驟 ben she santos" of the university of Cambridge speak ex atan? o de same effect. From the general use and necessity of some acquaintance with the common law, the inference was extremely easy with regard to the propriety of the present institution, in a place to which gentlemen of all ranks and degrees resort, as the fountain of all useful knowledge. But how it has come to pass that a design of this sort has never before taken place in the university, and the reason why the study of our laws has in general fallen into disuse, I shall previously proceed to inquire. n SIR John Fortescue, in his panegyric on the laws of England, (which was written in the reign of Henry the sixth,) puts a very obvious question into the mouth of the young prince, whom he is exhorting to apply himself to that branch of learning: "Why the laws of England, being so good, so "fruitful, and so commodious, are not taught in the univer"sities, as the civil and canon laws are?" In answer to which he gives o what seems, with due deference be it spoken, a very jejune and unsatisfactory reason; being, in short, that "as the 66 proceedings at common law were in his time carried on in "three different tongues, the English, the Latin, and the "French, that science must be necessarily taught in those "three several languages; but that in the universities all "sciences were taught in the Latin tongue only;" and therefore he concludes, "that they could not be conveniently 66 taught or studied in our universities." But without attempting to examine seriously the validity of this reason, (the very shadow of which by the wisdom of our late constitutions is entirely taken away,) we, perhaps, may find out a better, or at least a more plausible account, why the study of the municipal laws has been banished from these seats of science, than what the learned chancellor thought it prudent to give to his royal pupil. Doctor legum mox a doctoratu dabit operam legibus Angliae, ut non sit imperibus earum legum quas habet sua patria, et differentias exteri patriique juris noscat. Stat. Eliz. R. c. 14. Cowel. Institut. proëmio. " c. 47. c. 48. THAT ancient collection of unwritten maxims and customs, which is called the common law, however compounded, or from whatever fountains derived, had subsisted immemorially in this kingdom; and, though somewhat altered and impaired by the violence of the times, had in great measure weathered the rude shock of the Norman conquest. This had endeared it to the people in general, as well because it's decisions were universally known, as because it was found to be excellently adapted to the genius of the English nation. In the knowledge of this law consisted great part of the learning of those dark ages; it was then taught, says Mr. Selden P, in the monasteries, in the universities, and in the families of the principal nobility. The clergy in particular, as they then engrossed almost every other branch of learning, so (like their predecessors the British Druids 1) they were peculiarly remarkable for their proficiency in the study of the law. Nullus clericus nisi causidicus, is the character given of them soon after the conquest by William of Malmsbury'. The judges therefore were usually created out of the sacred order, as was likewise the case among the Normans; and all the inferior offices were supplied by the lower clergy, which has occasioned their successors to be denominated clerks to this day. BUT the common law of England, being not committed to writing, but only handed down by tradition, use, and experience, was not so heartily relished by the foreign clergy; came over hither in shoals, during the reign of the conqueror and his two sons, and were utter strangers to our constitution as well as our language. And an accident which soon after happened, had nearly completed its ruin. A copy of Justinian's pandects, being newly discovered at Amalfi, soon brought the civil law into vogue all over the west of Europe, where before it was quite laid aside and in a manner forgotten; though some traces of it's authority remained in Italy * W [18] and the eastern provinces of the empire. This now became in a particular manner the favourite of the popish clergy, who borrowed the method and many of the maxims of the canon law from this original. The study of it was introduced into several universities abroad, particularly that of Bologna; where exercises were performed, lectures read, and degrees conferred in this faculty, as in other branches of science: and many nations on the continent, just then beginning to recover from the convulsions consequent upon the overthrow of the Roman empire, and settling by degrees into peaceable forms of government, adopted the civil law, (being the best written system then extant,) as the basis of their several constitutions; blending and interweaving it among their own feodal customs, in some places with a more extensive, in others a more confined authority". NOR was it long before the prevailing mode of the times reached England. For Theobald, a Norman abbot, being elected to the see of Canterbury a, and extremely addicted to this new study, brought over with him in his retinue many learned proficients therein; and among the rest Roger sirnamed Vacarius, whom he placed in the university of Oxford, to teach it to the people