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Frederic William Maitland

Frederic William Maitland FBA (28 May 1850 – c. 19 December 1906) was an English historian and lawyer who is regarded as the modern father of English legal history.[1][2]

Frederic William Maitland

Born28 May 1850
London, England
Diedc. 19 December 1906
Spouse
(m. 1886)
ChildrenFredegond Shove (b. 1889)
Academic background
Alma materTrinity College, Cambridge
Influences
Academic work
InstitutionsDowning College, Cambridge
Notable students
Influenced
Signature

Early life and education, 1850–72

Frederic William Maitland was born at 53 Guilford Street, London, in 1850, the only son and second of three children of John Gorham Maitland and of Emma, daughter of John Frederic Daniell. His grandfather was Samuel Roffey Maitland. Maitland's father was a barrister but, having little practice, became a civil servant, serving as secretary to the Civil Service Commission.

Maitland was educated at a preparatory school in Brighton before entering Eton College in 1863, where Edward Daniel Stone was his private tutor. At Eton, Maitland was not prominent either academically or athletically, although a close school friend thought he would become "a kind of philosophic Charles Lamb". He then matriculated at Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1869 as a commoner. A dislike of classics acquired at Eton initially led him to read mathematics, with little success. Then, inspired by Henry Sidgwick, he switched to the relatively new moral sciences tripos in 1870, and took first-class honours in 1872, being bracketed senior with his friend William Cunningham; he was elected a scholar of his college the same year. The following year, he took his degree and won the Whewell Scholarship in international law.[3]

Popular among his contemporaries, Maitland was elected secretary, then president, of the Cambridge Union.[4] He was also, like his father before him, a Cambridge Apostle. A lover of exercise since his Eton days, he rowed for Trinity and ran for the university, winning a blue for representing the university in three-mile races.

Maitland's mother had died in 1851, shortly after the birth of his younger sister. Then, both his father and grandfather died when he was still at school. From his grandfather he inherited a manor house and some land in Brookthorpe, Gloucestershire. The estate provided him with an income until the agricultural depression in the 1880s.

Career at the bar and early efforts, 1872–84

Career at the bar

After Cambridge, Maitland tried to gain a fellowship in philosophy at Trinity College in 1875 with a dissertation entitled A Historical Sketch of Liberty and Equality: As Ideals of English Political Philosophy from the Time of Hobbes to the Time of Coleridge, but was beaten out by fellow Apostle James Ward. Having joined Lincoln's Inn as a student in 1872, he was called to the bar there in 1876, and became a competent equity lawyer and conveyancer.

Meanwhile, encouraged by Sidgwick, he began a book on property law, but abandoned it out of frustration at certain features of English property law; he expressed these sentiments in an anonymous article in the Westminster Review in 1879, described as "a bold, eloquent, and humorous plea for a sweeping change in the English law of Real Property". It was followed by three further articles in the Law Magazine and Review between 1881 and 1883.

Meeting with Vinogradoff

In 1880, Maitland was introduced by Frederick Pollock, who had been to Eton and Cambridge with him, to the Sunday Tramps, a walking club founded by Leslie Stephen. Through Pollock, Maitland was introduced in 1884 to Paul Vinogradoff, a Russian medievalist who was in England to study records lodged in the Public Record Office.

Maitland would later write that the day of his first meeting with Vinogradoff "determined the rest of my life". According to H. A. L. Fisher, Maitland was so chagrined by the fact that a Russian knew more about English legal records than he did that he made his first visit to the PRO shortly thereafter, though Geoffrey Elton points out that Maitland had already been working in the archives before he met Vinogradoff. The result of Maitland's initial work was Pleas of the Crown for the County of Gloucester, a transcription of the 1221 Gloucestershire eyre roll, which he published at his own expense in 1884 and dedicated to Vinogradoff.

Return to Cambridge and marriage, 1884–88

In 1884, Maitland was elected Reader in English law at Cambridge, having failed to be elected to a readership at Oxford the previous year.[4] The post had been personally endowed by Sidgwick, to the tune of £300 a year for four years. In 1887, Maitland published, again at his own expense, an edition of Bracton's note book in three volumes, acting on a suggestion by Vinogradoff. He also published extensively on legal history in the Law Quarterly Review, which was edited by Sidgwick.

On 20 July 1886, Maitland married Florence Henrietta Fisher in a village church in Hampshire. He had met her through Stephen: her aunt was Stephen's second wife. Fisher was the daughter of Herbert William Fisher and the sister of H. A. L. Fisher, a future Liberal minister and Maitland's biographer. They had two daughters: Ermengard (named after a woman whose name appeared in Bracton's note book) in 1887 and Fredegond in 1889. By all account the marriage was a success, and the household a happy one.

Selden Society

In 1887, Maitland was among the founders of the Selden Society, established to promote the study of the history of English law, mainly through the publication of English legal manuscripts. The Society's first years were rocky: its treasurer, P. E. Dove, committed suicide in 1894, leaving behind a deficit of £1,000. Nevertheless, the Society published a steady stream of volumes under Maitland's direction as its first literary director. He personally edited eight volumes for the Society, contributed to more, and personally reviewed the proofs of every volume.

Downing Professor, 1888–1906

In 1888, Maitland was elected Downing Professor of the Laws of England, becoming a fellow of Downing College. On 13 October 1888 he gave his inaugural lecture, "Why the History of English Law is Not Written". The post carried with it an official residence, and Maitland's family settled in happily. He held frequent musical gatherings, and kept a series of exotic pets, including a monkey, a meerkat, and a badger. The same year, he published Select pleas of the Crown, A.D. 1200–1225, the first publication of the Selden Society.

