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Ancient law

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About This Book

The work traces the historical development of legal and social institutions, arguing that custom and group relationships precede conscious legislation and individual contracts. It identifies the family, under patriarchal authority, as the primary unit of early legal order and explains features like agnation, adoption, and the status of dependents as products of that structure. Through Roman examples and comparative evidence from other traditions, it examines the gradual shift from collective status to individual contract, and applies this framework to wills, property, succession, and village-community arrangements.

About the Author

Maine, Sir Henry Sumner portrait

Sir Henry Sumner Maine

Sir Henry Sumner Maine was a British jurist and legal historian, best known for his influential work "Ancient Law," published in 1861. In this seminal text, Maine explores the evolution of legal systems from ancient societies to modern times, emphasizing the relationship between law and social development. His insights into the nature of legal institutions and their historical contexts have significantly contributed to the fields of anthropology and legal theory. Maine's scholarship laid the groundwork for future studies in comparative law and the sociology of law, making him a notable figure in the intellectual landscape of the 19th century.

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