Historical law tracts
Historical law tracts
Law of the United Kingdom and Ireland > England and Wales > From Henry VIII (1547) to ca. 1775
Edition Details
- Creator or Attribution (Responsibility): Henry Home Kames
- Language: English
- Jurisdiction(s): Scotland
- Publication Information: Edinburgh : Bell & Bradfute, 1817
- Publication Type (Medium): History
- Material: Document, Internet resource
- Type: Internet Resource, Computer File
- Series title: The Making of the Modern Law
- Permalink: https://books.lawi.org.uk/historical-law-tracts-92503/ (Stable identifier)
Additional Format
(OCoLC)14881774 Print version: Kames, Henry Home, Lord, 1696-1782. Historical law tracts. Edinburgh: Bell & Bradfute, 1817 (DLC) 32017100
Short Description
1 online resource (XVI, 497 pages).
Purpose and Intended Audience
Useful for students learning an area of law, Historical law tracts is also useful for lawyers seeking to apply the law to issues arising in practice.
Research References
- Providing references to further research sources: Search
More Options
- Find it at other libraries via WorldCat/OCLC
- Find Historical law tracts in Google Books
- Find Historical law tracts in Open Library
Bibliographic information
- Responsable Person: by Henry Home of Kames.
- Publication Date: 1817
- Country/State: Scotland
- Number of Editions: 69 editions
- First edition Date: 1758
- Last edition Date: 2013
- General Notes: Reproduction of original from Harvard Law School Library.
- Languages: British English, French
- Library of Congress Code: KD612
- OCLC: 60718606
Structured Subjects (Headings):
Unstructured Subjects (Headings):
Find it in the Library of Congress:
If you wish to locate similar books to “Historical law tracts”, they can be found under the Library of Congress call numbers starting with KD612 in most university libraries. If you wish to look up similar titles to “Historical law tracts” in an on-line library catalog, the official Library of Congress Subject Headings under which they can be found are:
Criminal law
England
Great Britain
Property
Roman law
Scotland
Leave a Reply