Publication Date: 2013
Seller: The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., ABAA ILAB, Clark, NJ, U.S.A.
ISBN-13: 9781584777922. ISBN-10: 1584777923. [Great Britain]. [Vulgate Edition]. The Year Books. Originally published: London: by George Sawbridge, [etc]., 1678, 1679-80. With New Introductory Notes and Tables in Each Volume Naming all Justices and Serjeants, and Listing Calendar Years of Law Terms, by David J. Seipp, Professor of Law, Boston University, with Carol F. Lee of the District of Columbia Bar. xiv (vii-xiv new introduction), various paginations (630 pp.) Reprinted 2007, 2013 by The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd. VOLUME XI: ISBN-13: 9781584777922. ISBN-10: 1584777923. Hardcover, folio (9" x 14"). VOLUME XI ONLY. New. $250. * Reprint of Vol. XI of the Vulgate edition, with a new detailed introduction that addresses the history, content and significance of The Year Books, and tables that list all justices and sergeants, as well as calendar years of law terms. The new material includes references to Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535, which is based on the Vulgate edition reprinted here. A powerful research tool, Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports, 1268-1535 is a free online database of all printed Year Book reports that indexes and summarizes almost all of the cases in this edition. It also guides the reader to later and prior proceedings of individual cases and to all case references in abridgments and other sources. It is difficult to overestimate the importance of The Year Books. As Marvin put it in his Legal Bibliography, these were the "venerable books" from which Littleton, Hobart, Hale and Coke drew "so much valuable ore, melting it into ingots and refining and sending it abroad as the correct coin of the common law" (756). As a series of notes on debates and points of pleadings they are primary sources for our knowledge of medieval common law. The origin of The Year Books is unknown. Maitland believed that the earliest volumes were notes taken by law students in court copied for the use of pleaders in later cases. Holdsworth maintained that The Year Books, like other law reports, were records of cases made by lawyers for their own private use with no thought toward subsequent publication. Though it is not known when the first volumes were compiled, it is clear that the earliest cases date from 1268; the printed series.
Publication Date: 2013
Seller: The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., ABAA ILAB, Clark, NJ, U.S.A.
ISBN-13: 9781584777854. ISBN-10: 158477785. [Great Britain]. [Vulgate Edition]. The Year Books. Originally published: London: by George Sawbridge, [etc]., 1678, 1679-80. With New Introductory Notes and Tables in Each Volume Naming all Justices and Serjeants, and Listing Calendar Years of Law Terms, by David J. Seipp, Professor of Law, Boston University, with Carol F. Lee of the District of Columbia Bar. xi (vii-xi new introduction), various paginations (402 pp.) Reprinted 2007, 2013 by The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd. VOLUME IV: ISBN-13: 9781584777854. ISBN-10: 1584777850. Hardcover, folio (9" x 14"). VOLUME IV ONLY. New. $250. * Reprint of Vol. IV of the Vulgate edition, with a new detailed introduction that addresses the history, content and significance of The Year Books, and tables that list all justices and sergeants, as well as calendar years of law terms. The new material includes references to Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535, which is based on the Vulgate edition reprinted here. A powerful research tool, Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports, 1268-1535 is a free online database of all printed Year Book reports that indexes and summarizes almost all of the cases in this edition. It also guides the reader to later and prior proceedings of individual cases and to all case references in abridgments and other sources. It is difficult to overestimate the importance of The Year Books. As Marvin put it in his Legal Bibliography (1847), these were the "venerable books" from which Littleton, Hobart, Hale and Coke drew "so much valuable ore, melting it into ingots and refining and sending it abroad as the correct coin of the common law" (756). As a series of notes on debates and points of pleadings they are primary sources for our knowledge of medieval common law. The origin of The Year Books is unknown. Maitland believed that the earliest volumes were notes taken by law students in court copied for the use of pleaders in later cases. Holdsworth maintained that The Year Books, like other law reports, were records of cases made by lawyers for their own private use with no thought toward subsequent publication. Though it is not known when the first volumes were compiled, it is clear that the earliest cases date from 1268; the printed s.
Publication Date: 2013
Seller: The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., ABAA ILAB, Clark, NJ, U.S.A.
