success of legislation based on Soft Law internationally. The common interest seems unattainable when it comes to combating tax optimization, since the main aim is to protect the social model of the welfare state in continental European countries. A dichotomy of size at the time when the Anglo-Saxon countries are increasingly lacking in such a model
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Books on the topic "Feudal law (Saxon law)"

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Hayashi, Hiroshi. Essays in Anglo-Saxon law. Tokyo: Hiroshi Hayashi, 1989.

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Hayashi, Hiroshi. Essays in Anglo-Saxon law. 2nd ed. Tokyo: [s.n.], Distributed by the Selden Society, 1990.

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Hayashi, Hiroshi. Essays in Anglo-Saxon law. Tokyo: Privately printed, 1989.

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Commission, Scottish Law. Property law: Abolition of the feudal system. Edinburgh: The Commission, 1991.

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Eugen, Rosenstock-Huessy. Herzogsgewalt und Friedensschutz: Deutsche Provinzialversammlungen des 9.-12. Jahrhunderts. 2nd ed. Aalen: Scientia Verlag, 1991.

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MacQueen, Hector L. Common law and feudal society in medieval Scotland. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1993.

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Parliament, Scotland. Abolition of Feudal Tenure etc. (Scotland) Act 2000. Edinburgh: Stationery Office, 2000.

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Bónis, György. Hűbériség és rendiség a középkori magyar jogban. Budapest: Osiris, 2003.

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Tiesbrummel, Reinhard. Das Lehnrecht der Landgrafschaft Hessen (Niederhessen) im Spätmittelalter, 1247-1471. Darmstadt: Selbstverlag der Hessischen Historischen Kommission Darmstadt, 1990.

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Committee, Scotland Parliament Finance. Abolition of Feudal Tenure etc. (Scotland) Bill. Edinburgh: Stationery Office, 1999.

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Book chapters on the topic "Feudal law (Saxon law)"

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Griffel, Frank, Philippe Vallat, Mauro Zonta, Joseph Canning, Catherine König-Pralong, Roberto Lambertini, William Duba, Holly Hamilton-Bleakley, and Simo Knuuttila. "Feudal Law." In Encyclopedia of Medieval Philosophy, 354–56. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-9729-4_167.

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Canning, Joseph. "Feudal Law." In Encyclopedia of Medieval Philosophy, 562–64. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-024-1665-7_167.

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Simmons, Clare A. "Scottish Lawyers, Feudal Law." In Popular Medievalism in Romantic-Era Britain, 167–90. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230117068_7.

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Muldoon, James. "The Norman Yoke—Feudal Law." In John Adams and the Constitutional History of the Medieval British Empire, 43–82. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-66477-4_2.

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Rabin, Andrew. "Law and Justice." In A Handbook of Anglo-Saxon Studies, 85–98. Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118328828.ch6.

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Hudson, John. "Law and land in Anglo-Saxon England." In The Formation of the English Common Law, 73–96. Second edition. | Abingdon, Oxon; New York, NY: Routledge, 2017. | Series: The medieval world: Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315163031-4.

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Aguilera-Barchet, Bruno. "From Public to Private Power: Europe in the Feudal Age." In A History of Western Public Law, 153–73. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-11803-1_7.

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Hudson, John. "The court framework in Anglo-Saxon and Anglo-Norman England." In The Formation of the English Common Law, 18–40. Second edition. | Abingdon, Oxon; New York, NY: Routledge, 2017. | Series: The medieval world: Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315163031-2.

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Hudson, John. "Violence and theft in Anglo-Saxon and Anglo-Norman England." In The Formation of the English Common Law, 41–72. Second edition. | Abingdon, Oxon; New York, NY: Routledge, 2017. | Series: The medieval world: Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315163031-3.

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Jurasinski, Stefan. "Scribal Malpractice and the Study of Anglo-Saxon Law in the Twelfth Century." In Studies in the Early Middle Ages, 83–101. Turnhout: Brepols Publishers, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/m.sem-eb.5.105557.

