This article is a study of the regulation of the legal profession by the Star Chamber in the late Elizabethan and early Stuart periods. It addresses whether the Court developed a new regulatory regime during the early Stuart era that was used to punish lawyers within the constitutionalist opposition. The article demonstrates that the royalist view of the Star Chamber’s powers that developed during the early Stuart period drew heavily on jurisdictional theory first elaborated by William Lambarde.
The article will argue that the Court’s attempts to assert its extraordinary jurisdiction over the legal profession as a whole for the first time during this era were a response to crises that had escalated tensions over the royal prerogative. The article concludes that further studies of the use of the extraordinary jurisdiction of the Star Chamber over the legal profession as a means of repression during the early Stuart era and whether this contributed to the Court’s abolition remain pertinent.
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
Alford on Star Chamber and the Legal Profession
Ryan Patrick Alford, Ave Maria School of Law, has posted The Star Chamber and the Regulation of the Legal Profession 1570-1640: Re-Evaluating Revisionism, which will also appear in the American Journal of Legal History 51 (2011). Here is the abstract: