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The History of England, and of England's Records | 9 |
Statutory definition of the Public Records | 9 |
None earlier than the Norman Conquest | 10 |
The Conqueror and his Court | 10 |
Officers of State sitting in the Court: the Chancellor and the Treasurer | 10 |
Court and Council at Gloucester in 1085 | 11 |
First design of the Public Records : writs to be returned | 11 |
Domesday Book the great ancestor of the Public Records | 11 |
Indignation and astonishment of the English at the method pursued | 12 |
Annual account of the revenue to be sent to the King or his officer: the Great Rolls | 12 |
Profits from judicial proceedings | 13 |
The Missi, or Justices in Eyre, sent through the country | 13 |
The Treasurer at the head of one of the Commissions | 14 |
The old County Courts overshadowed by the Courts of Eyre | 14 |
Records of the Courts of the Justices in Eyre | 15 |
Records of the Principalis Curia Regis coram Justiciis | 15 |
Certain functions delegated by the King to this Court as to the Eyres | 15 |
The Bench, or King's Court, at Westminster | 16 |
The central authority : the counties have to come to the King's fixed Court | 16 |
Only one Bench at first : its jurisdiction not then restricted to common pleas | 17 |