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Conference papers on the topic "Feudal law (Saxon law)"

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Schäfer, Frank L. "Transition from Feudal to Modern Society: The Impact of Abolition of Serfdom on German Private Law." In The 7th International Scientific Conference of the Faculty of Law of the University of Latvia. LU Akadēmiskais apgāds, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.22364/iscflul.7.02.

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Hamah Saeed, Tahseen. "The normative role of the economic legal rule and the results of its application to the investment law in the Kurdistan region." In INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF DEFICIENCIES AND INFLATION ASPECTS IN LEGISLATION. University of Human Development, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.21928/uhdicdial.pp104-122.

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The reciprocal treatment between law and economics has become a fact in the real world. And that the influence and influence between them reached the point of putting the independence of each under question. The central role that the economy plays in the modern era, especially after the emergence of the phenomenon of globalization and the spread of transnational companies and the dominance of the liberal and capitalist intellectual current, caused the emergence of a special type of law and legal rules called economic legal rules that have characteristics that distinguish them from other legal rules. This is due to the special nature of the economy of change. Fast and complex. And it came to the point that some scholars claimed that the economy has become in the center and that the law lacks its independence and has no function but to regulate the affairs of the economy so that the latter performs its original and important function in modern societies. Although the opinion regarding the relativity of this independence differs among the jurists of the Latin school from the Anglo-Saxon school. The jurists of the Latin school in general recognize more independence of the law, while the Anglo-Saxon jurists go to the more influence of the economy on the law than the effect of the law on the economy. Especially in developing countries in need of development and development. That is why the researcher tries to apply the result of the structural role of the economic legal base on one of the economic laws in the afflicted Kurdistan region, which needs the most what it needs is change and development in both areas of law and economy. Especially with regard to investing and working with internal capital and attracting foreign investors, in order to remove some injustice from the oppressed people at a time when the reality was finally fair and gave them the opportunity to have their legitimate authority and enjoy the opportunity to rise and move to reach the level of progress of the world in the modern era and keep pace with what its brothers have reached in humanity from other peoples.
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3

Rapajić, Milan. "POSEBNE (UPRAVNE) ORGANIZACIJE U MILjEU VLADAVINE PRAVA." In XVII majsko savetovanje. Pravni fakultet Univerziteta u Kragujevcu, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.46793/uvp21.725r.

Full text
Abstract:
The modern state administration and its bodies and special organizations should act in the field of the rule of law. It is a term that originates from the Anglo-Saxon legal world, but it is also a category and a principle of the Constitution of Serbia from 2006. The paper points out the different understandings of the rule of law and briefly looks at the position of the administration or the phase in its historical course until its subsumption under the principle of legality. In Serbia, state administration bodies consist of ministries, administrative bodies within the ministry and special organizations. Administrative or special organizations are formed by the state in order to perform professional and related administrative tasks. In order to permanently and unhinderedly perform the professional work of these organizations, they can act authoritatively. Special organizations have numerous and diverse administrative powers. The paper points out both the similarities and differences of special organizations in relation to administrative bodies. A review of the activities and organizational structure of all special organizations (secretariats, institutes, directorates and one center) established by the Law on Ministries from 2020 was performed. It was also pointed out that all institutes: the Republic Institute of Statistics, the Republic Hydrometeorological Institute, the Republic Geodetic Institute and the Intellectual Property Institute are special organizations that provide services to interested parties. In one part of the final considerations, the author states that for special organizations (as part of the state administration) it could be concluded that they really operate in the field of rule of law as an order with positive properties as characterized by the Constitution, it is necessary to strictly respect the principles organization of state administration prescribed by the Law on State Administration: independence and legality; expertise, impartiality and political neutrality, effectiveness in exercising the rights of the parties, proportionality and respect for the parties; publicity of work.
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