In addition to teaching duties, Maitland served on numerous University and college bodies. He advocated for a number of reforms, including the abandonment of Greek as a compulsory entrance subject and the admission of women to degrees. In March 1897 he helped defeat a proposal for the creation of a Queen's University for women only as an alternative to granting them Cambridge degrees, making a speech which was long afterwards remembered.

Meanwhile, Maitland published extensively, making important contributions to the Cambridge Modern History, the English Historical Review, the Law Quarterly Review, Harvard Law Review and other publications. He delivered the Ford Lectures in English history at Oxford in 1897 (later published as Township and Borough) and the Rede Lecture in 1901. His most important work, The History of English Law Before the Time of Edward I, appeared in 1895. It was co-authored with his friend Sir Frederick Pollock, though the latter wrote only the chapter on Anglo-Saxon law: "Chapter 1...was Pollock's work, and Maitland's reaction was never to let him write another." Popularly known as "Pollock and Maitland", The History of English Law has been described as "the best book on English legal history ever published in the English language."[5]

In 1902 Maitland was offered the Regius Professorship of Modern History at Cambridge by Arthur Balfour in succession to Lord Acton, but declined.[4] In the same year he became one of the founding fellows of the British Academy.

Final years and death

Maitland's health began to deteriorate in the 1890s: the exact nature of his illness remains unclear, but has been variously ascribed to tuberculosis or to diabetes. In 1898 he suffered from an attack of pleurisy, and thereafter he wintered either in the Canary Islands or in Madeira. In December 1906, he left Cambridge for the Canaries for the last time: during the trip, he contracted influenza, which turned into double pneumonia. He died at Las Palmas and was buried in the English Cemetery there.

Upon his death, the University of Oxford presented an address of condolence to Cambridge, described by Sir Geoffrey Elton as an "unprecedented tribute".[6] Such addresses were often presented to the royal family, but the only precedent in the case of Maitland was an address to the University of Berlin upon the death of Theodor Mommsen.

Posthumous publications by his students, editing their lecture notes based on his lectures, include The Constitutional History of England, Equity, and The Forms of Action at Common Law. The latter publication has been repeatedly reprinted, and contains perhaps his most-quoted observation, which still appears in learned articles and superior court judgments: "The forms of action we have buried but still they rule us from their graves."

Personal life

Maitland married Florence Henrietta Fisher, daughter of the historian Herbert William Fisher, in 1886[7] and they had two daughters, Ermengard (1887–1968) and Fredegond (1889–1949); after Maitland's death his widow married Sir Francis Darwin, a son of Charles Darwin.

Maitland was a moderate Liberal in politics, sympathizing with the Liberal Party but striving to maintain objectivity in his scholarship.[8] Florence Fisher's brother, the Liberal scholar and politician H. A. L. Fisher, edited Maitland's papers and lectures on English constitutional history after his death.

Scholarship

Approach and style

His written style was elegant and lively.[9] His historical method was distinguished by his thorough and sensitive use of historical sources, and by his determinedly historical perspective. Maitland taught his students, and all later historians, not to investigate the history of law purely or mostly by reference to the needs of the present, but rather to consider and seek to understand the past on its own terms.

Memoranda de Parliamento

In 1889, Maitland was invited by Henry Maxwell Lyte, the Deputy Keeper of the Public Records, to examine and edit the petitions presented to Edward I's parliament. Maitland quickly determined that the task was too large to be completed by one man. However, by chance he discovered a hitherto unpublished parliament roll from 1305, which he edited and published in 1883 as part of the Rolls Series. This formed the basis of what Elton described as his "most explosive contribution to English history".

At the time, it was generally believed that early English parliaments were, from the beginning, an assembly of the estates of the realm who met to discuss affairs of state. This view had been laid down by Stubbs, who had based his view on the 1295 "Model Parliament". In his introduction to the 1305 roll, Maitland instead proposed that early English parliaments were judicial bodies which met mainly to receive petitions to address grievances. Though the revolutionary nature of Maitland's suggestion was realised only later, most historians have come to accept Maitland's view.

"Why the history of English Law is not written?"

On 13 October 1888, Maitland gave his inaugural lecture as Downing Professor of the Laws of England. Pointing out that "no attempt has ever been made to write the history of English law as a whole", he proposed two causes: the insularity of English law and the conflicting logics of the lawyer and of the historian.

Assessment

Maitland was held in high regard by his contemporaries. Lord Acton called him the ablest historian in England.

Maitland's reputation has stood high since his death. Speaking in 1980, S. F. C. Milsom said that Maitland is "not just revered but loved" by historians, while in 1985, Sir Geoffrey Elton wrote of Maitland as the "patron saint" of historians.

Beginning in the 1960s, scholars such as S. F. C. Milsom and Patrick Wormald began to point out shortcomings in Maitland's views, which had by then become the orthodoxy, although the criticisms were inevitably coupled with sincere admiration for Maitland. The highly technical nature of Maitland's work, as well as the relative decline of legal history, made Maitland's views "lasting orthodoxies", as few historians had either the technical knowledge or the inclination to challenge them. Speaking on the centenary of the publication of Pollock and Maitland, Milsom said that:

"if we go on as we are, we can look forward to our successors celebrating the bicentenary of 'Pollock and Maitland' as still the last word on the history of English law in its most crucial period. I wonder whether he would be pleased."

