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This book is about trials, civil and criminal, ecclesiastical and
secular, in England and Europe between the thirteenth and the
seventeenth centuries. The opening chapter provides a conceptual
framework both for this book and for its companion volume on the
eighteenth, nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Subsequent chapters
provide a rounded view of trials conducted according to different
procedures within contrasting legal systems, including English
common law and Roman canon law. They consider the judges and juries
and the amateur and professional advisers involved in legal
processes as well as the offenders brought before the courts, with
the reasons for prosecuting them and the defences they put forward.
The cases examined range from a fourteenth century cause-celebre,
the attempted trial of Pope Boniface VIII for heresy, to
investigations of obscure people for sexual and religious offences
in the city states of Geneva and Venice. Technical terms have been
cut to a minimum to ensure accessibility and appeal to lawyers,
social, political and legal historians, undergraduate and
postgraduates as well as general readers interested in the
development of the trial through time. Domestic and international
trials, 1700-2000: The trial in history, vol. II edited by Dr Rose
Melikan, is also published by Manchester University Press.
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