Právněhistorické studie / Legal History Studies (Charles University journal; below referred to as PHS or Journal) is a scientific journal listed in the international prestigious database SCOPUS. The journal is published by Charles University in Prague under the guarantee of the Department of Legal History of the Faculty of Law of Charles University. It is published by the Karolinum Press. The journal focuses on the field of legal history and related topics.
Issue 1 of the Journal was published by the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences Publishing in June 1955. The Journal was initially published by the Cabinet of Legal History of the Czechoslovak Academy of Science (CSAV), later by the Institute of State and Law (CSAV) and then by the Institute of Legal History of the Faculty of Law of Charles University.
PHS is issued three times a year in April, August, and December and it presents original scientific works/papers as well as reviews, annotations and news from the scientific field of legal history. It also introduces annotated texts of a legal history nature. PHS accepts manuscripts from domestic as well as foreign authors. Manuscripts submitted by foreign authors are published in original language, namely in English, Slovak, German, French, Italian or Polish.
PHS (ISSN 0079-4929) is registered in the Czech national ISSN centre (supervised by the State Technical Library). The Journal is registered by the Ministry of Culture of the Czech Republic according to Act No. 46/2000 Sb., on Rights and Liabilities for the Publishing of Periodicals and Change of Some Acts (Press Act), and it is allocated with registration number of periodical press MK E 18813.
PHS is an open journal and ensures open access to scientific data (Open Access). The entire content is released as open to the public on the web pages of the journal.
The journal is archived in Portico.
PRÁVNĚHISTORICKÉ STUDIE, Vol 44 No 2 (2014), 5–27
Statusový spor o slobodu v Anglicku
[Controversy Regarding Status Libertatis in England]
Matej Mlkvý
published online: 21. 05. 2015
abstract
Unfree personal status in feudal Europe has witnessed two separate modes of development distinguished by the East/West divide. While the usual mode of development in Western Europe has been a piecemeal abolition of villeinship or of servitude as its harsher form at the very least, Eastern European development has been characterised by the expansion of servitude and general deterioration of the legal status of the unfree persons. The article focuses on the procedural aspects of legal emancipation of unfree persons under the common law of England. After setting the scene of inquiry with a brief comparison of analogous proceedings under the classical Roman law and with an introduction to the medieval common law system of pleading and counting, the article continues with a more detailed analysis of the proceedings initiated under the writ de native habendo, the main form of common law action used to sue inter alia for personal freedom, and related interlocutory writs (i.e. forms of action). The analysis of this writ deals separately with the initiation of prejudicial and judicial proceedings and with the problem of allocation of burden of proof. The focus on evidence admissible during the trial is justified by the fact that the burden of proof becoming ever more onerous for the suing lords has played with the passage of time a vital role in the effective decline and disappearance of unfree personal status in England. The article concludes with an analysis of other writs which could be used to determine personal status usually in the form of a prejudicial question. These were mainly various forms of trespassory writs that were used by the alleged villeins against lords claiming power over them. The synergic effect of all these writs has led in England to the curious development that the legal status of villeinship has never been statutorily abolished and therefore still forms an obsolete part of the substantive English common law.
Statusový spor o slobodu v Anglicku is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
240 x 170 mm
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ISSN: 0079-4929
E-ISSN: 2464-689X