Honours and memorials

During his lifetime, Maitland received honorary doctorates from the universities of Cambridge (1891), Oxford (1899), Glasgow (1896), Moscow and Kracow. He was one of the founding fellows of the British Academy in 1902, and was a corresponding member of the Royal Prussian Academy of the Arts and of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities. He was also an honorary fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, and an honorary bencher of Lincoln's Inn. On the latter honour, Maitland wrote to Pollock that "one of the vacant bishoprics would have been less of a surprise". Just before his death Maitland received the Ames Medal from Harvard Law School, and at the time of the death he had been invited by Oxford to deliver the Romanes Lecture.

After his death, the F. W. Maitland Memorial Fund was established at Cambridge in 1907 to promote research in legal history. It continues to award grants and studentships for that purpose. In 2000, a Maitland Legal History Room was established within the Squire Law Library of the Faculty of Law at the University of Cambridge. The Maitland Historical Society of Downing College, Cambridge, is also named in his honour.

At Oxford, a Maitland Library, begun with 300 books from Maitland's personal library, was established in 1908. Originally housed at All Souls College, Oxford, it was eventually taken over by the Bodleian Library, and was maintained as a separate collection until 1933.

In 2001, a memorial stone for Maitland was unveiled in Poet's Corner, Westminster Abbey; he was the first professional historian to be so honoured.[10] The stone, cut by Richard Kindersley, is inscribed with a quote from Doomsday Book and Beyond: "By slow degrees the thoughts of our forefathers their common thoughts about common things will have become thinkable once more".

See also

Works

His principal works include:[7]

  • Pleas of the Crown for the County of Gloucester before the Abbot of Reading and his Fellows Justices Itinerant, Macmillan & Co., 1884.
  • Justice and Police, Macmillan & Co., 1885.
  • Bracton's Note-Book, Vol. 2, C. J. Clay & Sons, 1887 [reissued by Cambridge University Press, 2010]. ISBN 978-1-108-01031-3)
  • History of English Law before the Time of Edward I, with Sir Frederick Pollock, Cambridge University Press, 1899 [1st Pub. 1895; new ed. 1898].
  • Domesday Book and Beyond, Cambridge University Press, 1897.
  • Township and Borough: Being the Ford Lectures Delivered in the University of Oxford in the October Term of 1897, Cambridge University Press, 1898.
  • Roman Canon Law in the Church of England, Methuen & Co., 1898.
  • English Law and the Renaissance: the Rede Lecture for 1901, Cambridge University Press, 1901.
  • Charters of the Borough of Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1901 (reissued by Cambridge University Press, 2010. ISBN 978-1-108-01043-6)
  • Life and Letters of Leslie Stephen, Duckworth & Co., 1906.[11]
  • The Constitutional History of England, Cambridge University Press, 1909 [1st Pub. 1908].
  • Equity. Also the Forms of Action at Common Law, Edited by A.H. Chaytor and W.J. Whittaker, Cambridge University Press, 1910.
  • The Collected Papers of Frederic William Maitland, H.A.L. Fisher, ed., Vol. I, Cambridge University Press, 1911.
  • The Collected Papers of Frederic William Maitland, H.A.L. Fisher, ed., Vol. II, Cambridge University Press, 1911.
  • The Collected Papers of Frederic William Maitland, H.A.L. Fisher, ed., Vol. III, Cambridge University Press, 1911.
  • A Sketch of English Legal History, with Francis G. Montague, G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1915.
  • The Letters of Frederic William Maitland, Selden Society, 1965.

Essays

  • "The Relation of Punishment to Temptation," Mind, Vol. V, 1880.
  • "The Criminal Liability of the Hundred," The Law Magazine and Review, Vol. VII, 1882.
  • "Mr. Herbert Spencer's Theory of Society," Part II, Mind, Vol. VIII, 1883.
  • "From the Old Law Courts to the New," The English Illustrated Magazine, Vol. I, 1883.
  • "The Seisin of Chattels," The Law Quarterly Review, Vol. I, 1885.
  • "The Deacon and the Jewess: or, Apostasy at Common Law," The Law Quarterly Review, Vol. II, 1886.
  • "The Mystery of Seisin," The Law Quarterly Review, Vol. II, 1886.
  • "The Suitors of the County Court," The English Historical Review, Vol. III, 1888.
  • "The Beatitude of Seisin," Part II, The Law Quarterly Review, Vol. IV, 1888.
  • "The Surnames of English Villages", The Archaeological Review, Vol. IV, No. 4, 1889.
  • "The Introduction of English Law into Ireland," The English Historical Review, Vol. IV, 1889.
  • "The Materials for English Legal History," Part II, Political Science Quarterly, Vol. IV, 1889.
  • "The 'Praerogativa Regis'," The English Historical Review, Vol. VI, 1891.
  • "Henry II and the Criminous Clerks," The English Historical Review, Vol. VII, 1892.
  • "The 'Quatripartitus'," The Law Quarterly Review, Vol. VIII, 1892.
  • "The History of Cambridgeshire Manor," The English Historical Review, Vol. IX, No. 35, July 1894.
  • "The Origin of the Borough," The English Historical Review, Vol. IX, 1896.
  • "Wyclif on English and Roman Law," The Law Quarterly Review, Vol. XII, 1896.
  • "'Execrabilis' in the Common Pleas," The Law Quarterly Review, Vol. XII, 1896.
  • "Canon Law in England," The English Historical Review, Vol. XII, 1897.
  • "The Corporation Sole," The Law Quarterly Review, Vol. XVI, 1900, pp. 335–354
  • "The Crown as Corporation," The Law Quarterly Review, Vol. XVII, 1901, pp. 131–146
  • "Prologue to a History of English Law." In: Select Essays in Anglo-American Legal History, Vol. I. Boston: Little, Brown, and Company, 1907.
  • "Materials For the History of English Law." In: Select Essays in Anglo-American Legal History, Vol. II. Boston: Little, Brown, and Company, 1908.
  • "The History of the Register of Original Writs." In: Select Essays in Anglo-American Legal History, Vol. II. Boston: Little, Brown, and Company, 1908.

