Law and Revolution

Law and Revolution

by Harold J. Berman
Law and Revolution

Law and Revolution

by Harold J. Berman

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Overview

The roots of modern Western legal institutions and concepts go back nine centuries to the Papal Revolution, when the Western church established its political and legal unity and its independence from emperors, kings, and feudal lords. Out of this upheaval came the Western idea of integrated legal systems consciously developed over generations and centuries. Harold J. Berman describes the main features of these systems of law, including the canon law of the church, the royal law of the major kingdoms, the urban law of the newly emerging cities, feudal law, manorial law, and mercantile law. In the coexistence and competition of these systems he finds an important source of the Western belief in the supremacy of law.

Written simply and dramatically, carrying a wealth of detail for the scholar but also a fascinating story for the layman, the book grapples with wide-ranging questions of our heritage and our future. One of its main themes is the interaction between the Western belief in legal evolution and the periodic outbreak of apocalyptic revolutionary upheavals.

Berman challenges conventional nationalist approaches to legal history, which have neglected the common foundations of all Western legal systems. He also questions conventional social theory, which has paid insufficient attention to the origin of modern Western legal systems and has therefore misjudged the nature of the crisis of the legal tradition in the twentieth century.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674252479
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 01/01/1985
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 672
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Harold J. Berman was Woodruff Professor of Law, Emory University, and Ames Professor of Law, Emeritus, Harvard University.

Table of Contents

Introduction

Law and History


Law and Revolution


The Crisis of the Western Legal Tradition


Toward a Social Theory of Law

PART I: THE PAPAL REVOLUTION AND THE CANON LAW


1. The Background of the Western Legal Tradition: The Folklaw


Tribal Law


Dynamic Elements in Germanic Law: Christianity and Kingship


Penitential Law and Its Relation to the Folklaw


2. The Origin of the Western Legal Tradition in the Papal Revolution


Church and Empire: The Cluniac Reform


The Dictates of the Pope


The Revolutionary Character of the Papal Revolution


Social-Psychological Causes and Consequences of the Papal Revolution


The Rise of the Modern State


The Rise of Modern Legal Systems


3.

What People are Saying About This

By demonstrating the revolutionary character of the papal reformation, Berman upsets periodizations commonly accepted by Church historians, positivists, Marxist historians, and historians of the law... Law and Revolution is itself a revolutionary book in obliging the practitioners of many university disciplines to readjust their focus and to see in law a revolutionary cultural force.

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