fbpx
Wikipedia

Commentaries on the Laws of England

The Commentaries on the Laws of England[1] (commonly, but informally known as Blackstone's Commentaries) are an influential 18th-century treatise on the common law of England by Sir William Blackstone, originally published by the Clarendon Press at Oxford between 1765 and 1769. The work is divided into four volumes, on the rights of persons, the rights of things, of private wrongs and of public wrongs.

The title page of the first book of William Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England (1st ed., 1765)

The Commentaries were long regarded as the leading work on the development of English law and played a role in the development of the American legal system. They were in fact the first methodical treatise on the common law suitable for a lay readership since at least the Middle Ages. The common law of England has relied on precedent more than statute and codifications and has been far less amenable than the civil law, developed from the Roman law, to the needs of a treatise. The Commentaries were influential largely because they were in fact readable, and because they met a need. As such, they were used in the training of American and British lawyers long after the death of Blackstone.

The Commentaries are often quoted as the definitive pre-Revolutionary source of common law by United States courts.[citation needed] Opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States quote from Blackstone's work whenever they wish to engage in historical discussion that goes back that far, or farther (for example, when discussing the intent of the Framers of the Constitution). The book was famously used as the key in Benedict Arnold's book cipher, which he used to communicate secretly with his conspirator John André during their plot to betray the Continental Army during the American Revolution.

Publication history edit

In 1765 Blackstone announced his resignation from the Vinerian Chair, effective after his 1766 lectures. These were divided into two 14-lecture series, on "private wrongs" and "public wrongs" delivered between 12 February and 24 April.[2] At this point Blackstone had published nothing new since A Treatise on the Law of Descents in Fee Simple in 1759.[3] The decision to resign was most likely due to the increasing demands of his legal practice and the reduced profit from the lectures, which, after peaking at £340 in 1762, dropped to £239 a year later and to £203 for the final round of lectures in 1765–6.[4]

In response, Blackstone decided to publish a new book – Commentaries on the Laws of England. The first volume was published in November 1765, bringing the author £1,600 – the full work would eventually bring in over £14,000. Owen Ruffhead described Volume I as "masterly", noting that "Mr Blackstone is perhaps the first who has treated the body of the law in a liberal, elegant and constitutional manner. A vein of good sense and moderation runs through every page". Every copy was sold within six months, and the second and third volumes, published in October 1766 and June 1768, received a similar reception.[5] The fourth and final volume appeared in 1769, dealing with Criminal Law.[6] With the financial success of the Commentaries, Blackstone moved in 1768 from his London property in Carey Fields to No. 55 Lincoln's Inn Fields. Neighbours included the Sardinian ambassador, Sir Walter Rawlinson, Lord Northington, John Morton and the Third Earl of Abingdon, making it an appropriate house for a "great and able Lawyer".[7]

Blackstone's treatise was republished in 1770, 1773, 1774, 1775, 1778 and in a posthumous edition in 1783.[8] Reprints of the first edition, intended for practical use rather than antiquary interest, were published until the 1870s in England and Wales, and a working version by Henry John Stephen, first published in 1841,[9] was reprinted until after the Second World War.[10] The first American edition was produced in 1772; prior to this, over 1,000 copies had already been sold in the Thirteen Colonies.[11]

Contents edit

 
Sir William Blackstone as illustrated in his Commentaries on the Laws of England

The Rights of Persons edit

The Rights of Persons is the first volume in the four part series that is the Commentaries. Divided into 18 chapters, it is largely concerned with the rights of individuals; the rights of Parliament; the rights and title of the King; the royal family; the councils belonging to the King; kingly duties; the royal prerogative; the King's revenue; subordinate magistrates; the people (aliens, denizens, and natives); the rights of the clergy; the civil state; the military and maritime states; the relationship between master and servant (in modern-day terminology, employer and employee), husband and wife, parent and child, guardian and ward; and finally corporates.

The Rights of Things edit

The Rights of Things, Blackstone's longest volume, deals with property. The vast majority of the text is devoted to real property, this being the most valuable sort in the feudal law upon which the English law of land was founded. Property in chattels was already beginning to overshadow property in land, but its law lacked the complex feudal background of the common law of land, and was not dealt with nearly as extensively by Blackstone.

Of Private Wrongs edit

Of Private Wrongs dealt with torts as they existed in Blackstone's time. The various methods of trial that existed at civil law were also dealt with in this volume, as were the jurisdictions of the several courts, from the lowest to the highest. Almost as an afterthought, Blackstone also adds a brief chapter on equity, the parallel legal system that existed in English law at the time, seeking to address wrongs that the common law did not handle.

Of Public Wrongs edit

Of Public Wrongs is Blackstone's treatise on criminal law. Here, Blackstone the apologist takes centre stage; he seeks to explain how the criminal laws of England were just and merciful, despite becoming later known as the Bloody Code for their severity. He does however accept that "It is a melancholy truth, that among the variety of actions which men are daily liable to commit, no less than an hundred and sixty have been declared by Act of Parliament to be felonious without benefit of clergy; or, in other words, to be worthy of instant death". Blackstone frequently resorted to assuring his reader that the laws as written were not always enforced, and that the King's power of pardon could be exercised to correct any hardships or injustices.