Other

  • "Glanville, Ranulf de." In: Dictionary of National Biography, Vol. XXI, 1890.
  • "Court Rolls, Manorial Accounts and Extents." In: Dictionary of Political Economy, Vol. I, 1894.
  • Essays on the Teaching of History, William Arthur Jobson Archbold, ed., with an introduction by F.W. Maitland, Cambridge University Press, 1901.
  • Maitland, Frederic William (1911). "Bracton, Henry de" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 4 (11th ed.). p. 369.
  • Maitland, Frederic William (1911). "English Law" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 9 (11th ed.). pp. 600–607.

Notes

  1. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Maitland, Frederic William" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 17 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 446.
  2. ^ Runciman, David (1997). Pluralism and the Personality of the State. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. xi. ISBN 9780521551915.
  3. ^ "Maitland, Frederic William (MTLT868FW)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  4. ^ a b c Milsom, S. F. C. "Maitland, Frederic William (1850–1906)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/34837. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  5. ^ Rabban, David M. (2013). Law's History: American Legal Thought and the Transatlantic Turn to History. Cambridge University Press. p. 389.
  6. ^ Elton, G.R. (1985). F.W. Maitland. Yale University Press. p. 1.
  7. ^ a b "Professor F. W. Maitland." Times [London, England] 22 December 1906: 6. The Times Digital Archive. Web. 29 May 2012
  8. ^ Kirby, James (2017). "History, Law and Freedom: FW Maitland in Context". Modern Intellectual History: 1–28.
  9. ^ "Frederic William Maitland," The Cambridge History of English and American Literature, Volume XIV. The Victorian Age, Part Two: Historians, Biographers and Political Orators, Putnam, 1907–1921.
  10. ^ . Westminster Abbey. Archived from the original on 25 March 2009. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
  11. ^ Greenslet, Ferris (1907). "Review: Life and Letters of Leslie Stephen by Frederic William Maitland". The North American Review. 184: 195–198.

References

  • Bell, Henry Esmond (1965). Maitland: A Critical Examination and Assessment. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
  • Cameron, James R. (1961). Frederic William Maitland and the History of English Law. University of Oklahoma Press [rep. by Greenwood Press, 1977; Lawbook Exchange, 2001].
  • Elton, G. R. (1985). F.W. Maitland. Yale University Press.
  • Fifoot, C. H. S. (1971). Frederic William Maitland: A Life. Harvard University Press, 1971 [only full-length biography in print. Written by an academic lawyer in the field, but covering both the personal and professional life of its subject].
  • Fisher, H. A.L. (1910). F. W. Maitland. Cambridge University Press.
  • Heatley, D. P. (1913). "Frederic William Maitland." In: Studies in British History and Politics. London: Smith, Elder & Co., pp. 138–163.
  • Hollond, Henry Arthur (1953). Frederic William Maitland, 1850–1906: A Memorial Address. London: Quaritch.
  • Lapsley, Gaillard Thomas (1907). "Frederic William Maitland," The Green Bag, Vol. 19, No. 4, pp. 205–213.
  • Milsom, Stroud Francis Charles (1980). F. W. Maitland: Lecture on a Mastermind. Oxford University Press.
  • Milsom, Stroud Francis Charles (2001). "Maitland," Cambridge Law Journal, Vol. 60, No. 2, pp. 265–270.
  • Reynell, Mrs. (1951). "Frederic William Maitland," The Cambridge Law Journal, Vol. XI, No. 1, pp. 67–73 [Mrs. Reynell was Maitland's eldest sister].
  • Schuyler, Robert Livingston (1952). "The Historical Spirit Incarnate: Frederic William Maitland," The American Historical Review, Vol. 57, No. 2, pp. 303–322.
  • Schuyler, Robert Livingston (1960). Introduction to Frederic William Maitland: Historian, University of California Press.
  • Smith, A. L. (1908). F. W. Maitland. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • Smith, Munro & J. T. Shotwell (1907). "Frederic William Maitland," Political Science Quarterly, Vol. 22, pp. 282–296.
  • Pollock, Sir Frederick et al. (1907). "In Memoriam: Frederic W. Maitland," The Law Quarterly Review, Vol. 23, pp. 137–150.
  • Vinogradoff, Paul (1907). "Frederic William Maitland," English Historical Review, Vol. 22, No. 86, pp. 280–289.
  • Wormald, Patrick (1998). "Frederic William Maitland and the Earliest English Law," Law and History Review, Vol. 16, No. 1, pp. 1–25.

