The judicial system constructed by the Normans after 1066 rested on a broad foundation of Anglo-Saxon institutions. Adams traces this evolution with an emphasis on the ways Anglo-Saxon and Norman practices influenced one another, then demonstrates how the resulting judicial hybrid contributed to the development of the English constitution.
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The judicial system constructed by the Normans after 1066 rested on a broad foundation of Anglo-Saxon institutions. Adams traces this evolution with an emphasis on the ways Anglo-Saxon and Norman practices influenced one another, then demonstrates how the resulting judicial hybrid contributed to the development of the English constitution.
Read Less