Legacy edit

Blackstone for the first time made the common law readable and understandable by non-lawyers. At first, his Commentaries were hotly contested, some seeing in them an evil or covert attempt to reduce or codify the common law which was anathema to common law purists.[citation needed]

For decades, a study of the Commentaries was required reading for all first year law students. Lord Avonmore said of Blackstone: "He it was who first gave to the law the air of a science. He found it a skeleton and clothed it with life, colour and complexion. He embraced the cold statue and by his touch, it grew into youth, health and beauty." Jeremy Bentham, who had been a critic of the Commentaries when they were first published, credits Blackstone with having "taught jurisprudence to speak the language of the scholar and the gentleman; put a polish upon that rugged science, cleansed her from the dust and cobwebs of the office and, if he has not enriched her with that precision which is drawn only from the sterling treasury of the sciences, has decked her out to advantage from the toilet of classical erudition, enlivened her with metaphors and allusions and sent her abroad in some measure to instruct."[12])

While there is much valuable historical information in the Commentaries, later historians have tended to be somewhat critical of the uses Blackstone made of history. There is a lot of what would later be called "Whig history" in the Commentaries;[citation needed] the easy and contradictory assurance that England's current political settlement represented the optimal state of rational and just government, while claiming simultaneously that this optimal state was an ideal that had always existed in the past, despite the many struggles in England's history between overreaching kings and wayward parliaments.

But Blackstone's chief contribution was to create a succinct, readable, and above all handy epitome of the common law tradition. While useful in England, Blackstone's text answered an urgent need in the developing United States and Canada. In the United States, the common law tradition was being spread into frontier areas, but it was not feasible for lawyers and judges to carry around the large libraries that contained the common law precedents. The four volumes of Blackstone put the gist of that tradition in portable form. (A modern paperback printing of the four volumes total about 1500 pages [13]) They were required reading for most lawyers in the Colonies, and for many, they were the only reading. Blackstone's Whiggish but conservative vision of English law as a force to protect people, their liberty, and their property, had a deep impact on the ideologies that were cited in support of the American Revolution, and ultimately, the United States Constitution.[citation needed]

Two decades after their publication, Blackstone's Commentaries were the focus of a mocking polemic by Jeremy Bentham, called Fragment on Government.[14] This dissection of Blackstone's first book made Bentham's name notorious, though it was originally published anonymously.

In 1841–1845, Henry John Stephen published New Commentaries on the Laws of England (Partly Founded on Blackstone), whose structure was modelled on Blackstone's work and which liberally quoted from it; much of Blackstone's text remained as late as 1914 in the 16th edition of Stephen's Commentaries; in 1922 under Edward Jenks most of the text was rewritten but the structure was realigned more closely to Blackstone's original.[15][16]

Quotations edit

Of great importance to the public is the preservation of this personal liberty; for if once it were left in the power of any the highest magistrate to imprison arbitrarily whomever he or his officers thought proper, (as in France it is daily practised by the crown,) there would soon be an end of all other rights and immunities. Some have thought that unjust attacks, even upon life or property, at the arbitrary will of the magistrate, are less dangerous to the commonwealth than such as are made upon the personal liberty of the subject. To bereave a man of life, or by violence to confiscate his estate, without accusation or trial, would be so gross and notorious an act of despotism, as must at once convey the alarm of tyranny throughout the whole kingdom; but confinement of the person, by secretly hurrying him to jail, where his sufferings are unknown or forgotten, is a less public, a less striking, and therefore a more dangerous engine of arbitrary government.[17]

[T]he principal aim of society is to protect individuals in the enjoyment of those absolute rights, which were vested in them by the immutable laws of nature, but which could not be preserved in peace without that mutual assistance and intercourse which is gained by the institution of friendly and social communities. Hence it follows, that the first and primary end of human laws is to maintain and regulate these absolute rights of individuals.[18]

That the King can do no wrong, is a necessary and fundamental principle of the English constitution.[19]

It is better that ten guilty persons escape than one innocent suffer.[20]

There is nothing which so generally strikes the imagination, and engages the affections of mankind, as the right of property; or that sole and despotic dominion which one man claims and exercises over the external things of the world, in total exclusion of the right of any other individual in the universe. And yet there are very few, that will give themselves the trouble to consider the original and foundation of this right.[21]

