Commentaries on the Laws of England

William BLACKSTONE

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Commentaries on the Laws of England
Commentaries on the Laws of England

“THE BEST HISTORY OF THE ENGLISH LAW”: HANDSOME EARLY QUARTO SET OF BLACKSTONE’S COMMENTARIES

BLACKSTONE, William. Commentaries on the Laws of England. Oxford: Printed at the Clarendon Press, 1770. Four volumes. Quarto, contemporary full tan polished calf gilt rebacked with elaborately gilt-decorated spines laid down, original red and black morocco spine labels, raised bands, marbled endpapers.

Fourth edition of Blackstone’s landmark Commentaries, the last quarto edition printed at Oxford, handsomely bound in contemporary calf-gilt.

One of the great achievements in legal history, Blackstone’s Commentaries proved instrumental to the definition of the English constitution and in establishing common law as the basis of the American legal system. The Commentaries helped clarify the system of English law by introducing to the public the traditions underlying its formation. “Until the Commentaries, the ordinary Englishman had viewed the law as a vast, unintelligible and unfriendly machine… Blackstone’s great achievement was to popularize the law and the traditions which had influenced its formation… He did for the English what the imperial publication of Roman law did for the people of Rome” (PMM 212). “The Commentaries are not only a statement of the law of Blackstone’s day, but the best history of English law as a whole which had yet appeared… The skillful manner in which Blackstone uses his authorities new and old, and the analogy of other systems of law, to illustrate the evolution of the law of his day, had a vast influence, both in England and America” (NYU, 34). First published 1765-69. HLC I:187. See: PMM 212; Schwartz, The Law in America, 24-26. Armorial bookplates. Leaf from Legal Bibliography, January 1911 tipped to second leaf of Volume I.

Scattered mild foxing, expert restoration to contemporary calf bindings. A near-fine set, handsomely bound.

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