NOTES AND QUERIES. 



[Sept. 29. 1855. 



Continuation of So^^*^ Sntigeg. 



In the Next Year will be published 



THE JUDGES OF ENGLAND; 



WITH 



SKETCHES OF THEIR LIVES, 



AND MISCELLANEOUS NOTICES CONNECTED WITH THE 



COURTS AT WESTMINSTER. 



By EDWARD FOSS, F.S.A. 



Vol. v.— The Tudors. 

 Vol. VI. —The Stuarts. 



♦^* Any communication relative to the Judges who flourished under those dynasties will be gratefully 

 received by the Author, if addressed to him at Street-End House, near Canterbury. 



Opinions of the Press on the first Four Volumes published by Longman ^ Co., comprehending the period from the Conquest 



to the end of the Line of York, 1483. 



" It supplies what was much wanted,— a regular and progressive ac- 

 count of English institutions. The result is a correction of many errors, 

 an addition of much new Information, and a better general view of our 

 strictly legal history than any other jurist, historian, or biographer had 

 heretofore attempted to give." — Examiner. 



" The portion before us (Vols. III. and IV.) is in no respect inferior 

 to that which was first published. It is now manifest that, quite apart 

 from any biographical interest belonging to it, the work, in its com- 

 plete state, will supply a regular and progressive account of English 

 legal institutions, such as exists in no other equally accessible form in 

 our language." — iJxamincr. 



"The two former volumes established Mr. Toss's reputation as an 

 author. It would be difficult to point out any other work in which is 

 contained so much valuable matter, combined with so much incident 

 interesting to the legal antiquary." — Standard. 



" In the sense of research this work may be said to be original." — 

 Spectator, 



"Too high praise cannot be awarded to Mr. Foss for careful and 

 painstaking research. . . . He has rejected the husk of archeology, 

 and presented the kernel. His conclusions are not merely sound, his 

 logic is inventive." — Spectator. 



" The Judges of England is an excellent book, and will, without 

 doubt, be appreciated as well by the public at large as by the members 

 of the legal profession." — Tait's Magazine. 



" These additional volumes deserve a hearty welcome from the read- 

 ing world, ... to antiquary, lawyer, and historian, they will be 

 found rife with interest and erudition." — Tait's Magazine. 



"Lord Campbell boasts of ' the Cancellarian mummies which he has 

 dug up and exhibited to the public ; ' but Mr. Foss may boast of a 

 Ixigher claim to praise, in having given to the persons whom he has 

 drawn from the shades of a long and all but hopeless obscurity, the truth 

 of an historical interest, and the animation of a real existence." — Oen- 

 tkman'g Magazine. 



" It is the distinction of Mr. Foss's book, that he builds everything 

 upon authority, and quotes authority for everything. . . . He ha» 

 written a book which has added more to our knowledge of legal history 

 than any single work published since Madox's ' History of the Ex- 

 chequer,' — a book which is essentially sound and truthful, and must 

 therefore take its stand in the permanent literature of our country." 

 — Gentleman's Magazine. 



" Our description will be sufficient to show how valuable an addition 

 Mr. Foss has made to our literary stores, and how vast a mass of useful 

 and attractive information he has placed within the reach of tlie his- 

 torian, tlie antiquary, the legal student, and the constitutional 

 lawyer." — Jofm Bull. 



" A work which cannot be too highly estimated, whether for the im- 

 portance of its object, or the great learning, extraordinary research, 

 juigment, and impartiality which are bestowed on all parts of its com- 

 position." — Legal Observer. 



" Mr. Foss deserves infinite credit for the industry and perseverance 

 of his investigations, and for his judicious use of the materials at hand. 

 . . . All possible assistance is due to Mr. Foss in return for tlie patient 

 research of wliich the volumes before us are the result. Their im- 

 portance can hardly be overrated." — Literary Oazette. 



" We believe that this is the only work of the kind."— iato Magazine. 



" Mr. Foss, as he proceeds with his arduous researches, is picking up 

 some bits of much antiquated interest. His book must not be j udged as. 

 a history of all the judges, so much as in the light of fragments of the 

 history of their times." — Law Magazine. 



" The work of Mr. Foss is the only one which is at all to be relied 

 on." — Rambler. 



" The reputation which Mr. Foss acquired, as a diligent investigator 

 of legal antiquities, and an impartial biographer of those who have won 

 for themselves seats on the woolsack or the bench, by the publication of 

 the first two volumes, will be more than confirmed by the 3rU and 4th 

 Volumes which Iiave just been issued." — Notes and Queries. 



Printed by Thomas Clark Shaw, of No. 10. Stonefleld Street, in the Parish of St. Mary, Islington, at No. 6. New Street Square, In the Parish of 

 St. Bride, In the City of London i and published by Georob Bell, of No. 186. Fleet Street, in the Parieh of St. Dunstau in the Wert, In the 

 City of Londoa, Publisher, at No. !86. Fleet Street aforesaid Saturday, September 29, 1855. 