Notable editions edit

  • A bibliography of The Commentaries of the Laws of England from Legal Bibliography (1905)
  1. The Fifth Edition, Oxford, at the Clarendon Press, MDCCLXXIII., printed for William Strahan, Thomas Cadell, and Daniel Prince. 8vo., 4 vols.
  2. The Twelfth Edition (with portraits of the judges), with the last corrections of the author and with notes and additions by Edward Christian, Esq., Barrister at Law and Professor of the Laws of England in the University of Cambridge, London, 1793–1795. 4 vols., 8vo.
  3. Blackstone's Commentaries:[22] with notes of reference, to the Constitution and laws, of the federal government of the United States, and of the Commonwealth of Virginia : in five volumes, with an appendix to each volume, containing short tracts upon such subjects as appeared necessary to form a connected view of the laws of Virginia, as a member of the federal union / by St. George Tucker.
  4. The Sixteenth Edition, with notes by J. F. Archbold, (added to Christian's), London, 1811. 4 vols., royal 8vo.
  5. The Sixteenth Edition, with notes by J. T. Coleridge, London, 1825.
  6. The Eighteenth Edition, with notes by J. Chitty, London, 1826 (often reprinted in America).
  7. 'Commentaries on the laws of England: in four books] / by Sir William Blackstone ... ; together with such notes of enduring value as have been published in the several English editions ; and also, a copious analysis of the contents ; and additional notes with references to English and American decisions and statutes, to date, which illustrate or change the law of the text ; also a full table of abbreviations and some considerations regarding the study of the law, by Thomas M. Cooley. Published: Chicago: Callaghan and Co., 1871, Second Edition 1876, Third Edition 1884, Fourth Edition edited by James DeWitt Andrews 1899.
  8. Commentaries on the laws of England / by Sir William Blackstone, KT. Edition Information: From the author's 8th ed., 1778 / edited for American lawyers by William G. Hammond ; with copious notes, and references to all comments on the text in the American reports, 1787–1890. Published: San Francisco : Bancroft–Whitney Company, 1890. Description: 4 vols.
  9. Commentaries on the Laws of England in Four Books / by Sir William Blackstone. Notes selected from the editions of Archibold, Christian, Coleridge, Chitty, Stewart, Kerr, and others, Barron Field's Analysis, and Additional Notes, and a Life of the Author by George Sharswood. In Two Volumes. (Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott Co., 1893).
  10. Commentaries on the laws of England : in four books / by Sir William Blackstone ; with notes selected from the editions of Archbold, Christian, Coleridge, Chitty, Stewart, Kerr, and others ; and in addition, notes and references to all text books and decisions wherein the Commentaries have been cited, and all statutes modifying the text by William Draper Lewis. Published: Philadelphia : Rees Welsh and Company, 1897. Description: 4 vols.
  11. Commentaries on the Laws of England by Sir William Blackstone, Kt. ; edited by William Carey Jones. Published: San Francisco : Bancroft–Whitney, 1915–16. Description: 2 vols.
  12. Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England; edited by Wayne Morrison. 4 vols. Published: London: Routledge–Cavendish; London, England: 2001. Description 4 vols.
  13. Wilfrid Prest, ed. (2016), Commentaries on the Laws of England, Oxford: Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-960103-5.
  14. Online: Yale University https://avalon.law.yale.edu/subject_menus/blackstone.asp

Abridgements edit

Ralph Thomas in Notes & Queries, 4th Series, II August 8, 1868 gave the following list of the abridgements of Blackstone's Commentaries.

  1. A Summary of the Constitutional Law of England: being an Abridgment of Blackstone's Commentaries. By the Rev. Dr. J. Trusler, 1788, 12mo ; 228 and index. "Everything in Blackstone necessary for the general reader is here comprised ... and nothing omitted but what is peculiarly adapted to the profession of a lawyer." (Advertisement.)
  2. The Commentaries of Sir W. Blackstone, Knight, on the Law and Constitution of England, carefully abridged in a new manner, and continued down to the present time, by Wm. Curry 1796, 8vo; viii. contents, 566. 2nd edit. 1809. Consists of selections of the most essential parts in the words of the author.
  3. Commentaries on the Law of England, principally in the order, and comprising the whole substance, of Commentaries of Sir W. Blackstone. [By J. Addams], 1819, 8vo.
  4. An Abridgment of Blackstone's Commentaries. By John Gifford [pseud. i. e. Edward Foss], 1821, 8vo. See No. VI.
  5. An Abridgment of Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England, in a series of Letters from a Father to his Daughter, chiefly intended for the Use and Advancement of Female Education. By a Barrister at Law, F.R., F.A., and F.L.S. [Sir E. E. Wilmot], 1822, 12mo; viii. 304.
  6. Same by Sir J. E.E. W. . . . A new edition [the 2nd] corrected ... by his son Sir J. E. E. W. 3rd edit. 1855.
  7. Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England, abridged for the Use of Students, &c. By John Gifford, author of the Life of . . . . Pitt [pseud. John Richards Green], 1823, 8vo.
  8. The British Constitution; or, an Epitome of Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England, for the Use of Schools. By Vincent Wanostrocht, LL.D., Alfred House Academy, Camberwell, 1823, 12mo; xi. 845.
  9. An American Abridgment, 1832. [Mr Thomas may be referring to John Anthon's An Analytical Abridgment of the Commentaries of Sir William Blackstone on the laws of England: in four books: together with an analytical synopsis of each book, printed and published by Isaac Riley in 1809, second edition 1832.]
  10. Select Extracts from Blackstone's Commentaries, carefully adapted to the Use of Schools and Young Persons; with a Glossary, Questions, and Notes, and a General Introduction. By Samuel Warren, 1837, 12mo; xxvi. 428 (no index).
  11. Commentaries on the Laws of England, in the Order and Compiled from the Text of Blackstone, and embracing the New Statutes and Alterations to the present time. By J. Bethune Bayly, of the Middle Temple, 1840, roy. 8vo; li. 700.
  12. A Synopsis of Blackstone's Commentaries. London. [1847]. A large single sheet in folio.
  13. The Law Student's First Book, being chiefly an Abridgment of Blackstone's Commentaries; incorporating the Alterations in the Law down to the present time. By the Editors of The Law Student's Magazine, 1848, 12mo; xxiv. 508, xvi.
  14. Blackstone's Commentaries systematically arranged and adapted to the existing State of the Law and Constitution, with great Additions. By S. Warren, . . . 1855, 8vo 2nd edition, 1856. See IX. The original portions of Blackstone are indicated.
  15. The Student's Blackstone; Selections from the Commentaries on the Laws of England. By Sir W. B.; being those portions of the work which relate to the British Constitution and the Rights of Persons. By R. M. Kerr, 1858, 12mo; xix. 575. The Student's Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England, in four books, by Sir W. Blackstone, &c., abridged ... By R. M. Kerr. 2nd edit. 1865, 12mo; xx. 612.