ISBN-13: 9781584777830. ISBN-10: 1584777834. [Great Britain]. [Vulgate Edition]. The Year Books. Originally published: London: by George Sawbridge, [etc]., 1678, 1679-80. With New Introductory Notes and Tables in Each Volume Naming all Justices and Serjeants, and Listing Calendar Years of Law Terms, by David J. Seipp, Professor of Law, Boston University, with Carol F. Lee of the District of Columbia Bar. xii (vii-xii new introduction, various paginations (total 586 pp.) Reprinted 2007, 2013 by The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd. VOLUME II: ISBN-13: 9781584777830. ISBN-10: 1584777834. Hardcover, folio (9" x 14"). VOLUME II ONLY. New. $250. * Reprint of Volume II of the Vulgate edition, with a new detailed introduction that addresses the history, content and significance of The Year Books, and tables that list all justices and sergeants, as well as calendar years of law terms. The new material includes references to Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535, which is based on the Vulgate edition reprinted here. A powerful research tool, Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports, 1268-1535 is a free online database of all printed Year Book reports that indexes and summarizes almost all of the cases in this edition. It also guides the reader to later and prior proceedings of individual cases and to all case references in abridgments and other sources. It is difficult to overestimate the importance of The Year Books. As Marvin put it in his Legal Bibliography (1847), these were the "venerable books" from which Littleton, Hobart, Hale and Coke drew "so much valuable ore, melting it into ingots and refining and sending it abroad as the correct coin of the common law" (756). As a series of notes on debates and points of pleadings they are primary sources for our knowledge of medieval common law. The origin of The Year Books is unknown. Maitland believed that the earliest volumes were notes taken by law students in court copied for the use of pleaders in later cases. Holdsworth maintained that The Year Books, like other law reports, were records of cases made by lawyers for their own private use with no thought toward subsequent publication. Though it is not known when the first volumes were compiled, it is clear that the earliest cases date from 1268; the.
Publication Date: 2013
Seller: The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., ABAA ILAB, Clark, NJ, U.S.A.
ISBN-13: 9781584777885. ISBN-10: 1584777885. [Great Britain]. [Vulgate Edition]. The Year Books. Originally published: London: by George Sawbridge, [etc]., 1678, 1679-80. With New Introductory Notes and Tables in Each Volume Naming all Justices and Serjeants, and Listing Calendar Years of Law Terms, by David J. Seipp, Professor of Law, Boston University, with Carol F. Lee of the District of Columbia Bar. xii (vii-xii new introduction), various paginations (580 pp.) Reprinted 2007, 2013 by The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd. VOLUME VII: ISBN-13: 9781584777885. ISBN-10: 1584777885. Hardcover, folio (9" x 14"). VOLUME VII ONLY. New. $250. * Reprint of Vol. VII of the Vulgate edition, with a new detailed introduction that addresses the history, content and significance of The Year Books, and tables that list all justices and sergeants, as well as calendar years of law terms. The new material includes references to Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535, which is based on the Vulgate edition reprinted here. A powerful research tool, Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports, 1268-1535 is a free online database of all printed Year Book reports that indexes and summarizes almost all of the cases in this edition. It also guides the reader to later and prior proceedings of individual cases and to all case references in abridgments and other sources. It is difficult to overestimate the importance of The Year Books. As Marvin put it in his Legal Bibliography (1847), these were the "venerable books" from which Littleton, Hobart, Hale and Coke drew "so much valuable ore, melting it into ingots and refining and sending it abroad as the correct coin of the common law" (756). As a series of notes on debates and points of pleadings they are primary sources for our knowledge of medieval common law. The origin of The Year Books is unknown. Maitland believed that the earliest volumes were notes taken by law students in court copied for the use of pleaders in later cases. Holdsworth maintained that The Year Books, like other law reports, were records of cases made by lawyers for their own private use with no thought toward subsequent publication. Though it is not known when the first volumes were compiled, it is clear that the earliest cases date from 1268; the prin.
Publication Date: 2013
Seller: The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., ABAA ILAB, Clark, NJ, U.S.A.
