The myth of the 'five bloods': from fiction to legal custom in the English royal courts in fourteenth-century Ireland
Citation:
Hewer, S.G., The myth of the 'five bloods': from fiction to legal custom in the English royal courts in fourteenth-century Ireland, Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, Section C, 118, 2018, 1 - 33Download Item:
Abstract:
This paper examines two issues: misconceptions concerning English law in high medieval Ireland; and the invention and mutation of an exceptio (objection) in court which was based on a fabrication. The plea, or defensive claim, was that the plaintiff in a court case was an unfranchised Gael (Hibernica/Hibernicus) and therefore could not sue a civil writ in the English king’s royal courts in Ireland. This pleading has led some historians to surmise that all Gaels were unfran-chised in English Ireland without a personal grant of access from the crown of England. The plea also claimed that only five Gaelic families were allowed to sue in the royal courts. Each time the plea was made, it changed, and after sixty years a defendant claimed that the ancestors of the then current king (Edward III) had granted access to English law only to five Gaelic families. There are many problems with this claim.
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http://people.tcd.ie/shewerDescription:
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Author: Hewer, Stephen
Type of material:
Journal ArticleCollections
Series/Report no:
Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, Section C;118;
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Full text availableKeywords:
Irish politics, Pleas, Defendants, Juries, Public records, Kings, Judicial writs, Plaintiffs, Irish resistanceSubject (TCD):
Discourse analysis , Irish History , Legal History , Medieval IrelandISSN:
00358991Metadata
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