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  1. Arbitrary seventeenth-century magistrates, rule-conscious eighteenth-century common law courts, statute-enacting nineteenth-century legislatures: in the years between 1600 and 1820, the white residents of British North America lived under three distinct, but overlapping and interrelated, legal systems.

  2. Oct 1, 2019 · In contrast, in Britain, three magistrates – one a woman – were required at every sitting; they had to form a consensus before adjudicating, and were advised on matters of law by a legally trained clerk.

  3. Three of the commissioners of oyer and terminerD'Ewes Coke, Thomas Dodd, and Jonathan Ogden—were also practicing surgeons. Surgeons possessed three qualities desirable for local magistrates: they were relatively learned, actively willing, and readily available.

  4. A magistrate is a civil officer charged with the administration of the law. Magistrates have been around since 1361 (they were originally called Justice of the Peace). They became the first incarnation of local government.

  5. Study with Quizlet and memorize flashcards containing terms like What were the three branches of government, How did magistrates become magistrates, Which branch was the closest thing to the executive branch and more.

  6. Oct 23, 2017 · Recent literature has recast the history of the British empire as a vast project of intervention in and reordering of colonial legal administrations. Closer inspection of local moments of legal reform, however, reveals substantial complications and contradictions in that project.

  7. Nov 3, 2014 · Most courts formed a combination of households rather than a single establishment, a situation reflecting the role of the dynasty around the individual ruler. Women played a marked role, particularly as mothers and dowagers.