ISBN-13: 9781584777915. ISBN-10: 1584777915. [Great Britain]. [Vulgate Edition]. The Year Books. Originally published: London: by George Sawbridge, [etc]., 1678, 1679-80. With New Introductory Notes and Tables in Each Volume Naming all Justices and Serjeants, and Listing Calendar Years of Law Terms, by David J. Seipp, Professor of Law, Boston University, with Carol F. Lee of the District of Columbia Bar. x (vii-x new introduction), various paginations (160 pp.) Reprinted 2007, 2013 by The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd. VOLUME X: ISBN-13: 9781584777915. ISBN-10: 1584777915. Hardcover, folio (9" x 14"). VOLUME X ONLY. New. $250. * Reprint of Vol. X of the Vulgate edition, with a new detailed introduction that addresses the history, content and significance of The Year Books, and tables that list all justices and sergeants, as well as calendar years of law terms. The new material includes references to Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535, which is based on the Vulgate edition reprinted here. A powerful research tool, Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports, 1268-1535 is a free online database of all printed Year Book reports that indexes and summarizes almost all of the cases in this edition. It also guides the reader to later and prior proceedings of individual cases and to all case references in abridgments and other sources. It is difficult to overestimate the importance of The Year Books. As Marvin put it in his Legal Bibliography (1847), these were the "venerable books" from which Littleton, Hobart, Hale and Coke drew "so much valuable ore, melting it into ingots and refining and sending it abroad as the correct coin of the common law" (756). As a series of notes on debates and points of pleadings they are primary sources for our knowledge of medieval common law. The origin of The Year Books is unknown. Maitland believed that the earliest volumes were notes taken by law students in court copied for the use of pleaders in later cases. Holdsworth maintained that The Year Books, like other law reports, were records of cases made by lawyers for their own private use with no thought toward subsequent publication. Though it is not known when the first volumes were compiled, it is clear that the earliest cases date from 1268; the printed series.
Publication Date: 2013
Seller: The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., ABAA ILAB, Clark, NJ, U.S.A.
[Great Britain]. [Vulgate Edition]. The Year Books. Originally published: London: by George Sawbridge, [etc]., 1678, 1679-80. With New Introductory Notes and Tables in Each Volume Naming all Justices and Serjeants, and Listing Calendar Years of Law Terms, by David J. Seipp, Professor of Law, Boston University, with Carol F. Lee of the District of Columbia Bar. xii (vii-xii new introduction), various paginations (642 pp.) Reprinted 2007, 2013 by The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd. VOLUME IX: ISBN-13: 9781584777908. ISBN-10: 1584777907. Hardcover, folio (9" x 14"). VOLUME IX ONLY. New. $250. * Reprint of Vol. IX of the Vulgate edition, with a new detailed introduction that addresses the history, content and significance of The Year Books, and tables that list all justices and sergeants, as well as calendar years of law terms. The new material includes references to Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535, which is based on the Vulgate edition reprinted here. A powerful research tool, Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports, 1268-1535 is a free online database of all printed Year Book reports that indexes and summarizes almost all of the cases in this edition. It also guides the reader to later and prior proceedings of individual cases and to all case references in abridgments and other sources. It is difficult to overestimate the importance of The Year Books. As Marvin put it in his Legal Bibliography (1847), these were the "venerable books" from which Littleton, Hobart, Hale and Coke drew "so much valuable ore, melting it into ingots and refining and sending it abroad as the correct coin of the common law" (756). As a series of notes on debates and points of pleadings they are primary sources for our knowledge of medieval common law. The origin of The Year Books is unknown. Maitland believed that the earliest volumes were notes taken by law students in court copied for the use of pleaders in later cases. Holdsworth maintained that The Year Books, like other law reports, were records of cases made by lawyers for their own private use with no thought toward subsequent publication. Though it is not known when the first volumes were compiled, it is clear that the earliest cases date from 1268; the printed.
Publication Date: 2013
Seller: The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., ABAA ILAB, Clark, NJ, U.S.A.
