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In: Cambridge library collection. History
This hugely influential work of 1861 is probably the one for which Sir Henry Maine (1822-88) is best remembered. Appointed Regius Professor of Civil Law at Cambridge when he was only twenty-five, Maine then became Reader in Roman law and jurisprudence at the Council of Legal Education, which had been established in London in 1852 by the Inns of Court, and combined this post with research and journalism. He was interested in the relationship between the law and the society that both shaped it and consented to be regulated by it, and drew on historical examples from the culture of many Indo-European societies to further his arguments on the development of law as a vital component of civilisation. Published at a time when the evolution of institutions as well as of species was a topic of widespread interest, this remains a landmark work in the intellectual history of legal studies
In: The Whewell lectures 1887
In: Bibliothèque de l'histoire du droit et des institutions 6
In: Bibliothèque de l'histoire du droit et des institutions 5
In: http://mdz-nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:12-bsb11571988-6
by the Right Hon. Sir M.E. Grant Duff . with some of his Indian speeches and minutes, selected and ed. by W. Stokes . with portrait ; Volltext // Exemplar mit der Signatur: München, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek -- Biogr. 696 l
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In: http://mdz-nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:12-bsb11127379-8
by Henry Sumner Maine ; Volltext // Exemplar mit der Signatur: München, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek -- Pol.g. 601 d
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In The Victorian Achievement of Sir Henry Maine some of the world's leading scholars, in a wide range of disciplines, come together to consider the extraordinary achievement of Sir Henry Maine, sometime Master of Trinity Hall, Cambridge (1877–1888) and one of the most powerful and original minds of the Victorian age. The disciplinary range and scholarly stature of the contributors is itself testimony to the fascination of Maine's work which, after a period of relative neglect, is now recognized as a unique and fecund contribution to the development of social scientific study. The book is divided into four sections, dealing with the principal strands of Maine's life and writing, viz. his views on social and political progress, his anthropological and social scientific works, his legal and jurisprudential thought and finally his writings on Indian affairs, the product (in part) of his experiences as the legal member of Council of the Governor-General from 1862 to 1869