Other abridgments include:

  • Blackstone economized: being a compendium of the laws of England to the present time by Sir William Blackstone, David Mitchell Aird Published: London: Longmans, Green, & Co.: 1878
  • Essentials of the Law: A Review of Blackstone's Commentaries for the Use of Students at Law (1882) Author: Marshall Davis Ewell Published: Boston: Charles C Soule: 1882
  • Selections from Blackstone edited by William Carey Jones Published: San Francisco: Bancroft–Whitney Co. 1926.
  • The Sovereignty of the Law: Selections from Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England edited by Gareth Jones, Published: London: Macmillan, 1973 ISBN 0-8357-4720-4

See also edit

Sources edit

  • Alschuler, Albert (1994). "Sir William Blackstone and the shaping of American law". New Law Journal. 144 (6653). ISSN 0306-6479.
  • Boorstin, Daniel J., The Mysterious Science of the Law: An Essay on Blackstone's Commentaries (Univ. Chicago, 1996). ISBN 0-226-06498-0
  • Milsom, S.F.C. (1981). "The Nature of Blackstone's Achievement". Oxford Journal of Legal Studies. 1 (1). ISSN 0143-6503.
  • Prest, Wilfrid (2008). William Blackstone: Law and Letters in the Eighteenth Century. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-955029-6.
  • Stacey, Robert D. Sir William Blackstone and the Common Law: Blackstone's Legacy to America (ACW, 2003) ISBN 1-932124-14-4

References edit

  1. ^ Blackstone, William, Commentaries on the Laws of England, facsimile edition with introductions by Stanley N. Katz. (Univ. Chicago, 1979). 4 vols. ISBN 0-226-05538-8, ISBN 0-226-05541-8, ISBN 0-226-05543-4, ISBN 0-226-05545-0
  2. ^ Prest (2008) p. 212
  3. ^ Prest (2008) p. 214
  4. ^ Prest (2008) p. 217
  5. ^ Prest (2008) p. 220
  6. ^ Prest (2008) p. 246
  7. ^ Prest (2008) p. 235
  8. ^ Prest (2008) p. 287
  9. ^ Stephen, Leslie; Patrick Polden (2004). "Oxford DNB article: Stephen, Henry (subscription needed)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/26372. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  10. ^ Milsom (1981) p. 1
  11. ^ Alschuler (1994) p. 896
  12. ^ "Blackstone, Sir William". Law Hall of Fame.
  13. ^ "Amazon".
  14. ^ Bentham, Jeremy (1776). Fragment on Government.
  15. ^ Jenks, Edward (1922). "Preface". Stephen's Commentaries on the Laws of England. Vol. 1 (17th ed.). London: Butterworth. pp. v–ix – via HeinOnline.
  16. ^ H. D. H. (November 1926). "Stephen's Commentaries on the Laws of England Eighteenth edition". The Cambridge Law Journal (book review). 2 (3): 435. doi:10.1017/S0008197300112103. S2CID 159774596.
  17. ^ Sir William Blackstone. "Commentaries on the Laws of England (1768), Book 1: Of The Rights of Persons, Chapter 1: Of the Absolute Rights of Individuals". Wikisource. Wikisource. Retrieved 7 October 2023.
  18. ^ Sir William Blackstone. "Commentaries on the Laws of England (1768), Book 1: Of The Rights of Persons, Chapter 1: Of the Absolute Rights of Individuals". Wikisource. Wikisource. Retrieved 7 October 2023.
  19. ^ Sir William Blackstone. . The Avalon Project of the Yale Law School Lillian Goldman Law Library. Archived from the original on 7 October 2023. Retrieved 7 October 2023.
  20. ^ Sir William Blackstone. . The Avalon Project of the Yale Law School Lillian Goldman Law Library. Archived from the original on 7 October 2023. Retrieved 7 October 2023.
  21. ^ Sir William Blackstone. . The Avalon Project of the Yale Law School Lillian Goldman Law Library. Archived from the original on 7 October 2023. Retrieved 7 October 2023.
  22. ^ Tucker, St. George (1803). "Blackstone's Commentaries with Notes of Reference".