ISBN-13: 9781584777847. ISBN-10: 1584777842. [Great Britain]. [Vulgate Edition]. The Year Books. Originally published: London: by George Sawbridge, [etc]., 1678, 1679-80. With New Introductory Notes and Tables in Each Volume Naming all Justices and Serjeants, and Listing Calendar Years of Law Terms, by David J. Seipp, Professor of Law, Boston University, with Carol F. Lee of the District of Columbia Bar. xii (vii-xii new introduction), various paginations (558 pp.) Reprinted 2007, 2013 by The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd. VOLUME III: ISBN-13: 9781584777847. ISBN-10: 1584777842. Hardcover, folio (9" x 14"). VOLUME III ONLY. New. $250. * Reprint of Volume III of the Vulgate edition, with a new detailed introduction that addresses the history, content and significance of The Year Books, and tables that list all justices and sergeants, as well as calendar years of law terms. The new material includes references to Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535, which is based on the Vulgate edition reprinted here. A powerful research tool, Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports, 1268-1535 is a free online database of all printed Year Book reports that indexes and summarizes almost all of the cases in this edition. It also guides the reader to later and prior proceedings of individual cases and to all case references in abridgments and other sources. It is difficult to overestimate the importance of The Year Books. As Marvin put it in his Legal Bibliography (1847), these were the "venerable books" from which Littleton, Hobart, Hale and Coke drew "so much valuable ore, melting it into ingots and refining and sending it abroad as the correct coin of the common law" (756). As a series of notes on debates and points of pleadings they are primary sources for our knowledge of medieval common law. The origin of The Year Books is unknown. Maitland believed that the earliest volumes were notes taken by law students in court copied for the use of pleaders in later cases. Holdsworth maintained that The Year Books, like other law reports, were records of cases made by lawyers for their own private use with no thought toward subsequent publication. Though it is not known when the first volumes were compiled, it is clear that the earliest cases date from 1268; the pr.
Publication Date: 2013
Seller: The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., ABAA ILAB, Clark, NJ, U.S.A.
ISBN-13: 9781584777823. ISBN-10: 1584777826. [Great Britain]. [Vulgate Edition]. The Year Books. Originally published: London: by George Sawbridge, [etc]., 1678, 1679-80. With New Introductory Notes and Tables in Each Volume Naming all Justices and Serjeants, and Listing Calendar Years of Law Terms, by David J. Seipp, Professor of Law, Boston University, with Carol F. Lee of the District of Columbia Bar. xii (vii-xii new introduction), [2], 685, [70] pp. Reprinted 2007, 2013 by The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd. VOLUME I: ISBN-13: 9781584777823. ISBN-10: 1584777826. Hardcover, folio (9" x 14"). VOLUME I ONLY. New. $250. * Reprint of Vol. I of the Vulgate edition, with a new detailed introduction that addresses the history, content and significance of The Year Books, and tables that list all justices and sergeants, as well as calendar years of law terms. The new material includes references to Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535, which is based on the Vulgate edition reprinted here. A powerful research tool, Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports, 1268-1535 is a free online database of all printed Year Book reports that indexes and summarizes almost all of the cases in this edition. It also guides the reader to later and prior proceedings of individual cases and to all case references in abridgments and other sources. It is difficult to overestimate the importance of The Year Books. As Marvin put it in his Legal Bibliography (1847), these were the "venerable books" from which Littleton, Hobart, Hale and Coke drew "so much valuable ore, melting it into ingots and refining and sending it abroad as the correct coin of the common law" (756). As a series of notes on debates and points of pleadings they are primary sources for our knowledge of medieval common law. The origin of The Year Books is unknown. Maitland believed that the earliest volumes were notes taken by law students in court copied for the use of pleaders in later cases. Holdsworth maintained that The Year Books, like other law reports, were records of cases made by lawyers for their own private use with no thought toward subsequent publication. Though it is not known when the first volumes were compiled, it is clear that the earliest cases date from 1268; the printed series continues to.
Publication Date: 2013
Seller: The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., ABAA ILAB, Clark, NJ, U.S.A.
