1. Schuyler, ed., Maitland: Historian (2 Jan)

Frederic Maitland renovated understanding of the medieval common law, perhaps the most distinctive of English institutions. Resisting generalization in fidelity to the era’s documents, his scrutinous work also established methodological standards for the historical profession. Legal history was to be distinguished from antiquarianism, and not to blandly accept Whiggish constitutional narratives.

The medieval law was fairly criticized by humanists. Written in bad Latin and worse French, its weaknesses might have opened the door for Continental Roman law – a ‘reception’. Under Henry VIII, the Parliamentary act Lex Regia gave force of statute to the king’s proclamations. There were new courts grown out of the king’s council and using a summary procedure devised by legists. Scotland was contemporaneously establishing a Roman Court of Justice under James V. In 1535 More was executed and the Year Books ceased publication. Maitland quotes Burke: ‘To put an end to reports is to put an end to the law of England’.
‘Might not the council and the Star Chamber and the Court of Requests do the romanizing work that was done in Germany by the Imperial Chamber Court, the Reichskammergericht?’

After Henry VIII passed in 1547, the common lawyers pushed back; civil law was preeminent in Mary’s reign; but the common law afterward recovered its former status. Maitland’s opinion that the common law was in danger in the second quarter of the 16th century had not been sustained by mid-20th century historians, Schuyler observes.

The Inns of Court and also the Year Books are characteristically English. No other institution could have preserved common law in the Renaissance era. Not so Parliament, nor trial by jury, which existed in France. England’s schools of the national law had no parallel on the Continent, whose universities (e.g., Bologna) had faculty of Roman civil law and ecclesiastical canon law. The Year Books are further notable in as much as printed books did not yet exist; lawyers advanced their skills and practice by taking notes and sharing works. Every lawyer had to read them, every prominent lawyer had to give lectures of them. This hardened the cohort of the common-law tradition. They are medieval England’s distinctive intellectual product, vernacular reports or oral debate, written by lawyers for lawyers. They show the dynamics of economic and moral currents in which the logic of law elicits the settled views of contemporary society.

Bracton’s main debt to Roman law is spirit and method but not principle, contra Sir Henry Maine, who wrongly asserted one-third of his work was Roman. Much less so, it was ‘a method of reasoning, of interdependence of rules and place in hierarchy. He assumed Roman law was complementary to distinct English law and borrowed to fill in the gaps, there being nothing like copyright.

Why was there little or no historiography of medieval English law? English lawyers, intimidated by the record of French and German law, have exaggerated the latter’s earlier development. Second, the lawyer wants authority – precedent – the newer the better. Third, those who understand the topic want to build their practice, not to write an account.

Much of this work’s excerpts are set in the reigns of Edward I and II (1272-1307 and 1307-27, respectively). Examining the Parliament of 1305’s concerns with affairs of state (especially ‘foreign policy’), legislation, taxation or supply, petitions of the crown (in three courts), and judicial matters (criminal and civil), Maitland showed there were yet no hard lines between petition for royal justice and grace, and wide scope for discretion. Further, petitions of the lords and commoners assembled were indistinct. It was also not yet established that representatives of the shires or towns could put their grievances and interests to the king in council. He concludes: it’s easy to fall into anachronism, and to dismiss institutions and techniques that seemed to contemporaries to work well enough, however flawed or frail they may appear to successors.

A separate essay on law prior to Edward I examines the varying meaning of words used in contemporary documents, showing they do not map to latter-day understandings. For example, a serf is not a chattel slave. On the manor, even the lowliest were rarely working for the lord, and even Bracton discusses the ‘relativity’ of status.

Studying Anglo-Saxon land books and charters, Maitland concluded historians had underestimated the king’s extent of rights over the land of freeholders. He might be entitled to a large, yearly quantum of produce while he was in situ. If in England the duty of feeding the king became a tax or rent, it was comparable to Scandinavia, German tribes and even Romans. Such derived practices – down to tenancy – did not appear as an abuse during feudal times when kingship devolved to landlordship, office to property, tax to rent. The early land books evidence that the king’s giving land is more the giving of certain privileges that are yet some ways from ownership; the Anglo-Saxon land book (i.e., the charter) never really ceased to be an ecclesiastical instrument. The king gave privileges of land for the benefit of his soul. It was land held by royal grant under Church sanction.

Feudalism, various services owed to superiors for protection and used of land, was a natural stage of English history. He insists: there is no way to reach from the 8th to the 16th century without its features. Feudalism was a civilizing sequence: separation of employment (division of labor); possibility of national defense, of art and science; the cathedral and the library. The growth of peasants subject to seignorial justice (i.e., the manor and its villeins) in place of free village / open fields is explicable and demonstrable in law. Civilizational progress is often cruel, especially in hindsight.

On county courts: there were many small freeholders on estates of lay lords, and many other residents with defined rights. When Henry I revived the duty to attend courts, it was incumbent of freeholders whose overlords had no immunity to attend; no one attended who didn’t have to. The ‘right’ to do what no one wants to do is no right.