External links edit

  • Commentaries on the laws of England, original edition 1765
    • Book the first: of the rights of persons (1765)
    • Book the second: of the rights of things (1766)
    • Book the third: of private wrongs
    • Book the fourth: of public wrongs
  • The commentaries on the laws of England of Sir William Blackstone (1876, London : John Murray. Edited by Robert Malcolm Kerr)
    • – volume 1
    • – volume 2
  • Commentaries on the laws of England: in four books, edited by Thomas Cooley, Callaghan & Co, 1884—Third Edition
    • Books 1 & 2
    • Books 3 & 4
  • The Student's Blackstone Adapted and Abridged by R M N Kerr, William Clowes & Son, 1885—Ninth Edition
  •   Commentaries on the Laws of England public domain audiobook at LibriVox

commentaries, laws, england, commonly, informally, known, blackstone, commentaries, influential, 18th, century, treatise, common, england, william, blackstone, originally, published, clarendon, press, oxford, between, 1765, 1769, work, divided, into, four, vol. The Commentaries on the Laws of England 1 commonly but informally known as Blackstone s Commentaries are an influential 18th century treatise on the common law of England by Sir William Blackstone originally published by the Clarendon Press at Oxford between 1765 and 1769 The work is divided into four volumes on the rights of persons the rights of things of private wrongs and of public wrongs The title page of the first book of William Blackstone s Commentaries on the Laws of England 1st ed 1765 The Commentaries were long regarded as the leading work on the development of English law and played a role in the development of the American legal system They were in fact the first methodical treatise on the common law suitable for a lay readership since at least the Middle Ages The common law of England has relied on precedent more than statute and codifications and has been far less amenable than the civil law developed from the Roman law to the needs of a treatise The Commentaries were influential largely because they were in fact readable and because they met a need As such they were used in the training of American and British lawyers long after the death of Blackstone The Commentaries are often quoted as the definitive pre Revolutionary source of common law by United States courts citation needed Opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States quote from Blackstone s work whenever they wish to engage in historical discussion that goes back that far or farther for example when discussing the intent of the Framers of the Constitution The book was famously used as the key in Benedict Arnold s book cipher which he used to communicate secretly with his conspirator John Andre during their plot to betray the Continental Army during the American Revolution Contents 1 Publication history 2 Contents 2 1 The Rights of Persons 2 2 The Rights of Things 2 3 Of Private Wrongs 2 4 Of Public Wrongs 3 Legacy 4 Quotations 5 Notable editions 6 Abridgements 7 See also 8 Sources 9 References 10 External linksPublication history editIn 1765 Blackstone announced his resignation from the Vinerian Chair effective after his 1766 lectures These were divided into two 14 lecture series on private wrongs and public wrongs delivered between 12 February and 24 April 2 At this point Blackstone had published nothing new since A Treatise on the Law of Descents in Fee Simple in 1759 3 The decision to resign was most likely due to the increasing demands of his legal practice and the reduced profit from the lectures which after peaking at 340 in 1762 dropped to 239 a year later and to 203 for the final round of lectures in 1765 6 4 In response Blackstone decided to publish a new book Commentaries on the Laws of England The first volume was published in November 1765 bringing the author 1 600 the full work would eventually bring in over 14 000 Owen Ruffhead described Volume I as masterly noting that Mr Blackstone is perhaps the first who has treated the body of the law in a liberal elegant and constitutional manner A vein of good sense and moderation runs through every page Every copy was sold within six months and the second and third volumes published in October 1766 and June 1768 received a similar reception 5 The fourth and final volume appeared in 1769 dealing with Criminal Law 6 With the financial success of the Commentaries Blackstone moved in 1768 from his London property in Carey Fields to No 55 Lincoln s Inn Fields Neighbours included the Sardinian ambassador Sir Walter Rawlinson Lord Northington John Morton and the Third Earl of Abingdon making it an appropriate house for a great and able Lawyer 7 Blackstone s treatise was republished in 1770 1773 1774 1775 1778 and in a posthumous edition in 1783 8 Reprints of the first edition intended for practical use rather than antiquary interest were published until the 1870s in England and Wales and a working version by Henry John Stephen first published in 1841 9 was reprinted until after the Second World War 10 The first American edition was produced in 1772 prior to this over 1 000 copies had already been sold in the Thirteen Colonies 11 Contents edit nbsp Sir William Blackstone as illustrated in his Commentaries on the Laws of England The Rights of Persons edit The Rights of Persons is the first volume in the four part series that is the Commentaries Divided into 18 chapters it is largely concerned with the rights of individuals the rights of Parliament the rights and title of the King the royal family the councils belonging to the King kingly duties the royal prerogative the King s revenue subordinate magistrates the people aliens denizens and natives the rights of the clergy the civil state the military and maritime states the relationship between master and servant in modern day terminology employer and employee husband and wife parent and child guardian and ward and finally corporates The Rights of Things edit The Rights of Things Blackstone s longest volume deals with property The vast majority of the text is devoted to real property this being