External links

  • Works by or about Frederic William Maitland at Internet Archive
  • Works by Frederic William Maitland at Project Gutenberg
  • Macdonell, Sir John; Manson, Edward, eds. (1906). "The late Professor Maitland and Obituary (From The Times". Journal of the Society of Comparative Legislation. London: John Murray. VII (2): 581–582 – via Internet Archive).
  • Maitland, Frederick William: at McMaster University Archive for the History of Economic Thought.
  • Works by or about Frederic William Maitland in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
  • Frederic William Maitland at Find a Grave
  • Portraits of Frederic William Maitland at the National Portrait Gallery, London  

frederic, william, maitland, 1850, december, 1906, english, historian, lawyer, regarded, modern, father, english, legal, history, fbaborn28, 1850london, englanddiedc, december, 1906, palmas, gran, canaria, spainspouseflorence, henrietta, fisher, 1886, children. Frederic William Maitland FBA 28 May 1850 c 19 December 1906 was an English historian and lawyer who is regarded as the modern father of English legal history 1 2 Frederic William MaitlandFBABorn28 May 1850London EnglandDiedc 19 December 1906 Las Palmas Gran Canaria SpainSpouseFlorence Henrietta Fisher m 1886 wbr ChildrenFredegond Shove b 1889 Academic backgroundAlma materTrinity College CambridgeInfluencesHenry SidgwickPaul VinogradoffAcademic workInstitutionsDowning College CambridgeNotable studentsNellie NeilsonInfluencedMary BatesonGeoffrey EltonJohn Neville FiggisHarold LaskiS F C MilsomSusan ReynoldsPatrick WormaldSignature Contents 1 Early life and education 1850 72 2 Career at the bar and early efforts 1872 84 2 1 Career at the bar 2 2 Meeting with Vinogradoff 3 Return to Cambridge and marriage 1884 88 3 1 Selden Society 4 Downing Professor 1888 1906 5 Final years and death 6 Personal life 7 Scholarship 7 1 Approach and style 7 2 Memoranda de Parliamento 7 3 Why the history of English Law is not written 8 Assessment 9 Honours and memorials 10 See also 11 Works 11 1 Essays 11 2 Other 12 Notes 13 References 14 External linksEarly life and education 1850 72 EditFrederic William Maitland was born at 53 Guilford Street London in 1850 the only son and second of three children of John Gorham Maitland and of Emma daughter of John Frederic Daniell His grandfather was Samuel Roffey Maitland Maitland s father was a barrister but having little practice became a civil servant serving as secretary to the Civil Service Commission Maitland was educated at a preparatory school in Brighton before entering Eton College in 1863 where Edward Daniel Stone was his private tutor At Eton Maitland was not prominent either academically or athletically although a close school friend thought he would become a kind of philosophic Charles Lamb He then matriculated at Trinity College Cambridge in 1869 as a commoner A dislike of classics acquired at Eton initially led him to read mathematics with little success Then inspired by Henry Sidgwick he switched to the relatively new moral sciences tripos in 1870 and took first class honours in 1872 being bracketed senior with his friend William Cunningham he was elected a scholar of his college the same year The following year he took his degree and won the Whewell Scholarship in international law 3 Popular among his contemporaries Maitland was elected secretary then president of the Cambridge Union 4 He was also like his father before him a Cambridge Apostle A lover of exercise since his Eton days he rowed for Trinity and ran for the university winning a blue for representing the university in three mile races Maitland s mother had died in 1851 shortly after the birth of his younger sister Then both his father and grandfather died when he was still at school From his grandfather he inherited a manor house and some land in Brookthorpe Gloucestershire The estate provided him with an income until the agricultural depression in the 1880s Career at the bar and early efforts 1872 84 EditCareer at the bar Edit After Cambridge Maitland tried to gain a fellowship in philosophy at Trinity College in 1875 with a dissertation entitled A Historical Sketch of Liberty and Equality As Ideals of English Political Philosophy from the Time of Hobbes to the Time of Coleridge but was beaten out by fellow Apostle James Ward Having joined Lincoln s Inn as a student in 1872 he was called to the bar there in 1876 and became a competent equity lawyer and conveyancer Meanwhile encouraged by Sidgwick he began a book on property law but abandoned it out of frustration at certain features of English property law he expressed these sentiments in an anonymous article in the Westminster Review in 1879 described as a bold eloquent and humorous plea for a sweeping change in the English law of Real Property It was followed by three further articles in the Law Magazine and Review between 1881 and 1883 Meeting with Vinogradoff Edit In 1880 Maitland was introduced by Frederick Pollock who had been to Eton and Cambridge with him to the Sunday Tramps a walking club founded by Leslie Stephen Through Pollock Maitland was introduced in 1884 to Paul Vinogradoff a Russian medievalist who was in England to study records lodged in the Public Record Office Maitland would later write that the day of his first meeting with Vinogradoff determined the rest of my life According to H A L Fisher Maitland was so chagrined by the fact that a Russian knew more about English legal records than he did that he made his first visit to the PRO shortly thereafter though Geoffrey Elton points out that Maitland had already been working in the archives before he met Vinogradoff The result of Maitland s initial work was Pleas of the Crown for the County of Gloucester a transcription of the 1221 Gloucestershire eyre roll which he published at his own expense in 1884 and dedicated to Vinogradoff Return to Cambridge and marriage 1884 88 EditIn 1884 Maitland was elected Reader in English law at Cambridge having failed to be elected to a readership at Oxford the previous year 4 The post had been personally endowed by Sidgwick to the tune of 300 a year for four years In 1887 Maitland published again at his own expense an edition