A Short History of European Law is a valuable and original book.– Simona Cerutti, École des hautes études en sciences sociales, Paris. In this fresh and sometimes surprising book, Herzog acknowledges the worldwide impact of European legal history without ever becoming Eurocentric. She connects legal history with their imperial dimensions.. A Short History of European Law brings to life 2,500 years of legal history, tying current norms to the circumstances of their conception. Tamar Herzog describes how successive legal systems built upon one another, from ancient times through to the European Union. Roman law formed the backbone of each configuration, though the way it was used.
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A Short History of European Law is a valuable and original book.” ― Simona Cerutti, École des hautes études en sciences sociales, Paris “In this fresh and sometimes surprising book, Herzog acknowledges the worldwide impact of European legal history without ever becoming Eurocentric. She connects legal history with their imperial.. Every historian runs into law in one or another way: Letters refer to legal disputes; court records describe relations among neighbors; families are bound together and broken apart by law. Nor can law be separated from such large social and economic systems as slavery, feudalism, capitalism, or colonialism. Not every historian must be a legal historian, but some basic literacy in the.