ISBN-13: 9781584777892. ISBN-10: 1584777893. [Great Britain]. [Vulgate Edition]. The Year Books. Originally published: London: by George Sawbridge, [etc]., 1678, 1679-80. With New Introductory Notes and Tables in Each Volume Naming all Justices and Serjeants, and Listing Calendar Years of Law Terms, by David J. Seipp, Professor of Law, Boston University, with Carol F. Lee of the District of Columbia Bar. xii (vii-xii new introduction), various paginations (644 pp.) Reprinted 2007, 2013 by The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd. VOLUME VIII: ISBN-13: 9781584777892. ISBN-10: 1584777893. Hardcover, folio (9" x 14"). VOLUME VIII ONLY. New. $250. * Reprint of Vol. VIII of the Vulgate edition, with a new detailed introduction that addresses the history, content and significance of The Year Books, and tables that list all justices and sergeants, as well as calendar years of law terms. The new material includes references to Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535, which is based on the Vulgate edition reprinted here. A powerful research tool, Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports, 1268-1535 is a free online database of all printed Year Book reports that indexes and summarizes almost all of the cases in this edition. It also guides the reader to later and prior proceedings of individual cases and to all case references in abridgments and other sources. It is difficult to overestimate the importance of The Year Books. As Marvin put it in his Legal Bibliography (1847), these were the "venerable books" from which Littleton, Hobart, Hale and Coke drew "so much valuable ore, melting it into ingots and refining and sending it abroad as the correct coin of the common law" (756). As a series of notes on debates and points of pleadings they are primary sources for our knowledge of medieval common law. The origin of The Year Books is unknown. Maitland believed that the earliest volumes were notes taken by law students in court copied for the use of pleaders in later cases. Holdsworth maintained that The Year Books, like other law reports, were records of cases made by lawyers for their own private use with no thought toward subsequent publication. Though it is not known when the first volumes were compiled, it is clear that the earliest cases date from 1268; the p.
Publication Date: 2013
Seller: The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., ABAA ILAB, Clark, NJ, U.S.A.
ISBN-13: 9781584777878. ISBN-10: 1584777877. [Great Britain]. [Vulgate Edition]. The Year Books. Originally published: London: by George Sawbridge, [etc]., 1678, 1679-80. With New Introductory Notes and Tables in Each Volume Naming all Justices and Serjeants, and Listing Calendar Years of Law Terms, by David J. Seipp, Professor of Law, Boston University, with Carol F. Lee of the District of Columbia Bar. xii (vii-xii new introduction), various paginations (434 pp.) Reprinted 2007, 2013 by The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd. VOLUME VI: ISBN-13: 9781584777878. ISBN-10: 1584777877. Hardcover, folio (9" x 14"). VOLUME VI ONLY. New. $250. * Reprint of Vol. VI of the Vulgate edition, with a new detailed introduction that addresses the history, content and significance of The Year Books, and tables that list all justices and sergeants, as well as calendar years of law terms. The new material includes references to Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535, which is based on the Vulgate edition reprinted here. A powerful research tool, Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports, 1268-1535 is a free online database of all printed Year Book reports that indexes and summarizes almost all of the cases in this edition. It also guides the reader to later and prior proceedings of individual cases and to all case references in abridgments and other sources. It is difficult to overestimate the importance of The Year Books. As Marvin put it in his Legal Bibliography (1847), these were the "venerable books" from which Littleton, Hobart, Hale and Coke drew "so much valuable ore, melting it into ingots and refining and sending it abroad as the correct coin of the common law" (756). As a series of notes on debates and points of pleadings they are primary sources for our knowledge of medieval common law. The origin of The Year Books is unknown. Maitland believed that the earliest volumes were notes taken by law students in court copied for the use of pleaders in later cases. Holdsworth maintained that The Year Books, like other law reports, were records of cases made by lawyers for their own private use with no thought toward subsequent publication. Though it is not known when the first volumes were compiled, it is clear that the earliest cases date from 1268; the printed.
Publication Date: 2013
Seller: The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., ABAA ILAB, Clark, NJ, U.S.A.
