The Southwark Fire Court
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Description
From the Publisher
On 26 May 1676, a fire consumed most of central Southwark. The fire panicked the nation and helped to kindle one of the great political crises in seventeenth-century England. To spur the speedy rebuilding of the borough, Parliament turned to a device that had proven so successful in responding to the Great Fire of London ten years earlier: a fire court. This court had the power to cut through the web of legal relationships that made rebuilding difficult and to spread the cost of rebuilding between lessors and tenants.
In this book Jay Tidmarsh, James J. Clynes Professor of Law at the University of Notre Dame, Indiana, tells the story behind the Great Fire of Southwark, the City of London’s failed designs to reconstruct Southwark to its liking, and the Southwark Fire Court’s unrelenting effort to identify the builders best able to put Southwark back on its feet. The book also includes digests of all fifty-two of the Court’s decrees, which illuminate both the nature of property holdings in London and the ordinary people and places of Southwark.
ISBN
9780902087750
Publication Date
2024
Publisher
London Topographical Society
City
London
Keywords
Seventh Amendment, legal history, jury trial, constitutional interpretation, originalism
Disciplines
Civil Procedure | Courts | Law
Recommended Citation
Tidmarsh, Jay, "The Southwark Fire Court" (2024). Books. 424.
https://scholarship.law.nd.edu/law_books/424
Comments
Also by Jay Tidmarsh: The English Fire Courts and the American Right to Civil Jury Trial