Volume 2, Number 2 (2016) Legal Worlds and Legal Encounters
Edited by Elizabeth Lambourn
Law has been a primary locus and vehicle of contact across human history—as a system of ideas embodied in people and enacted on bodies; and also as a material, textual, and sensory “thing.” The seven essays gathered here analyze a variety of legal encounters on the medieval globe, ranging from South Asia to South and Central America, Africa, the Middle East, and Europe. Contributors uncover the people behind and within legal systems and explore various material expressions of law that reveal the complexity and intensity of cross-cultural contact in this pivotal era. Topics include comparative jurisprudence, sumptuary law, varieties of punishment, forms of documentation and legal knowledge, religious law, and encounters between imperial and indigenous legal systems. A featured source preserves an Ethiopian king’s legislation against traffic in Christian slaves, resulting from the intensifying African slave trade of the sixteenth century.Complete Issue
Articles
The Future of Aztec Law
Jerome A. Offner
Land and Tenure in Early Colonial Peru: Individualizing the Sapci, "That Which is Common to All"
Susan E. Ramirez
The Edict of King Gälawdéwos Against the Illegal Slave Trade in Christians: Ethiopia, 1548 -- FEATURED SOURCE
Habtamu M. Tegegne
Mutilation and the Law in Early Medieval Europe and India: A Comparative Study -- OPEN ACCESS
Patricia E. Skinner
Toward a History of Documents in Medieval India: The Encounter of Scholasticism and Regional Law in the Smṛticandrikā
Donald R. Davis Jr.
Chinese Porcelain and the Material Taxonomies of Medieval Rabbinic Law: Encounters with Disruptive Substances in Twelfth-Century Yemen
Elizabeth Lambourn and Phillip I. Ackerman-Lieberman