The Brehon Laws. A Legal Handbook (1894)
Book ID: 64480
Price: €175.00
The Brehon Laws. A Legal Handbook. London: Unwim, 1894. First Edition. Pp vii,, 249, uncut. Black cloth boards, title lettered in gilt to upper cover & spine. Light soiling to covers, contents in very good condition.
Text with decorative Celtic headpieces and initials throughout.
‘The beginning of the 17th century saw English law and rule prevail in Ireland and the Irish laws outlawed and declared barbarous. These ancient ‘barbarous’ laws of Ireland have since been recognized as the most advanced system of jurisprudence in the ancient world, a system under which the doctrine of the equality of man [including equality between men and women] was understood and under which a deeply humane and cultured society flourished. These ancient Irish laws have come to be called The Brehon Laws from the Irish term ‘Brehon’ which was applied to the official lawgiver. These laws are of great antiquity and may antedate the coming of the Celts to Ireland. St. Patrick is credited with codifying [them] in the 5th century. His efforts fill five volumes and are known as the Senchus Mor.’ [Loretta Wilson, Irish Cultural Society of the Garden City Area, 1989].
Laurence Ginnell (1854-1923) was an Irish nationalist politician and lawyer and Member of Parliament in the House of Commons of Great Britain and Ireland as a member, at different times, of the Irish Parliamentary Party, the Independent Nationalists and Sinn Fein. The last social and agrarian campaign of the home rule movement, the Ranch War (1906 and 1909), was largely led and organised by Ginnell. He was a staunch opponent of the Anglo-Irish Treaty that was ratified in 1922
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