ISBN-13: 9781584777861. ISBN-10: 1584777869. [Great Britain]. [Vulgate Edition]. The Year Books. Originally published: London: by George Sawbridge, [etc]., 1678, 1679-80. With New Introductory Notes and Tables in Each Volume Naming all Justices and Serjeants, and Listing Calendar Years of Law Terms, by David J. Seipp, Professor of Law, Boston University, with Carol F. Lee of the District of Columbia Bar. xi (vii-xi new introduction), various paginations (374 pp.) Reprinted 2007, 2013 by The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd. VOLUME V: ISBN-13: 9781584777861. ISBN-10: 1584777869. Hardcover, folio (9" x 14"). VOLUME V ONLY. New. $250. * Reprint of Vol. V of the Vulgate edition, with a new detailed introduction that addresses the history, content and significance of The Year Books, and tables that list all justices and sergeants, as well as calendar years of law terms. The new material includes references to Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535, which is based on the Vulgate edition reprinted here. A powerful research tool, Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports, 1268-1535 is a free online database of all printed Year Book reports that indexes and summarizes almost all of the cases in this edition. It also guides the reader to later and prior proceedings of individual cases and to all case references in abridgments and other sources. It is difficult to overestimate the importance of The Year Books. As Marvin put it in his Legal Bibliography (1847), these were the "venerable books" from which Littleton, Hobart, Hale and Coke drew "so much valuable ore, melting it into ingots and refining and sending it abroad as the correct coin of the common law" (756). As a series of notes on debates and points of pleadings they are primary sources for our knowledge of medieval common law. The origin of The Year Books is unknown. Maitland believed that the earliest volumes were notes taken by law students in court copied for the use of pleaders in later cases. Holdsworth maintained that The Year Books, like other law reports, were records of cases made by lawyers for their own private use with no thought toward subsequent publication. Though it is not known when the first volumes were compiled, it is clear that the earliest cases date from 1268; the printed seri.
Publication Date: 1679
Seller: The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., ABAA ILAB, Clark, NJ, U.S.A.
Cases from the Reign of Edward III, Part IV of the Vulgate Edition [Year Book]. [Vulgate Edition]. Edward III [1312-1377], King of England. Les Reports del Cases en Ley, Que Fuerunt Argues a Quadragesimo ad Quinquagesimum Annum' de Tres Haut & Puissant Prince Roy Edward le Tierce. Ore Novelment Imprimes, Corriges & Amendes, Avec les Notations & References al Brook, Fitzherbert & Statham. London: Printed by George Sawbridge [et al.] and are to be sold by H. Twyford [et al.], 1679. [ii], 2-49, 2-31, 26, 36, 2-46, 2-28, 2-34, 2-26, 34, 27, 27, [34] pp. Collates complete. Folio (15" x 9"). Recent pebbled cloth, blind fillets and gilt title and date to spine, endpapers renewed. Light soiling to boards, light rubbing to extremities, spine ends bumped, corners lightly worn. Moderate toning to interior, light foxing and soiling in several places, mostly to margins, small clean tears to edges of a few leaves not affecting text, upper corner of leaf B4 (pp. 16-17) lacking, no loss to text, brief later underlining and case citation to recto of leaf Bb1 (p. 19), offsetting from removed laid-in item to leaves Gg4v and Hh1r (pp. 29-30). $500. * First issue of Part IV of the Vulgate edition. It is difficult to overestimate the importance of the Year Books. As a series of notes on debates and points of pleadings in Norman England they are of crucial primary sources for our knowledge of medieval common law. They also provide a richly detailed portrait of contemporary English life, customs and manners. The origin of the Year Books is unknown. Some scholars believe the earliest volumes were notes transcribed by law students for study and for the use of lawyers in later cases while others maintain they were made by lawyers. Though it is not known when the first manuscript volumes were compiled, the date from the 1270s to 1535. Printed editions of the Year Books were first issued by William de Machlinia between 1481 and 1482. Issued between 1678-1680 and also known as Maynard's edition, the Vulgate remains the standard edition to this day. English Short-Title Catalogue R200650. Sweet & Maxwell, A Legal Bibliography of the British Commonwealth 1:313 (16).
Publication Date: 1679
Seller: The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., ABAA ILAB, Clark, NJ, U.S.A.