the most valuable sort in the feudal law upon which the English law of land was founded Property in chattels was already beginning to overshadow property in land but its law lacked the complex feudal background of the common law of land and was not dealt with nearly as extensively by Blackstone Of Private Wrongs edit Of Private Wrongs dealt with torts as they existed in Blackstone s time The various methods of trial that existed at civil law were also dealt with in this volume as were the jurisdictions of the several courts from the lowest to the highest Almost as an afterthought Blackstone also adds a brief chapter on equity the parallel legal system that existed in English law at the time seeking to address wrongs that the common law did not handle Of Public Wrongs edit Of Public Wrongs is Blackstone s treatise on criminal law Here Blackstone the apologist takes centre stage he seeks to explain how the criminal laws of England were just and merciful despite becoming later known as the Bloody Code for their severity He does however accept that It is a melancholy truth that among the variety of actions which men are daily liable to commit no less than an hundred and sixty have been declared by Act of Parliament to be felonious without benefit of clergy or in other words to be worthy of instant death Blackstone frequently resorted to assuring his reader that the laws as written were not always enforced and that the King s power of pardon could be exercised to correct any hardships or injustices Legacy editBlackstone for the first time made the common law readable and understandable by non lawyers At first his Commentaries were hotly contested some seeing in them an evil or covert attempt to reduce or codify the common law which was anathema to common law purists citation needed For decades a study of the Commentaries was required reading for all first year law students Lord Avonmore said of Blackstone He it was who first gave to the law the air of a science He found it a skeleton and clothed it with life colour and complexion He embraced the cold statue and by his touch it grew into youth health and beauty Jeremy Bentham who had been a critic of the Commentaries when they were first published credits Blackstone with having taught jurisprudence to speak the language of the scholar and the gentleman put a polish upon that rugged science cleansed her from the dust and cobwebs of the office and if he has not enriched her with that precision which is drawn only from the sterling treasury of the sciences has decked her out to advantage from the toilet of classical erudition enlivened her with metaphors and allusions and sent her abroad in some measure to instruct 12 While there is much valuable historical information in the Commentaries later historians have tended to be somewhat critical of the uses Blackstone made of history There is a lot of what would later be called Whig history in the Commentaries citation needed the easy and contradictory assurance that England s current political settlement represented the optimal state of rational and just government while claiming simultaneously that this optimal state was an ideal that had always existed in the past despite the many struggles in England s history between overreaching kings and wayward parliaments But Blackstone s chief contribution was to create a succinct readable and above all handy epitome of the common law tradition While useful in England Blackstone s text answered an urgent need in the developing United States and Canada In the United States the common law tradition was being spread into frontier areas but it was not feasible for lawyers and judges to carry around the large libraries that contained the common law precedents The four volumes of Blackstone put the gist of that tradition in portable form A modern paperback printing of the four volumes total about 1500 pages 13 They were required reading for most lawyers in the Colonies and for many they were the only reading Blackstone s Whiggish but conservative vision of English law as a force to protect people their liberty and their property had a deep impact on the ideologies that were cited in support of the American Revolution and ultimately the United States Constitution citation needed Two decades after their publication Blackstone s Commentaries were the focus of a mocking polemic by Jeremy Bentham called Fragment on Government 14 This dissection of Blackstone s first book made Bentham s name notorious though it was originally published anonymously In 1841 1845 Henry John Stephen published New Commentaries on the Laws of England Partly Founded on Blackstone whose structure was modelled on Blackstone s work and which liberally quoted from it much of Blackstone s text remained as late as 1914 in the 16th edition of Stephen s Commentaries in 1922 under Edward Jenks most of the text was rewritten but the structure was realigned more closely to Blackstone s original 15 16 Quotations editThis section is a candidate for copying over to Wikiquote using the Transwiki process Of great importance to the public is the preservation of this personal liberty for if once it were left in the power of any the highest magistrate to imprison arbitrarily whomever he or his officers thought proper as in France it is daily practised by the crown there would soon be an end of all other rights and immunities Some have thought that unjust attacks even upon life or property at the arbitrary will of the magistrate are less dangerous to the commonwealth than such as are made upon the personal liberty of the subject To bereave a man of life or by violence to confiscate his estate without accusation or trial would be so gross and notorious an act of despotism as must at once convey the alarm of tyranny throughout the whole kingdom but confinement of the person by secretly hurrying him to jail where his sufferings are unknown or forgotten is a less public a less striking and therefore a more dangerous engine of arbitrary government 17 T he principal aim of society is to protect individuals in the enjoyment of