of Bracton s note book in three volumes acting on a suggestion by Vinogradoff He also published extensively on legal history in the Law Quarterly Review which was edited by Sidgwick On 20 July 1886 Maitland married Florence Henrietta Fisher in a village church in Hampshire He had met her through Stephen her aunt was Stephen s second wife Fisher was the daughter of Herbert William Fisher and the sister of H A L Fisher a future Liberal minister and Maitland s biographer They had two daughters Ermengard named after a woman whose name appeared in Bracton s note book in 1887 and Fredegond in 1889 By all account the marriage was a success and the household a happy one Selden Society Edit In 1887 Maitland was among the founders of the Selden Society established to promote the study of the history of English law mainly through the publication of English legal manuscripts The Society s first years were rocky its treasurer P E Dove committed suicide in 1894 leaving behind a deficit of 1 000 Nevertheless the Society published a steady stream of volumes under Maitland s direction as its first literary director He personally edited eight volumes for the Society contributed to more and personally reviewed the proofs of every volume Downing Professor 1888 1906 EditIn 1888 Maitland was elected Downing Professor of the Laws of England becoming a fellow of Downing College On 13 October 1888 he gave his inaugural lecture Why the History of English Law is Not Written The post carried with it an official residence and Maitland s family settled in happily He held frequent musical gatherings and kept a series of exotic pets including a monkey a meerkat and a badger The same year he published Select pleas of the Crown A D 1200 1225 the first publication of the Selden Society In addition to teaching duties Maitland served on numerous University and college bodies He advocated for a number of reforms including the abandonment of Greek as a compulsory entrance subject and the admission of women to degrees In March 1897 he helped defeat a proposal for the creation of a Queen s University for women only as an alternative to granting them Cambridge degrees making a speech which was long afterwards remembered Meanwhile Maitland published extensively making important contributions to the Cambridge Modern History the English Historical Review the Law Quarterly Review Harvard Law Review and other publications He delivered the Ford Lectures in English history at Oxford in 1897 later published as Township and Borough and the Rede Lecture in 1901 His most important work The History of English Law Before the Time of Edward I appeared in 1895 It was co authored with his friend Sir Frederick Pollock though the latter wrote only the chapter on Anglo Saxon law Chapter 1 was Pollock s work and Maitland s reaction was never to let him write another Popularly known as Pollock and Maitland The History of English Law has been described as the best book on English legal history ever published in the English language 5 In 1902 Maitland was offered the Regius Professorship of Modern History at Cambridge by Arthur Balfour in succession to Lord Acton but declined 4 In the same year he became one of the founding fellows of the British Academy Final years and death EditMaitland s health began to deteriorate in the 1890s the exact nature of his illness remains unclear but has been variously ascribed to tuberculosis or to diabetes In 1898 he suffered from an attack of pleurisy and thereafter he wintered either in the Canary Islands or in Madeira In December 1906 he left Cambridge for the Canaries for the last time during the trip he contracted influenza which turned into double pneumonia He died at Las Palmas and was buried in the English Cemetery there Upon his death the University of Oxford presented an address of condolence to Cambridge described by Sir Geoffrey Elton as an unprecedented tribute 6 Such addresses were often presented to the royal family but the only precedent in the case of Maitland was an address to the University of Berlin upon the death of Theodor Mommsen Posthumous publications by his students editing their lecture notes based on his lectures include The Constitutional History of England Equity and The Forms of Action at Common Law The latter publication has been repeatedly reprinted and contains perhaps his most quoted observation which still appears in learned articles and superior court judgments The forms of action we have buried but still they rule us from their graves Personal life EditMaitland married Florence Henrietta Fisher daughter of the historian Herbert William Fisher in 1886 7 and they had two daughters Ermengard 1887 1968 and Fredegond 1889 1949 after Maitland s death his widow married Sir Francis Darwin a son of Charles Darwin Maitland was a moderate Liberal in politics sympathizing with the Liberal Party but striving to maintain objectivity in his scholarship 8 Florence Fisher s brother the Liberal scholar and politician H A L Fisher edited Maitland s papers and lectures on English constitutional history after his death Scholarship EditApproach and style Edit His written style was elegant and lively 9 His historical method was distinguished by his thorough and sensitive use of historical sources and by his determinedly historical perspective Maitland taught his students and all later historians not to investigate the history of law purely or mostly by reference to the needs of the present but rather to consider and seek to understand the past on its own terms Memoranda de Parliamento Edit In 1889 Maitland was invited by Henry Maxwell Lyte the Deputy Keeper of the Public Records to examine and edit the petitions presented to Edward I s parliament Maitland quickly determined that the task was too large to be completed by one man However by chance he discovered a hitherto unpublished parliament roll from 1305 which he edited and published in 1883 as part of the Rolls Series This formed the basis of what Elton described as his most explosive contribution to English history At the time it was generally believed that early English parliaments were from the beginning an assembly of the estates of the realm who met to discuss affairs of state