Cases From the Reign of Edward III, Parts II and III of the Vulgate Edition [Year Books]. [Vulgate Edition]. Edward III [1327-1377], King of England. Le Premier Part de les Reports del' Cases en Ley, Que Furent Argues en le Temps de le Tres Haut & Puissant Prince Roy Edward le Tierce. Ore Nouvelment Imprimes, Corriges & Amendes, Avec les Notations & References a L'Abregement de l'Tres Reverend & Tres Sages Juges de cest Royaulme, Brook & Fitzherbert. [Bound with] Le Second Part de les Reports des Cases en Ley, Que Furent Argues en le Temps de le tres Haut & Puissant Prince, Roy Edward le Tierce. Ore Nouvelment Imprimes, Corriges & Amendes, Avec les Notations & References a l'Abregement de l'Tres Reverend & Tres Sage Juge de cest Royaulme, Fitzherbert. London: Printed by George Sawbridge, William Rawlins, and Samuel Roycroft for H. Twyford, F. Tytan, J. Bellinger [et al.], 1679. Two volumes in one, various paginations. Folio (15" x 9"). Later (eighteenth or nineteenth-century) calf, blind rules and fillets to boards, raised bands, blind fillets and fragment of lettering piece to spine, gilt rules to board edges. Rubbing and scuffing to boards with some wear to extremities, large gouge near lower right corner of front board, which is detached along with front free endpaper, rear board separated but secured by cords, chipping to spine ends, corners bumped and worn. Moderate toning to interior, light foxing and soiling in a few places, small clean tears to edges of a few leaves not affecting text, small burn hole to text block of leaf Z6 (pp. 73-74) of second title with minor loss to text but not legibility, slight crack in text block between titles, all leaves secure. $500. * Maynard's (Vulgate) edition, parts II and III. Part II: 1-10 Edward III. Part III: 17-39 Edward III (omitting 19-20, 31-37). The old abridgements are valuable because they contain some of the cases of the wanting years of Edward III. Sir Frederick Pollock, "while pointing out that the text of the black letter Year-Book for the first half of the fourteenth century is so corrupt that a modern editor must simply disregard it and work on the unpublished MSS, indicates that the text of the later printed Year-Books may possibly turn out to be capable of use by future editors. No explanation has yet been offered of the gaps in years which occur i.
Publication Date: 1678
Seller: The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., ABAA ILAB, Clark, NJ, U.S.A.
From the Reigns of Edward I and Edward II, Part I of the Vulgate Edition [Year Books]. [Vulgate Edition]. [Maynard's Edition]. Edward I [1239-1307], King of England. Edward II [1284-1327], King of England. Les Reports des Cases Argue & Adjudge in le Temps del' Roy Edward le Second, Et Auxy Memoranda del' Exchequer en Temps le Roy Edward le Primer. Solonq; Les Ancient Manuscripts Ore Remanent en les Maines de Sir Jehan' Maynard Chevaler, Serjeant de la Ley al sa Tres Excellent Majesty le Roy Charles le Second. Ovesq; Un Perfect Table des Matters en les Dits Cases de Temps del' Roy Edward le Second, Colligee per le Mesme Serjeant. London: Printed by George Sawbridge [et al.], for T. Basset [et al.], 1678. [iv], 43, [1], 115, 132-216, 221-453, [1], 454-461 [i.e. 469], 462-665, 669, 667-668, 679-685, [73] pp. Pagination irregular, text complete. Folio (14-1/2" x 9"). Recent pebbled cloth, blind fillets and gilt title and (erroneous) date to spine, endpapers renewed. Light soiling to boards, light rubbing to extremities, spine ends and corners bumped, lower corner of rear board lightly worn. Moderate toning to interior, light foxing, soiling and faint dampstaining/spotting in several places, mostly to margins but somewhat heavier to last few leaves, bottom edges of leaves GG-Nnn6 (pp. 221-461) lightly worn with no loss to text, small early annotation ("Quod tibi nonvis fieri, Alteri ne feceris") to title page. $500. * First issue of Part I of the Vulgate edition. It is difficult to overestimate the importance of the Year Books. As a series of notes on debates and points of pleadings in Norman England they are of crucial primary sources for our knowledge of medieval common law. They also provide a richly detailed portrait of contemporary English life, customs and manners. The origin of the Year Books is unknown. Some scholars believe the earliest volumes were notes transcribed by law students for study and for the use of lawyers in later cases while others maintain they were made by lawyers. Though it is not known when the first manuscript volumes were compiled, the date from the 1270s to 1535. Printed editions of the Year Books were first issued by William de Machlinia between 1481 and 1482. Issued from 1678-1680 and also known as Maynard's edition, the Vulgate remains the standard edition to this day. English Short-Title.
Publication Date: 1679
Seller: The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., ABAA ILAB, Clark, NJ, U.S.A.
