Justly famous as a historian of roman law and as a comparative lawyer, Paul Vinogradoff [1854-1925] also wrote on public international law and English legal history. Roman Law in Medieval Europe (1909) contains his essays on roman law in France, England and Germany and the decay of roman law and the revival of jurisprudence. His Villainage in England (1892) is a classic study of peasantry in the feudal age. His other major works include Outlines in Historical Jurisprudence (1920), a complex description and analytical perspective of the growth of jurisprudence from tribal to modern law, and On the History of International Law and International Organization: Collected Papers of Sir Paul Vinogradoff (2009), which collects his most important contributions to international law and historical jurisprudence.
Preface
Book I. The Pre-English Period: 1. Celtic tribal arrangements
2. Roman influence
Book II. The Old English Period: 1. The English conquest
2. The grouping of the Folk
3. The shares in the township
4. The open-field system
5. The history of the holding
6. Manorial origins
Book III. The Feudal Period: 1. The principles of the Domesday survey
2. Ownership and husbandry
3. Social Classes
Notes to Book I
Notes to Book II
Notes to Book III
Index.