This view had been laid down by Stubbs who had based his view on the 1295 Model Parliament In his introduction to the 1305 roll Maitland instead proposed that early English parliaments were judicial bodies which met mainly to receive petitions to address grievances Though the revolutionary nature of Maitland s suggestion was realised only later most historians have come to accept Maitland s view Why the history of English Law is not written Edit On 13 October 1888 Maitland gave his inaugural lecture as Downing Professor of the Laws of England Pointing out that no attempt has ever been made to write the history of English law as a whole he proposed two causes the insularity of English law and the conflicting logics of the lawyer and of the historian Assessment EditMaitland was held in high regard by his contemporaries Lord Acton called him the ablest historian in England Maitland s reputation has stood high since his death Speaking in 1980 S F C Milsom said that Maitland is not just revered but loved by historians while in 1985 Sir Geoffrey Elton wrote of Maitland as the patron saint of historians Beginning in the 1960s scholars such as S F C Milsom and Patrick Wormald began to point out shortcomings in Maitland s views which had by then become the orthodoxy although the criticisms were inevitably coupled with sincere admiration for Maitland The highly technical nature of Maitland s work as well as the relative decline of legal history made Maitland s views lasting orthodoxies as few historians had either the technical knowledge or the inclination to challenge them Speaking on the centenary of the publication of Pollock and Maitland Milsom said that if we go on as we are we can look forward to our successors celebrating the bicentenary of Pollock and Maitland as still the last word on the history of English law in its most crucial period I wonder whether he would be pleased Honours and memorials EditDuring his lifetime Maitland received honorary doctorates from the universities of Cambridge 1891 Oxford 1899 Glasgow 1896 Moscow and Kracow He was one of the founding fellows of the British Academy in 1902 and was a corresponding member of the Royal Prussian Academy of the Arts and of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences and Humanities He was also an honorary fellow of Trinity College Cambridge and an honorary bencher of Lincoln s Inn On the latter honour Maitland wrote to Pollock that one of the vacant bishoprics would have been less of a surprise Just before his death Maitland received the Ames Medal from Harvard Law School and at the time of the death he had been invited by Oxford to deliver the Romanes Lecture After his death the F W Maitland Memorial Fund was established at Cambridge in 1907 to promote research in legal history It continues to award grants and studentships for that purpose In 2000 a Maitland Legal History Room was established within the Squire Law Library of the Faculty of Law at the University of Cambridge The Maitland Historical Society of Downing College Cambridge is also named in his honour At Oxford a Maitland Library begun with 300 books from Maitland s personal library was established in 1908 Originally housed at All Souls College Oxford it was eventually taken over by the Bodleian Library and was maintained as a separate collection until 1933 In 2001 a memorial stone for Maitland was unveiled in Poet s Corner Westminster Abbey he was the first professional historian to be so honoured 10 The stone cut by Richard Kindersley is inscribed with a quote from Doomsday Book and Beyond By slow degrees the thoughts of our forefathers their common thoughts about common things will have become thinkable once more See also EditOtto von Gierke Herbert Fisher Henry de Bracton Paul Vinogradoff Social law Quia Emptores Seisin and Cestui queWorks EditHis principal works include 7 Pleas of the Crown for the County of Gloucester before the Abbot of Reading and his Fellows Justices Itinerant Macmillan amp Co 1884 Justice and Police Macmillan amp Co 1885 Bracton s Note Book Vol 2 C J Clay amp Sons 1887 reissued by Cambridge University Press 2010 ISBN 978 1 108 01031 3 History of English Law before the Time of Edward I with Sir Frederick Pollock Cambridge University Press 1899 1st Pub 1895 new ed 1898 Domesday Book and Beyond Cambridge University Press 1897 Township and Borough Being the Ford Lectures Delivered in the University of Oxford in the October Term of 1897 Cambridge University Press 1898 Roman Canon Law in the Church of England Methuen amp Co 1898 English Law and the Renaissance the Rede Lecture for 1901 Cambridge University Press 1901 Charters of the Borough of Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1901 reissued by Cambridge University Press 2010 ISBN 978 1 108 01043 6 Life and Letters of Leslie Stephen Duckworth amp Co 1906 11 The Constitutional History of England Cambridge University Press 1909 1st Pub 1908 Equity Also the Forms of Action at Common Law Edited by A H Chaytor and W J Whittaker Cambridge University Press 1910 The Collected Papers of Frederic William Maitland H A L Fisher ed Vol I Cambridge University Press 1911 The Collected Papers of Frederic William Maitland H A L Fisher ed Vol II Cambridge University Press 1911 The Collected Papers of Frederic William Maitland H A L Fisher ed Vol III Cambridge University Press 1911 A Sketch of English Legal History with Francis G Montague G P Putnam s Sons 1915 The Letters of Frederic William Maitland Selden Society 1965 Essays Edit The Relation of Punishment to Temptation Mind Vol V 1880 The Criminal Liability of the Hundred The Law Magazine and Review Vol VII 1882 Mr Herbert Spencer s Theory of Society Part II Mind Vol VIII 1883 From the Old Law Courts to the New The English Illustrated Magazine Vol I 1883 The Seisin of Chattels The Law Quarterly Review Vol I 1885 The Deacon and the Jewess or Apostasy at Common Law The Law Quarterly Review Vol II 1886 The Mystery of Seisin The Law Quarterly Review Vol II 1886 The Suitors of the County Court The English Historical Review Vol III 1888 The Beatitude of Seisin Part II The Law Quarterly Review Vol IV 1888 The Surnames of English Villages The Archaeological Review Vol IV No 4 1889 