Archeion, or, A discourse vpon the high courts of iustice in England. Composed by William Lambard, of Lincolnes Inne, Gent

About this Item

Title
Archeion, or, A discourse vpon the high courts of iustice in England. Composed by William Lambard, of Lincolnes Inne, Gent
Author
Lambarde, William, 1536-1601.
Publication
London :: Printed by E. P[urslowe] for Henry Seile, dwelling at the Tygers-head in St. Pauls Church-yard,
1635.
Rights/Permissions

To the extent possible under law, the Text Creation Partnership has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to this keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above, according to the terms of the CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/). This waiver does not extend to any page images or other supplementary files associated with this work, which may be protected by copyright or other license restrictions. Please go to http://www.textcreationpartnership.org/ for more information.

Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A04995.0001.001
Cite this Item
"Archeion, or, A discourse vpon the high courts of iustice in England. Composed by William Lambard, of Lincolnes Inne, Gent." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A04995.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 14, 2024.

Pages

Page [unnumbered]

The Contents.

  • COntention hath beene from the beginning. pag. 1
  • The beginning of Kingdomes. pag. 3
  • The beginning of Lawes. pag. 4
  • The beginning of Courts of Iustice. pag. 5
  • What a Court signifieth. pag. 8
  • The Division of Courts. pag. 9
  • Ecclesiasticall Courts what they be. pag. 9
  • Lay Courts of two sorts in ancient time. pag. 13
  • The first division of this Realme for Iu∣risdiction. pag. 13
  • The Kings Bench. pag. 19
  • The division of meere Lay Courts at this day. pag. 20
  • The Court of Exchequer. pag. 24
  • The first beginning of Iustices in Eyre. pag. 30

Page [unnumbered]

  • The Court of Common Pleas. pag. 34
  • The division of the Courts by Britton. pag. 36
  • Marshall, whence it is. pag. 37
  • Seneschall, whence. pag. 39
  • The Admiraltie, and its Name. pag. 41
  • The Constables Court, and whence the Name. pag. 43
  • The Chancellor and Chancerie Court. pag. 45
  • The Great Seale, and the Office of him that beareth it. pag. 47
  • The Court of Equitie, or Chancerie. pag. 58
  • The Court of Star-chamber. pag. 78
  • The first part of this Discourse. pag. 79
  • The sundrie sorts of extraordinarie cri∣minall causes. pag. 82
  • The offences of publike persons. pag. 82
  • The misdemeanours of private men. pag. 85
  • The apparant lack of ordinarie helpe. pag. 89
  • The second part, enquiring who is Iudge of these extraordinarie criminals. pag. 95
  • The Kings Councell. pag. 101
  • The conflicts betweene the Law absolute and ordinarie. pag. 108
  • The Office of the King. pag. 117

Page [unnumbered]

  • The true moderation of Iurisdiction ab∣solute. pag. 120
  • The maintenance of that moderation. pag. 122
  • Examples of that moderation. pag. 133
  • President of the Requests. pag. 139
  • Order taken for the Councell, during the minoritie of King Henry the sixt. pag. 141
  • The third part, touching the place. pag. 148
  • The Star-chamber is the usuall place. pag. 149
  • The name of Star-chamber. pag. 154
  • The ancient usage of the Star-chamber. pag. 156
  • The Officers of the Star-chamber. pag. 159
  • The Authoritie of the Star-chamber, by new Statutes. pag. 163
  • A Confutation of some Objections against the Star-chamber. pag. 175
  • The double Authoritie of the Star-cham∣ber. pag. 174
  • The severall Offences determinable by the Statutes. pag. 182

Page [unnumbered]

  • Maintenance, and Champartie. pag. 183
  • Giving of Liveries. pag. 190
  • Embracerie. pag. 199
  • Offences in the making of Pannels. pag. 203
  • Vntrue Returnes by Sheriffes. pag. 208
  • Taking of Money by Iurors. pag. 212
  • Riots, Routs, and Rebellious Assemblies. pag. 215
  • Counterfeits of Privie Tokens. pag. 222
  • The Court of Requests. pag. 224
  • The Presidents and Councells. pag. 231
  • The Dutchie Court of Lancaster. pag. 231
  • The Court of Wards and Liveries. pag. 233
  • The Court of Augmentations. pag. 233
  • The Wardens Court. pag. 234
  • The Parliament. pag. 238
  • The word Parliament. pag. 239
  • The conformitie and reason of the three Estates in Parliament. pag. 244
  • The beginning of the Parliament. pag. 246
  • The continuance of the Parliament till the Conquest. pag. 246
  • The continuance of the Parliament after the Conquest. pag. 260
Do you have questions about this content? Need to report a problem? Please contact us.