(LAW). Traité des fiefes et droites feodaux en Normandie suivant l’ordre naturel des matières et de la procèdure. Divisé en cinque parties. [France ?Normandy, mid eighteenth century, before 1775.]
Manuscript, 4to (225 × 165 mm), pp. [ii], 303, [1], [13] (table), [1]. Closely, but legibly, written in French throughout, author or copyist’s name carefully obliterated at an early date. Title and following leaf slightly creased and becoming loose, front free endpaper detached. Contemporary mottled calf, gilt panelled spine. Expert recent repairs to spine.
An extensive manuscript devoted to the feudal and customary law of Normandy, a region in which feudal law remained dominant until the Revolution. Though anonymous, this is perhaps a transcript of legal lectures given at the University of Caen. Of paramount interest here are laws relating to land and inheritance, by which, according to Norman custom, property passed strictly through the male line to the almost total exclusion of women. The text is divided into five parts: 1. De l’origine et de la definition des fiefes; 2. Des droites féodaux; 3. Des droits naturels; 4. Des droits accidentels; 5. Des moïens de reversion ou consolidation aux fiefs. Within these broad sections is also much of incidental interest to the social historian, including several articles on the laws of hunting, fishing and game; on the customary rights of salvage (‘Varech’) of goods washed up on the Channel coasts and on water law, concerning rivers and ditches. The work is generally theoretical in tone, but it contains very numerous references to external sources, usually giving page references. Le Grant Coustumier du pays & duché de Normandie by Guillaume Le Rouillé is cited many times (it was first published in 1534 but frequently reprinted and here referred to as ‘la nouvelle Rouillé’) as is La coustume réformée du pays et duché de Normandie by Josias Bérault. Alongside these treatises, many chapters include precise references to royal ‘arrêts’ governing the operation of customary law which had been issued in the preceding centuries. The author or copyist may have inscribed his name at the foot of the title page, but this has been carefully obscured at an early date
£2250.00
(equal to approx. US$3562.83* or €2782.60* for 22 May 2012)
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