Lord Halsbury

Lord Halsbury

Auteur : John Hostettler

Date de publication : 1998

Éditeur : Barry Rose

Nombre de pages : 168

Résumé du livre

Those who have used the serried ranks of volumes in the course of their professional work may, perhaps, have regarded Halsbury the man as almost a mythical figure - a man so much overshadowed by the work which bears his name that he himself has been hidden from public view. John Hostettler in this volume brings him triumphantly to life. Although the many years of his life belonged to the 19th century and to the Victorian era, the later part of his life proved to be the most productive. And what a period that was: the tumultuous history of the early days of this century, with the social revolution following the end of the Victorian reign, the Lloyd George "People's Budget", the Easter Rising in Ireland, the Taff Vale case, and with the approach of the Great War as a dark and terrifying backdrop. John Hostettler has written a biography which is a fully rounded portrait of Halsbury: Halsbury the barrister, Halsbury the politician, Halsbury the Lord Chancellor, Halsbury the judge, and Halsbury as the progenitor of that remarkable exposition on the Common law which bears his name so proudly as a great jurist.

Connexion / Inscription

Saisissez votre e-mail pour vous connecter ou créer un compte

Connexion

Inscription

Mot de passe oublié ?

Nous allons vous envoyer un message pour vous permettre de vous connecter.