those absolute rights which were vested in them by the immutable laws of nature but which could not be preserved in peace without that mutual assistance and intercourse which is gained by the institution of friendly and social communities Hence it follows that the first and primary end of human laws is to maintain and regulate these absolute rights of individuals 18 That the King can do no wrong is a necessary and fundamental principle of the English constitution 19 It is better that ten guilty persons escape than one innocent suffer 20 There is nothing which so generally strikes the imagination and engages the affections of mankind as the right of property or that sole and despotic dominion which one man claims and exercises over the external things of the world in total exclusion of the right of any other individual in the universe And yet there are very few that will give themselves the trouble to consider the original and foundation of this right 21 Notable editions edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Commentaries on the Laws of England A bibliography of The Commentaries of the Laws of England from Legal Bibliography 1905 The Fifth Edition Oxford at the Clarendon Press MDCCLXXIII printed for William Strahan Thomas Cadell and Daniel Prince 8vo 4 vols The Twelfth Edition with portraits of the judges with the last corrections of the author and with notes and additions by Edward Christian Esq Barrister at Law and Professor of the Laws of England in the University of Cambridge London 1793 1795 4 vols 8vo Blackstone s Commentaries 22 with notes of reference to the Constitution and laws of the federal government of the United States and of the Commonwealth of Virginia in five volumes with an appendix to each volume containing short tracts upon such subjects as appeared necessary to form a connected view of the laws of Virginia as a member of the federal union by St George Tucker The Sixteenth Edition with notes by J F Archbold added to Christian s London 1811 4 vols royal 8vo The Sixteenth Edition with notes by J T Coleridge London 1825 The Eighteenth Edition with notes by J Chitty London 1826 often reprinted in America Commentaries on the laws of England in four books by Sir William Blackstone together with such notes of enduring value as have been published in the several English editions and also a copious analysis of the contents and additional notes with references to English and American decisions and statutes to date which illustrate or change the law of the text also a full table of abbreviations and some considerations regarding the study of the law by Thomas M Cooley Published Chicago Callaghan and Co 1871 Second Edition 1876 Third Edition 1884 Fourth Edition edited by James DeWitt Andrews 1899 Commentaries on the laws of England by Sir William Blackstone KT Edition Information From the author s 8th ed 1778 edited for American lawyers by William G Hammond with copious notes and references to all comments on the text in the American reports 1787 1890 Published San Francisco Bancroft Whitney Company 1890 Description 4 vols Commentaries on the Laws of England in Four Books by Sir William Blackstone Notes selected from the editions of Archibold Christian Coleridge Chitty Stewart Kerr and others Barron Field s Analysis and Additional Notes and a Life of the Author by George Sharswood In Two Volumes Philadelphia J B Lippincott Co 1893 Commentaries on the laws of England in four books by Sir William Blackstone with notes selected from the editions of Archbold Christian Coleridge Chitty Stewart Kerr and others and in addition notes and references to all text books and decisions wherein the Commentaries have been cited and all statutes modifying the text by William Draper Lewis Published Philadelphia Rees Welsh and Company 1897 Description 4 vols Commentaries on the Laws of England by Sir William Blackstone Kt edited by William Carey Jones Published San Francisco Bancroft Whitney 1915 16 Description 2 vols Blackstone s Commentaries on the Laws of England edited by Wayne Morrison 4 vols Published London Routledge Cavendish London England 2001 Description 4 vols Wilfrid Prest ed 2016 Commentaries on the Laws of England Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 960103 5 Online Yale University https avalon law yale edu subject menus blackstone aspAbridgements editRalph Thomas in Notes amp Queries 4th Series II August 8 1868 gave the following list of the abridgements of Blackstone s Commentaries A Summary of the Constitutional Law of England being an Abridgment of Blackstone s Commentaries By the Rev Dr J Trusler 1788 12mo 228 and index Everything in Blackstone necessary for the general reader is here comprised and nothing omitted but what is peculiarly adapted to the profession of a lawyer Advertisement The Commentaries of Sir W Blackstone Knight on the Law and Constitution of England carefully abridged in a new manner and continued down to the present time by Wm Curry 1796 8vo viii contents 566 2nd edit 1809 Consists of selections of the most essential parts in the words of the author Commentaries on the Law of England principally in the order and comprising the whole substance of Commentaries of Sir W Blackstone By J Addams 1819 8vo An Abridgment of Blackstone s Commentaries By John Gifford pseud i e Edward Foss 1821 8vo See No VI An Abridgment of Blackstone s Commentaries on the Laws of England in a series of Letters from a Father to his Daughter chiefly intended for the Use and Advancement of Female Education By a Barrister at Law F R F A and F L S Sir E E Wilmot 1822 12mo viii 304 Same by Sir J E E W A new edition the 2nd corrected by his son Sir J E E W 3rd edit 1855 Blackstone s Commentaries on the Laws of England abridged for the Use of Students amp c By John Gifford author of the Life of Pitt pseud John Richards Green 1823 8vo The British Constitution or an Epitome of Blackstone s Commentaries on the Laws of England for the Use of Schools By Vincent Wanostrocht LL D Alfred House Academy Camberwell 1823 12mo xi 845 An American Abridgment 1832 Mr Thomas may be referring