of this country. But it did not meet with the same easy reception in England, where a mild and rational system of laws had been long established, as it did upon the continent; and though the monkish clergy (devoted to the will of a foreign primate) received it with eagerness and zeal, yet the laity, who were more interested to preserve the old constitution, and had already severely felt the effect of many Norman innovations, continued wedded to the use of the common law. King Stephen immediately published a [19] proclamation, forbidding the study of the laws, then newly imported from Italy; which was treated by the monks as a piece of impiety, and although it might prevent the introduction of the civil law process into our courts of justice, yet did not hinder the clergy from reading and teaching it in their own schools and monasteries. FROM this time the nation seems to have been divided into two parties; the bishops and clergy, many of them foreigners, who applied themselves wholly to the study of the civil and canon laws, which now came to be inseparably interwoven with each other; and the nobility and laity, who adhered with equal pertinacity to the old common law : both of them reciprocally jealous of what they were unacquainted with, and neither of them perhaps allowing the opposite system that real merit which is abundantly to be found in each. This appears, on the one hand, from the spleen with which the monastic writers speak of our municipal laws upon all occasions; and on the other, from the firm temper which the nobility shewed at the famous parliament of Merton: when the prelates endeavoured to procure an act, to declare all bastards legitimate in case the parents intermarried at any time afterwards; alleging this only reason, because holy church (that is, the canon law) declared such children legitimate but "all the earls and barons (says the parliament "roll') with one voice answered, that they would not change; "the laws of England, which had hitherto been used and 66 e approved." And we find the same jealousy prevailing above a century afterwards, when the nobility declared with a kind of prophetic spirit," that the realm of England hath "never been unto this hour, neither by the consent of our "lord the king and the lords of parliament shall it ever be, "ruled or governed by the civil law "." And of this temper [ 20 ] between the clergy and laity many more instances might be given. WHILE things were in this situation, the clergy, finding it impossible to root out the municipal law, began to withdraw themselves by degrees from the temporal courts; and to that end, very early in the reign of King Henry the third, epis copal constitutions were published', forbidding all ecclesiastics to appear as advocates in foro saeculari: nor did they long continue to act as judges there, not caring to take the oath of office which was then found necessary to be administered, that they should in all things determine according to the law and custom of this realm; though they still kept possession of the high office of chancellor; an office then of little juridical power; and afterwards, as it's business increased by degrees, they modelled the process of the court at their own discretion. BUT wherever they retired, and wherever their authority extended, they carried with them the same zeal to introduce the rules of the civil, in exclusion of the municipal law. This appears in a particular manner from the spiritual courts of all denominations, from the chancellor's courts in both our universities, and from the high court of chancery before mentioned; in all of which the proceedings are to this day in a course much conformed to the civil law: for which no tolerable reason can be assigned, unless that these courts were all under the immediate direction of the popish ecclesiastics, among whom it was a point of religion to exclude the municipal law; Pope Innocent the fourth having forbidden 1 the very reading of it by the clergy, because its decisions were not founded on the imperial constitutions, but merely on the customs of the laity. And if it be considered, that our universities began about that period to receive their present form of scholastic [21] discipline; that they were then, and continued to be till the time of the reformation, entirely under the influence of the popish clergy; (Sir John Mason the first protestant, being also the first lay, chancellor of Oxford;) this will lead us to perceive the reason, why the study of the Roman laws was in those days of bigotry pursued with such alacrity in these seats m 1 Spelman. Concil. A. D. 1217. without making her a civilian and a Wilkins, vol. 1. p. 574. 599. *Selden ad Fletam. 9. 3. M. Paris ad A. D. 1254. m There cannot be a stronger instance of the absurd and superstitious veneration that was paid to these laws, than that the most learned writers of the times thought they could not form a perfect character even of the blessed virgin, canonist; which Albertus Magnus, the renowned dominican doctor of the thirteenth century, thus proves in his Summa de laudibus christiferae virginis (divinum magis quam humanum opus) qu. 23. § 5. " Item quod jura civilia, & leges, & de"creta scivit in summo, probatur hoc " modo; sapientia advocati manifestatur "in tribus; unum, quod obtineat omnia |