| Henry Sumner Maine - Anthropology - 1861 - 432 pages
...of smaller interest, it assists us, though only partially, to understand the plagiarisms of Bracton. That an English writer of the time of Henry III. should...the contents were directly borrowed from the Corpus Juris, and that he should have ventured on this experiment in a country where the systematic study... | |
| Henry Sumner Maine - Anthropology - 1861 - 432 pages
...of smaller interest, it assists us, though only partially, to understand the plagiarisms of Bracton. That an English writer of the time of Henry III. should...the contents were directly borrowed from the Corpus Juris, and that he should have ventured on this experiment in a country where the systematic study... | |
| Henry Sumner Maine - Anthropology - 1867 - 494 pages
...smaller interest, it assists us, though only partially, to. understand the plagiarisms of Bracton. That an English writer of the time of Henry III. should...the contents were directly borrowed from the Corpus Juris, and that he should have ventured on this experiment in a country where the systematic study... | |
| Henry Sumner Maine - Comparative law - 1834 - 484 pages
...of smaller interest, it assists us, though only partially to understand the plagiarisms of Bracton. That an English writer of the time of Henry III. should have been able to put off on his countrymen as a compendinm of pure English law a treatise of which the entire form and a third of the contents were... | |
| Henry Sumner Maine - Civilization, Ancient - 1874 - 436 pages
...interest, it assists us, though only partially, to understand the plagiarisms of Bracton. That an EnglishX 'writer of the time of Henry III. should have been...the contents were directly borrowed from the Corpus Juris, and that he should have ventured on this experiment in a country where the systematic study... | |
| Henry Sumner Maine - Comparative law - 1875 - 480 pages
...of smaller interest, it assists us, though only partially, to understand the plagiarisms of Bracton. That an English writer of the time of Henry III. should...his countrymen as a compendium of pure English law a tr^tise of which the entire form and a third of the contents were directly borrowed from the Corpus... | |
| Leslie Stephen - Philosophy, English - 1876 - 496 pages
...absent. The same remark applies equally to Mahommedanism. The bare religion of 1 Leslie, i. 296. ' That an English writer of the time of Henry III. should...able to put off on his countrymen as a compendium of English law a treatise of which the entire form and a third of the contents were directly borrowed... | |
| Leslie Stephen - Philosophy, English - 1876 - 504 pages
...absent. The same remark applies equally to Mahommedanism. The bare religion of ' Leslie, i. 296. ' That an English writer of the time of Henry III. should have been able lo put off on his countrymen as a compendium of English law a treatise of which the entire form and... | |
| Leslie Stephen - England - 1881 - 492 pages
...have been able to put off on his countrymen as a compendium of English law a treatise of which ihe entire form and a third of the contents were directly borrowed from the Corpus Juris, and lhat he should have ventured on this experiment in a country where the systematic study... | |
| James Williams - Common law - 1883 - 290 pages
...Bracton was actually used in England in the reign of Henry III. On the other hand, Sir H. Maine wonders " that an English writer of the time of Henry III. should...the contents were directly borrowed from the Corpus Juris " (Maine, ch. iv.). In some cases indeed Bracton uses expressions which could have had positively... | |
| |