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词条 The Mirror of Justices
释义

  1. See also

  2. References

{{Italic title}}{{Multiple image
|header = The Mirror of Justices
|image1 = Andrew Horn, Mirroir des iustices (1st ed, 1642, title page).jpg
|image2 = Andrew Horn, The Mirrour of Justices (1st ed, 1646, title page).jpg
|footer = The title pages of Andrew Horn's Mirroir des iustices (1642, left),[1] the first edition in Anglo-Norman and Latin; and The Mirror of Justices (1646),[2] the first English translation
}}The Mirror of Justices, also known in Anglo-Norman as Le mireur a justices[3] and in Latin as Speculum Justitiariorum,[4] is a law textbook[5] of the early 14th century, written in Anglo-Norman French by Andrew Horn (or Horne). The original manuscript is in the Parker Library, Corpus Christi College, Cambridge (manuscript identifier CCCC MS 258).[6]

The work was published in 1642,[1] based on a copy owned by Francis Tate and the Cambridge manuscript.[7] In 1646 it was translated into English and printed together with Anthony Fitzherbert's The Diversity of Courts and their Jurisdictions.[2] This version was republished in 1659[8] and 1768.[9] In 1895 the Selden Society published an edition of the work containing the Anglo-Norman text with a parallel English translation, and an extensive introduction by Frederic William Maitland.[4]

See also

  • Norman yoke

References

1. ^{{citation|author=Andrew Horn|authorlink=Andrew Horn|title=La somme appelle Mirroir des iustices: vel Speculum Iusticiariorum, Factum per Andream Horne|location=London|publisher=Printed by E[dward] G[riffin] for Matthew Walbanke and Richard Best and are to be sold at their shops at Grayes Inne Gate|year=1642|oclc=84157087}}.
2. ^{{citation|author=Andrew Horn|others=W[illiam] H[ughes], transl.|title=The Booke Called, The Mirrour of Justices: Made by Andrevv Horne. With the Book, Called, The Diversity of Courts, and their Jurisdictions. Both Translated out of the Old French into the English Tongue. By W. H. of Grays Inne Esquire.|edition=1st English|location=London|publisher=Imprinted ... for Matthew Walbancke at Graies Inne gate|year=1646|oclc=560061345}}.
3. ^{{citation|author=Frankwalt Möhren|contribution=MirJustW [Andrew Horn, Mireur a justices]|title=Dictionnaire étymologique de l'ancien français. Complément bibliographique 2007|url=http://www.deaf-page.de/bibl/bib99m.php#MirJustW|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20131222033208/http://www.deaf-page.de/bibl/bib99m.php|archivedate=22 December 2013|location=Tübingen|publisher=M. Niemeyer (reproduced on the Dictionnaire étymologique de l'ancien français (DEAF) Heidelberger Akademie der Wissenschaften, Romanisches Seminar, Heidelberg University)|year=2007|isbn=978-3-484-50616-9}}.
4. ^{{citation|author=Andrew Horn|editor=William Joseph Whittaker|title=The Mirror of Justices|edition=Selden Society|location=London|publisher=Bernard Quaritch|year=1895|page=1|oclc=760967779}}
5. ^In {{cite CommonLII|litigants=Doe dem. Burtwhistle v. Vardill|reporter=ER|fullstops=on|year=1840|num=867|volume=133|firstpage=148|pinpoint=149–150|parallelcite=6 Bing. (N.C.) 385 at 388|courtname=House of Lords|juris=UK}}, Sir Nicholas Conyngham Tindal, the Chief Justice of the Common Pleas sitting as a judge of the House of Lords, said the Mirror of Justices was "perhaps the very earliest of our text books" and cited it for the "admitted principle" that "the common law only taketh him to be a son whom the marriage proveth to be so".
6. ^{{citation|title=Cambridge, Corpus Christi College, Parker Library, CCCC MS 258|url=http://dms.stanford.edu/catalog/CCC258_keywords|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150925181329/http://dms.stanford.edu/catalog/CCC258_keywords|archivedate=25 September 2015|publisher=Digital Manuscripts Index, Stanford University|accessdate=25 September 2015}}.
7. ^{{citation|author=George Crabb|authorlink=George Crabb (writer)|title=History of English Law; or an Attempt to Trace the Rise, Progress, and Successive Changes of the Common Law from the Earliest Period to the Present Time|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9o1HAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA225|edition=1st American|location=Burlington|publisher=Chauncey Goodrich|year=1831|page=225|oclc=794710257}}.
8. ^{{citation|author=Andrew Horn|others=W[illiam] H[ughes], transl.|title=The Booke Called, The Mirrour of Justices: By Andrew Horne, to which is Added, the Book Called The Diversity and Jurisdictions of Courts, both now most exactly Rendred to more Ample Advantage out of the Old French into the English Tongue. By W. H. of Grayes Inne, Esquire|edition=2nd English|location=London|publisher=Printed for H[enry] Marsh at the Princes Armes in Chancery Lane neer Fleetstreet|year=1659|oclc=79567375}}.
9. ^{{citation|author=Andrew Horn|others=W[illiam] H[ughes], transl.|title=The Mirrour of Justices: Written Originally in the Old French, long before the Conquest; and Many Things Added, by Andrew Horne: To which is Added, The Diversity of Courts and their Jurisdiction. Translated into English by W. H. of Gray's Inn, Esq|edition=3rd English|location=London|publisher=Printed by His Majesty's law printers; for J. Worrall and B. Tovey, at the Dove in Bell Yard, near Lincoln's Inn, and P. Uriel, at the Inner Temple Gate|year=1768|oclc=642293338}}.
{{Commons category|The Mirror of Justices by Andrew Horn}}{{Italic title}}{{Use British English|date=September 2015}} {{use dmy dates|date=September 2015}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Mirror of Justices}}

2 : 13th-century manuscripts|Anglo-Norman literature

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