to John Anthon s An Analytical Abridgment of the Commentaries of Sir William Blackstone on the laws of England in four books together with an analytical synopsis of each book printed and published by Isaac Riley in 1809 second edition 1832 Select Extracts from Blackstone s Commentaries carefully adapted to the Use of Schools and Young Persons with a Glossary Questions and Notes and a General Introduction By Samuel Warren 1837 12mo xxvi 428 no index Commentaries on the Laws of England in the Order and Compiled from the Text of Blackstone and embracing the New Statutes and Alterations to the present time By J Bethune Bayly of the Middle Temple 1840 roy 8vo li 700 A Synopsis of Blackstone s Commentaries London 1847 A large single sheet in folio The Law Student s First Book being chiefly an Abridgment of Blackstone s Commentaries incorporating the Alterations in the Law down to the present time By the Editors of The Law Student s Magazine 1848 12mo xxiv 508 xvi Blackstone s Commentaries systematically arranged and adapted to the existing State of the Law and Constitution with great Additions By S Warren 1855 8vo 2nd edition 1856 See IX The original portions of Blackstone are indicated The Student s Blackstone Selections from the Commentaries on the Laws of England By Sir W B being those portions of the work which relate to the British Constitution and the Rights of Persons By R M Kerr 1858 12mo xix 575 The Student s Blackstone s Commentaries on the Laws of England in four books by Sir W Blackstone amp c abridged By R M Kerr 2nd edit 1865 12mo xx 612 Other abridgments include Blackstone economized being a compendium of the laws of England to the present time by Sir William Blackstone David Mitchell Aird Published London Longmans Green amp Co 1878 Essentials of the Law A Review of Blackstone s Commentaries for the Use of Students at Law 1882 Author Marshall Davis Ewell Published Boston Charles C Soule 1882 Selections from Blackstone edited by William Carey Jones Published San Francisco Bancroft Whitney Co 1926 The Sovereignty of the Law Selections from Blackstone s Commentaries on the Laws of England edited by Gareth Jones Published London Macmillan 1973 ISBN 0 8357 4720 4See also editBooks of authoritySources editAlschuler Albert 1994 Sir William Blackstone and the shaping of American law New Law Journal 144 6653 ISSN 0306 6479 Boorstin Daniel J The Mysterious Science of the Law An Essay on Blackstone s Commentaries Univ Chicago 1996 ISBN 0 226 06498 0 Milsom S F C 1981 The Nature of Blackstone s Achievement Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 1 1 ISSN 0143 6503 Prest Wilfrid 2008 William Blackstone Law and Letters in the Eighteenth Century Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 955029 6 Stacey Robert D Sir William Blackstone and the Common Law Blackstone s Legacy to America ACW 2003 ISBN 1 932124 14 4References edit Blackstone William Commentaries on the Laws of England facsimile edition with introductions by Stanley N Katz Univ Chicago 1979 4 vols ISBN 0 226 05538 8 ISBN 0 226 05541 8 ISBN 0 226 05543 4 ISBN 0 226 05545 0 Prest 2008 p 212 Prest 2008 p 214 Prest 2008 p 217 Prest 2008 p 220 Prest 2008 p 246 Prest 2008 p 235 Prest 2008 p 287 Stephen Leslie Patrick Polden 2004 Oxford DNB article Stephen Henry subscription needed Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 26372 Subscription or UK public library membership required Milsom 1981 p 1 Alschuler 1994 p 896 Blackstone Sir William Law Hall of Fame Amazon Bentham Jeremy 1776 Fragment on Government Jenks Edward 1922 Preface Stephen s Commentaries on the Laws of England Vol 1 17th ed London Butterworth pp v ix via HeinOnline H D H November 1926 Stephen s Commentaries on the Laws of England Eighteenth edition The Cambridge Law Journal book review 2 3 435 doi 10 1017 S0008197300112103 S2CID 159774596 Sir William Blackstone Commentaries on the Laws of England 1768 Book 1 Of The Rights of Persons Chapter 1 Of the Absolute Rights of Individuals Wikisource Wikisource Retrieved 7 October 2023 Sir William Blackstone Commentaries on the Laws of England 1768 Book 1 Of The Rights of Persons Chapter 1 Of the Absolute Rights of Individuals Wikisource Wikisource Retrieved 7 October 2023 Sir William Blackstone Commentaries on the Laws of England 1768 Book 3 Of Private Wrongs Chapter 17 Of Injuries Preeceding From Or Affecting The Crown The Avalon Project of the Yale Law School Lillian Goldman Law Library Archived from the original on 7 October 2023 Retrieved 7 October 2023 Sir William Blackstone Commentaries on the Laws of England 1768 Book 4 Of Public Wrongs Chapter 27 Of Injuries Preeceding From Or Affecting The Crown The Avalon Project of the Yale Law School Lillian Goldman Law Library Archived from the original on 7 October 2023 Retrieved 7 October 2023 Sir William Blackstone Commentaries on the Laws of England 1768 Book 2 The Rights of Things Chapter 1 Of Property in General The Avalon Project of the Yale Law School Lillian Goldman Law Library Archived from the original on 7 October 2023 Retrieved 7 October 2023 Tucker St George 1803 Blackstone s Commentaries with Notes of Reference External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Commentaries on the Laws of England by William Blackstone Commentaries on the laws of England original edition 1765 Book the first of the rights of persons 1765 Book the second of the rights of things 1766 Book the third of private wrongs Book the fourth of public wrongs The commentaries on the laws of England of Sir William Blackstone 1876 London John Murray Edited by Robert Malcolm Kerr volume 1 volume 2 Commentaries on the laws of England in four books edited by Thomas Cooley Callaghan amp Co 1884 Third Edition Books 1 amp 2 Books 3 amp 4 The Student s Blackstone Adapted and Abridged by R M N Kerr William Clowes amp Son 1885 Ninth Edition nbsp Commentaries on the Laws of England public domain audiobook at LibriVox Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Commentaries on the Laws of England amp oldid 1220832801, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.