معرفی کتاب «The ancient constitution and the feudal law: a study of English historical thought in the seventeenth century : a reissue with a retrospect» نوشتهٔ J G A Pocock, (John Greville Agard), 1924-، منتشرشده توسط نشر Cambridge University Press (Virtual Publishing) در سال 1987. این کتاب در 6 صفحه، فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
Professor Pocock's Subject Is How The Seventeenth Century Looked At Its Own Past. In The Sixteenth And Seventeenth Centuries, One Of The Most Important Modes Of Studying The Past Was The Study Of The Law - The Historical Outlook Which Arose In Each Nation Was In Part The Product Of Its Law, And Therefore, In Turn Of Its History. In Clarifying The Relation Of The Historical Outlook Of Seventeenth-century Englishmen To The Study Of Law, And Pointing Out Its Political Implication, Pocock Shows How History's Ground Was Laid For A More Philosophical Approach In The Eighteenth Century. -- Publisher Description. Part I. The Ancient Constitution And The Feudal Law: -- 1. Introductory: The French Prelude To Modern Historiography -- 2. The Common-law Mind: Custom And The Immemorial -- 3. The Common-law Mind: The Absence Of A Basis Of Comparison -- 4. The Discovery Of Feudalism: French And Scottish Historians -- 5. The Discovery Of Feudalism: Sir Henry Spelman -- 6. Interregnum: The Oceana Of James Harrington -- 7. Interregnum: The First Royalist Reaction And The Response Of Sir Matthew Hale -- 8. The Brady Controversy -- 9. Conclusion: 1688 In The History Of Historiography -- Part Ii. The Ancient Constitution Revisited: A Retrospect From 1986: -- 10. Historiography And Common Law -- 11. Civil War And Interregnum -- 12. Restoration, Revolution And Oligarchy. J.g.a. Pocock. Includes Bibliographical References And Index. Frontmatter Preface (page vii) Preface to the First Edition (page xiii) Part One The Ancient Constitution and the Feudal Law I Introductory: the French Prelude to Modern Historiography (page 1) II The Common-law Mind: Custom and the Immemorial (page 30) III The Common-law Mind: the Absence of a Basis of Comparison (page 56) IV The Discovery of Feudalism: French and Scottish Historians (page 70) V The Discovery of Feudalism: Sir Henry Spelman (page 91) VI Interregnum: the Oceana of James Harrington (page 124) VII Interregnum: the First Royalist Reaction and the Response of Sir Matthew Hale (page 148) VIII The Brady Controversy (page 182) IX Conclusion: 1688 in the History of Historiography (page 229) Part Two The Ancient Constitution Revisited: a Retrospect from 1986 I Historiography and Common Law (page 255) II Civil War and Interregnum (page 306) III Restoration, Revolution and Oligarchy (page 335) Index (page 389)
Professor Pocock's subject is how the seventeenth century looked at its own past. In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, one of the most important modes of studying the past was the study of the law - the historical outlook which arose in each nation was in part the product of its law, and therefore, in turn of its history. In clarifying the relation of the historical outlook of seventeenth-century Englishmen to the study of law, and pointing out its political implication, Pocock shows how history's ground was laid for a more philosophical approach in the eighteenth century.