Cases from the Reign of Edward IV, Parts IX and X of the Vulgate Edition [Year Books]. [Vulgate Edition]. Edward IV [1442-1483], King of England. Les Reports des Cases en Ley Que Fuerunt Argues en Temps du Roy Edward le Quart. Avec les Notations de le Tres Reverend Judges Brook & Fitz-Herbert. Et Auter References n'Unques Devant Imprimee. Ovesque un Table Perfect des Choses Notables Contenus en Ycel. London: Printed by George Sawbridge [et al.] And are to be sold by H. Twyford [et al.], 1680. [ii], 10, 29, 28, 44, 8, 12, 32, 25, 53, 19, 11, 21, 10, 8, 33, 12, 8, 30, 10, 19, 84, 51, [75] pp. Complete. [Bound with] Les Reports des Cases en Ley en le Cinque An du Roy Edward le Quart. Communement Appelle Long Quinto. Novelment Imprimee & Corrigee, Ovesque References al Brook; Et un Table Perfect. London: Printed by George Sawbridge [et al.] And are to be sold by H. Twyford [et al.], 1680. [ii], 108, 108-142, [9] pp. Complete. Folio (15" x 9"). Later (eighteenth or nineteenth-century) calf, blind rules and fillets to boards, raised bands, blind fillets and lettering piece to spine, gilt rules to board edges. Rubbing and scuffing to boards, heavier rubbing and light wear to extremities, front board separated but secured by cords, rear joint starting at ends, corners bumped and worn, rear hinge cracked, faint offsetting to endleaves, minor worming to foot of front pastedown. Moderate toning to interior, light foxing and soiling in a few places, minor worming to bottom margin of first 100 or so leaves, occasional faint dampstaining to edges of last several leaves, text not affected. $700. * It is difficult to overestimate the importance of the Year Books. As a series of notes on debates and points of pleadings in Norman England they are of crucial primary sources for our knowledge of medieval common law. They also provide a richly detailed portrait of contemporary English life, customs and manners. The origin of the Year Books is unknown. Some scholars believe the earliest volumes were notes transcribed by law students for study and for the use of lawyers in later cases while others maintain they were made by lawyers. Though it is not known when the first manuscript volumes were compiled, the date from the 1270s to 1535. Printed editions of the Year Books were first issued by William de Machlinia between 1481 and 1482.
Publication Date: 2013
Seller: The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., ABAA ILAB, Clark, NJ, U.S.A.
ISBN-13: 9781584777816; ISBN-10: 1584777818. The Vulgate Edition in Law French [Great Britain]. [Vulgate Edition]. The Year Books; Or Reports in the Following Reigns, with Notes to Brooke and Fitzherbert's Abridgments. Originally published: London: by George Sawbridge, [etc]., 1678, 1679-80. 11 volumes. Folio (9" x 14"). 5,802 pp. With New Introductory Notes and Tables in Each Volume Naming all Justices and Serjeants, and Listing Calendar Years of Law Terms, by David J. Seipp, Professor of Law, Boston University, with Carol F. Lee of the District of Columbia Bar. Reprinted 2007, 2013 by The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd. Set: ISBN-13: 9781584777816; ISBN-10: 1584777818. Hardcover, folio (9" x 14"). New. $2,495. * Reprint of the Vulgate edition, with new detailed introductions that address the history, content and significance of the Year Books, and tables that list all justices and sergeants, as well as calendar years of law terms. The new material includes references to Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports 1268-1535, which is based on the Vulgate edition reprinted here. A powerful research tool, Seipp's Index and Paraphrase of Printed Year Book Reports, 1268-1535 is a free online database of all printed Year Book reports that indexes and summarizes almost all of the cases in this edition. It also guides the reader to later and prior proceedings of individual cases and to all case references in abridgments and other sources. It is difficult to overestimate the importance of The Year Books. As Marvin put it in his Legal Bibliography, these were the "venerable books" from which Littleton, Hobart, Hale and Coke drew "so much valuable ore, melting it into ingots and refining and sending it abroad as the correct coin of the common law" (756). As a series of notes on debates and points of pleadings they are primary sources for our knowledge of medieval common law. The origin of The Year Books is unknown. Maitland believed that the earliest volumes were notes taken by law students in court copied for the use of pleaders in later cases. Holdsworth maintained that The Year Books, like other law reports, were records of cases made by lawyers for their own private use with no thought toward subsequent publication. Though it is not known when the first volumes were compiled, it is clear that the earliest cases date from 1268; t.