Conquest and the law in Swedish Livonia (ca. 1630-1710) : a case of legal pluralism in early modern Europe
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Bibliographic Information
Conquest and the law in Swedish Livonia (ca. 1630-1710) : a case of legal pluralism in early modern Europe
(The northern world : North Europe and the Baltic c. 400-1700 A.D. : peoples, economies and cultures, v. 77)
Brill, c2017
- : hardback
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Now available in Open Access thanks to the support of the University of Helsinki. In Conquest and the Law in Swedish Livonia (ca. 1630-1710), Heikki Pihlajamaki offers an exciting account of the law and judiciary in seventeenth-century Livonia. Immediately after Sweden conquered the province in the 1620s, a reorganization of the Livonian judiciary began. Its legal order became largely modelled after Swedish law, which differed in important ways from its Livonian counterpart. While Livonian legal tradition was firmly anchored in the European ius commune, the conquerors' law was, by nature, not founded in legal learning. The volume convincingly demonstrates how the differences in legal cultures decisively affected the way Livonian judicial and procedural systems were shaped. Based on archival sources, the study presents an important contribution to the comparative legal history of the early modern period.
Table of Contents
Contents
Acknowledgements vii
1 Introduction 1
1.1 The Research Questions 1
1.2 Archival Material 10
1.3 Previous Research 13
1.4 The Structure of the Book 18
2 The Outset: The Livonian and Swedish Legal Orders at the Time of the
Swedish Conquest 21
2.1 Livonian Administration, Judiciary, and the Legal Procedure before
the Swedish Conquest 21
2.2 Livonian Law and the Legal Sources: The European Context 41
2.3 Swedish Law before the Conquest of Livonia 64
2.4 Summary 82
3 The Reorganisation of the Livonian Judiciary under the Swedish
Rule 85
3.1 The Alternatives: Colonial Systems and Their Judicial
Organisations 85
3.2 Sweden's Other Overseas Possessions: Organizing the Judiciary in
Estonia and the Reich 94
3.3 Reforming the Livonian Judicial Structure 100
3.4 The Personnel in Charge: Judges, Lawyers, and Administrators 135
3.5 Summary 149
4 The Procedure in the Livonian Courts of the Swedish Era 151
4.1 The Classification of Cases into Civil and Criminal 151
4.2 The Civil Procedure in the Lower Courts 153
4.3 The Criminal Procedure in the Lower Courts 172
4.4 The Cases and the Procedure at the High Court of Dorpat 216
4.5 The Revision Procedure 228
4.6 Summary: Legal Procedure in Seventeenth-Century Livonia 235
5 Transplanting Swedish Law? The Legal Sources at the Livonian
Courts 238
5.1 The Theory of Legal Spheres 238
5.2 The Ius Commune in the Livonian Court Records 239
5.3 The Influence of Swedish Law in Livonia 244
5.4 The Livonian Legal Sources 246
5.5 Divine Law and Natural Law 248
5.6 The Theory and the Practice of Legal Sources: Europe and
Livonia 249
6 Conclusions 256
6.1 The Starting Point: Livonian and Swedish Law before the
Conquest 256
6.2 The Organization of the Judiciary in Swedish Livonia 258
6.3 The Judicial Procedure 259
6.4 Legal Sources in the Courts of Swedish Livonia 262
Sources and Bibliography 265
Archival Sources 265
Printed Sources 265
Literature 266
Index 291
by "Nielsen BookData"