The difficulty of historiography is in erasing clear views and returning to obscure, yet-undefined concepts – in a systematic fashion. For example, by overpopulating towns and villages. In previous centuries, the ‘corporate one’ held sway over common lands. The ‘plural many’ is a latter development. Where were the powers of the nebulous majority? ‘The law sees differences of kind where nature has made differences of degree’.

Maitland noted the Celtic language faded from use, though historiography suggested the Celts were the balance of the population: why? The victors established themselves: ‘true English villages with open fields are not Celtic, not Roman, but German’.
On the Mirror of Justices: in 1289 the English legal regime had sunk to a low level through corruption, a unique event of the late medieval era. Maitland exposed the document as the work of an amateur: even then trained jurists did not speak of law as being for the purposes of religious redemption. Written between 1285-90, it is a jumble playing on the known loss of public confidence in tribunals.

On criticizing text: Maitland rationally concludes that divergent copies of the same event may have been made simultaneously; he shows that a supposed statute could not have been so. All is in attention to detail.

In a final extract, Schuyler culminates by showing even careful scholarship could prove erroneous or in need of correction, as when Maitland surmised Elizabeth had adopted ‘etc’ in her title in order to sidestep controversy over the English crown doubling as head of the Church. Subsequently scholars shared Mary had previously done the same, for the converse reason of wishing not to offend the Pope.

NB: ‘Simplicity is the outcome of technical subtlety; it is the goal not the starting point.’ Moreover, the further back one goes ‘instead of the simple we find the indefinite’.

15. Ward and Ward, ed., Natural Right and Political Philosophy (17 August)

A festschrift organized in four categories: ancient, early modern, and American political thought and politics in literature. Often an elusive subject because it may encompass liberty, virtue, or responsibility with or without stating whether natural right is assumed, denied, or displaced by another dynamic.

Pangle: Socrates presents mastery of the body as essential to an excellent soul. In Xenophon’s telling, the best life is that of the athlete who masters the self-control needed for moderation, a guideline exceeding Aristotle’s middle way.

Cherry: All can participate in the Aristotelian pursuit of justice and equality. To depend on a derived philosophy such as cosmology is an error – better to start with what we know, what everyone can know. The ideal polity is a mixed regime for common advantage, incorporating the wealthy and virtuous among the ordinary multitude. Virtuous actions and political thought differ by individual, are not uniform; wealth-poverty isn’t the sole axis.

Nichols: Aristotle wrote the Politics because experience yields insufficient guidance: political science is the fruition of political life. In seeking for unity from diversity, pure ideas fall short. Humanity is political by nature because its various associations (e.g., families, friends, political communities) all entail participation. Plato treats friends as part of the whole, in contrast to Aristotle’s Ethics which asserts their intrinsic value. Both truth and friends are valuable. In reducing individuals to a class, Plato denies them the diversity of goods they seek. Multiple interests are necessary contributions to the community.

Keys: Augustine observed Rome commanded a disproportionate share of citizen loyalty, at the expense of natural rights. The state’s overreach itself caused grievance. God created mankind as capable of reason and freedom. Humanity itself is a natural right. Dignity and humility must ally for humanity to reach knowledge and justice; these goods depend on reverence.

Schaeffer: Montaigne lowers humanity’s aspirations, a la Machiavelli. We shouldn’t zealously pursue heretics: if it’s natural to deviate from reason, to what degree are men responsible? Contra Aristotle, the Frenchman sees that the ‘value and height of true virtue … lies in the ease, utility, and pleasure of its practice’, which even children can pursue. Montaigne’s Essays are conventionally seen as having evolved during course of composition, but it’s more likely he was nurturing his readers.

Lee Ward: Spinoza thought theocracy did not fit the classical typology of government: it has no balancing power, no universal basis of legitimacy. Having divided authority between the priest and the military commander, such that neither could rule alone, the Mosaic regime created deep social conflict, which naturally led to monarchy as resolution.
Divine law cannot be known prior to revelation, while natural law is immanent, available to all via unassisted use of reason. Mosaic law is unscientific and narcissistic, even if beneficial, because it must always refer to its foundation. It cannot be broken, where natural law allows for default.
In the Theological-Political Treatise, Spinoza claims intellectual freedom including free speech is vital to the polity’s success, contrary to conventional views of free speech as license. The Hebrew state was unable to promote freedom: lack of liberty, incoherent basis of political legitimacy and obligation leads to unchanging, rigid views of civil conduct. Further, theocracy’s demands inevitably expand as the means of meeting new contexts. Spinoza sought for a religion consistent with natural rights, a problem because each religion has very particular concepts of its civil contribution.

Sullivan: Montesquieu held ‘the citizen’s liberty depends principally on the goodness of the criminal laws’. He restricted civil authority from the conscience. Divine justice is distinct from human justice; the individual conscience is not to be inspected by human tribunals.
Sacrilege and treason are both conducted via conspiracy. The state’s ‘vague proofs’ are steps toward despotism: action not thought must be the threshold. Speech and though are not answerable in courts of law, but only deliberate acts exhorting treason.