The Introduction of English Law into Ireland The English Historical Review Vol IV 1889 The Materials for English Legal History Part II Political Science Quarterly Vol IV 1889 The Praerogativa Regis The English Historical Review Vol VI 1891 Henry II and the Criminous Clerks The English Historical Review Vol VII 1892 The Quatripartitus The Law Quarterly Review Vol VIII 1892 The History of Cambridgeshire Manor The English Historical Review Vol IX No 35 July 1894 The Origin of the Borough The English Historical Review Vol IX 1896 Wyclif on English and Roman Law The Law Quarterly Review Vol XII 1896 Execrabilis in the Common Pleas The Law Quarterly Review Vol XII 1896 Canon Law in England The English Historical Review Vol XII 1897 The Corporation Sole The Law Quarterly Review Vol XVI 1900 pp 335 354 The Crown as Corporation The Law Quarterly Review Vol XVII 1901 pp 131 146 Prologue to a History of English Law In Select Essays in Anglo American Legal History Vol I Boston Little Brown and Company 1907 Materials For the History of English Law In Select Essays in Anglo American Legal History Vol II Boston Little Brown and Company 1908 The History of the Register of Original Writs In Select Essays in Anglo American Legal History Vol II Boston Little Brown and Company 1908 Other Edit Glanville Ranulf de In Dictionary of National Biography Vol XXI 1890 Court Rolls Manorial Accounts and Extents In Dictionary of Political Economy Vol I 1894 Essays on the Teaching of History William Arthur Jobson Archbold ed with an introduction by F W Maitland Cambridge University Press 1901 Maitland Frederic William 1911 Bracton Henry de Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 4 11th ed p 369 Maitland Frederic William 1911 English Law Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 9 11th ed pp 600 607 Notes Edit Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Maitland Frederic William Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 17 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 446 Runciman David 1997 Pluralism and the Personality of the State Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp xi ISBN 9780521551915 Maitland Frederic William MTLT868FW A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge a b c Milsom S F C Maitland Frederic William 1850 1906 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 34837 Subscription or UK public library membership required Rabban David M 2013 Law s History American Legal Thought and the Transatlantic Turn to History Cambridge University Press p 389 Elton G R 1985 F W Maitland Yale University Press p 1 a b Professor F W Maitland Times London England 22 December 1906 6 The Times Digital Archive Web 29 May 2012 Kirby James 2017 History Law and Freedom FW Maitland in Context Modern Intellectual History 1 28 Frederic William Maitland The Cambridge History of English and American Literature Volume XIV The Victorian Age Part Two Historians Biographers and Political Orators Putnam 1907 1921 Poets Corner Westminster Abbey Archived from the original on 25 March 2009 Retrieved 20 September 2014 Greenslet Ferris 1907 Review Life and Letters of Leslie Stephen by Frederic William Maitland The North American Review 184 195 198 References EditBell Henry Esmond 1965 Maitland A Critical Examination and Assessment Cambridge Harvard University Press Cameron James R 1961 Frederic William Maitland and the History of English Law University of Oklahoma Press rep by Greenwood Press 1977 Lawbook Exchange 2001 Elton G R 1985 F W Maitland Yale University Press Fifoot C H S 1971 Frederic William Maitland A Life Harvard University Press 1971 only full length biography in print Written by an academic lawyer in the field but covering both the personal and professional life of its subject Fisher H A L 1910 F W Maitland Cambridge University Press Heatley D P 1913 Frederic William Maitland In Studies in British History and Politics London Smith Elder amp Co pp 138 163 Hollond Henry Arthur 1953 Frederic William Maitland 1850 1906 A Memorial Address London Quaritch Lapsley Gaillard Thomas 1907 Frederic William Maitland The Green Bag Vol 19 No 4 pp 205 213 Milsom Stroud Francis Charles 1980 F W Maitland Lecture on a Mastermind Oxford University Press Milsom Stroud Francis Charles 2001 Maitland Cambridge Law Journal Vol 60 No 2 pp 265 270 Reynell Mrs 1951 Frederic William Maitland The Cambridge Law Journal Vol XI No 1 pp 67 73 Mrs Reynell was Maitland s eldest sister Schuyler Robert Livingston 1952 The Historical Spirit Incarnate Frederic William Maitland The American Historical Review Vol 57 No 2 pp 303 322 Schuyler Robert Livingston 1960 Introduction to Frederic William Maitland Historian University of California Press Smith A L 1908 F W Maitland Oxford Clarendon Press Smith Munro amp J T Shotwell 1907 Frederic William Maitland Political Science Quarterly Vol 22 pp 282 296 Pollock Sir Frederick et al 1907 In Memoriam Frederic W Maitland The Law Quarterly Review Vol 23 pp 137 150 Vinogradoff Paul 1907 Frederic William Maitland English Historical Review Vol 22 No 86 pp 280 289 Wormald Patrick 1998 Frederic William Maitland and the Earliest English Law Law and History Review Vol 16 No 1 pp 1 25 External links Edit Wikisource has original works by or about Frederic William Maitland Wikimedia Commons has media related to Frederic William Maitland Wikiquote has quotations related to Frederic William Maitland Works by or about Frederic William Maitland at Internet Archive Works by Frederic William Maitland at Project Gutenberg Macdonell Sir John Manson Edward eds 1906 The late Professor Maitland and Obituary From The Times Journal of the Society of Comparative Legislation London John Murray VII 2 581 582 via Internet Archive Maitland Frederick William at McMaster University Archive for the History of Economic Thought Works by or about Frederic William Maitland in libraries WorldCat catalog Frederic William Maitland at Find a Grave Portraits of Frederic William Maitland at the National Portrait Gallery London Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Frederic William Maitland amp oldid 1124164996, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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