The Administration of Justice from Homer to Aristotle

Summary
Bonner, Robert J. and Gertrude Smith. The Administration of Justice from Homer to Aristotle. The University of Chicago Press, [1930]. Two volumes. ix, 390; vii, [320] pp. Reprinted 2001 by The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd. LCCN 00-050693. ISBN 1-58477-117-8. Cloth. $160. Traces the Athenian legal system from the Homeric agora and the Solonian Heliaea through the system described by Aristotle in his Constitution of Athens. Volume I traces the growth and development of the judiciary. Volume II investigates practice and procedure, including the relevance of the oath, witnesses, litigation, appeals and pardons, the execution of judgments, in the Athenian system.
Similar Books
-
-
International Law
by Barry E. Carter
-
Torts: Cases and Questions
by Ward Farnsworth
-
Corrections: The Fundamentals
by Burk Foster
-
Ipse Dixit: How the World Looks to a Federal Judge
by William L. Dwyer
-
Crimes and Trials of the Century: Volume 1
by Steven M. Chermak
-
Ransom Kidnapping in America, 1874-1974: The Creation of a Capital Crime
by Ernest Kahlar Alix
-
Domestic Violence and the Law: Theory and Practice
by Elizabeth M. Schneider
-
-
Verdict: Assessing the Civil Jury System
by Robert E. Litan
-
A Restatement of Rabbinic Civil Law: Volume IX
by Emanuel B. Quint
-
Foundations of Intelligent Tutoring Systems
by Martha C. Polson
-
-
The Federal Courts as a Political System
by Sheldon Goldman
-
The First Amendment and the Fifth Estate, 2007 Supplement
by T. Barton Carter
-
2003 Federal Court Management Statistics
by Leonidas Ralph Mecham
-
Unhappy Anniversary: Fifty Years Since Roth V. United States
by Daniel Mark Cohen
-
-
Police Ethics and the Jewish Tradition
by Stephen M. Passamaneck
-
Townshend-Smith on Discrimination Law
by Michael J. Connolly
-
-
Administration of Justice from Homer to Aristotle
by Robert Johnson Bonner