Church: Hegel is the source of criticizing the individual of Locke’s social contract. Though he follows Locke in many (often unrecognized) respects, he denies human goods are inescapably ethical and political. For Locke, the individual has no liberty or indeed identity without exclusive right to property as a product of labor. For Hegel this was merely selfish (i.e., subjective). The main good is freedom, understood as a rational and common. The political community, instead of being instrumental to protecting natural rights, expresses self-realization (overcoming objective alienation) in the scope of Geist.

Ncgorski: The Bible demands obedient love, philosophy autonomous understanding. Strauss’ choice of philosophy is paradoxically an act of faith, since the best way to live might indeed be in pursuit of religion. John Paul II, though calling ‘faith and reason like two wings on which the human spirit rises to the contemplation of truth’, asserted but could not prove revelation trumps reason. Interestingly, the duo also shared a Socratic approach.

Lawler: Locke’s understanding of personal identity depends on Christian (i.e., Puritan) understanding of natural right. It reworks of Biblical doctrine in light of what we can know of ourselves through unaided reason: what is natural follows from what is true of the will of the creator. Many features of personal liberation valued by Locke are Christian, for example opposition to slavery, equality of women in marriage, and egalitarian political community. A post-Christian Lockean is a believer in freedom without personal salvation. This attempt to transform God into an uncaring being is at odds with free society based on secure personal liberty.
America is a compromise between Locke and Puritanism, as we see in Tocqueville. Puritans are hypermoral, Virginians amoral. The Puritans could have learned liberty of conscience from the Virginians, mistakenly assigning to the church what is the state’s job. But renouncing religion in the name of science and progress curtails the mind, as per Marilynne Robinson. Tocqueville says modern / technical language works against metaphysical distinctions, draining humans of their distinction from animals

Yarborough: Jefferson believe in man’s teleological progress but probably would not have endorsed progressivism. Croly and Dewey made no use of natural right
Nichols: Gouvernor Morris sees property as the ideal grounding a republican state, where property is the product of labor (rather than inherited). But where others see wealthy vs poor, or property rights versus human rights, Morris sees freedom versus tyranny. As much as Hamilton he saw the potential of a strong national government and so labored at the Constitutional Convention for a modern economy, ending slavery, political parties, and a strong executive.

Alvis: Examines the Constitutional Convention’s debate over the executive office, which considered the Articles of Confederation, a weak (limited) or strong (expansive) position, one or several officeholders, and popular election. The settlement of voting, the electoral college, was very different from Hamilton’s Federalist 10, focused on elites, whereas Morris asserted electors should represent the common voter. Hence it was not intended to curb direct democracy to channel it. The need for an energetic executive was reconciled with limited government that protected individual rights, a problem acute in republics: ‘where law is the product of consent, its lax enforcement would call into question the very principles on which the nation is founded ‘ (Federalist 70). It was to be a ‘republican remedy for the diseases most incident to republican government’ (Federalist 10).

Schaub: Studies Booker Washington’s appreciation of Lincoln’s statesmanship inpublic addresses and writings. It was an inverted relationship: Lincoln appealed to natural equality to promote the physical liberty of slaves; Washington pitched to the spiritual liberty in pursuit of civic equality.

Emmert: Teddy Roosevelt’s histories, essays, and biographical sketches lead to an account of US history (i.e., statesmanship and constitutionalism) which is broadly grounded in moral and intellectual excellence: courage, moderation, and public spiritedness. Statesman wed common sense to reflections of political forms, the most important being the rule of law underpinned by charter or constitution. Roosevelt opined people need leaders not masters: biography is a form of education for the people in learning to choose elected representatives.

Spiekerman: Brutus is the hero of Julius Caesar, and by inviting us to consider his actions, Shakespeare brings us to ask of the nature of conspiracy. The playwright suggests Brutus and Cassius are refined intellectuals, not ‘men of action’; Shakespeare did not conclude anti-republican forces would not have won but for contingency: he says it was a close call, that the assassins made unforced errors. Hence the famous ‘tide of men’s affairs’ quote in untrue.
Shakespeare seeks to make Brutus attractive to friends of liberty while acknowledging his evident faults, to make the loser attractive to those who want to win, which has been made problematic by the republican failure. Did he see a link between philosophy and political weakness?

Pangle: In Cervantes’ Don Quixote, the narrator displays Averroism based on ‘natural light’ not Christian faith. He seeks to debunk the ‘Christian imperialism’ of chivalry, the militancy of contemporary religion. The work shows how monotheism appears to the philosopher.
Henderson: Tom Stoppard’s critique of utopianism in the Coast of Utopia stems from personal interests and politics being grounded in humanity.

NB: Machiavelli in Discourses: ‘For whoever has a stained conscience easily believes that one speaks of him; one can hear a word, said for another end, that perturbs your spirit and makes you believe it was said about your case’.