- Regius Professor of Civil Law (Oxford)
The Regius Chair of Civil Law, founded in the 1540s, is one of the oldest of the
professor ships at theUniversity of Oxford .Foundation
The Regius chair of Civil Law at Oxford was founded by King Henry VIII, who established five such
Regius Professor ships in the University, the others being the chairs of Divinity, Physic, Hebrew and Greek. [http://www.admin.ox.ac.uk/po/051201.shtml New Regius Professor of Civil Law Appointed] -University of Oxford news release dated 1 December 2005 online at ox.ac.uk (accessed 23 February 2008)] Thestipend attached to the position was then forty pounds a year. Henry VIII put an end to the teaching ofCanon law at both Oxford and Cambridge. [http://www.pmb.ox.ac.uk/cgi-bin/courses.cgi?subjectid=24 Law at Pembroke College] online at pmb.ox.ac.uk (accessed 23 February 2008)] Under statutes of 1549, the Regius Professor of Civil Law was to lecture four times a week between the hours of eight and nine in the morning on thePandects , on the Code, or on the ecclesiastical laws ofEngland . The requirement to give four lectures a week was repeated in the statutes of 1564 and of 1576. The professor was also to moderate at disputations in law.The exact date of the chair's foundation is uncertain. Some sources say that
John Story , the first professor, was appointed in about 1541, while others say the chair was founded in 1546. No foundation document survives, but in 1544 Robert Weston was recorded as acting as Story's deputy. [Reg. Cong. 1535-63, fo. 100]The holder of the Regius Professorship is still chosen by
The Crown and is still appointed to teachRoman law , its principles and history, and some other branches of the law.First Professor
As noted above, it is uncertain when the first Regius Professor, the Blessed
John Story , was first appointed. "The History of the University of Oxford" says that it was by a signed bill, c. 1541, adding that, together with Robert Weston, Story was reappointed for life byletters patent dated 26 February 1546. [Aston, "op. cit." p. 358] Payments to Story as professor of Civil Law are found in the accounts of the Treasurer of theCourt of Augmentations for the periodsMichaelmas 1546 to Michaelmas 1550, part of 1553, and 1556–1557, and for fees and annuities in issues of theExchequer for 1553-1557.Public Record Office : PRO E 323/3, rot. 91, 4, rot 38/39, 5, rot 35/37, 6, rot. 22/24, E 405/499, 507, fo. 75v, 510]Story had a tempestuous career. Elected to parliament in 1547, in 1548 he opposed the anti-Roman Catholic laws of King Edward VI, was imprisoned, and on release fled to the
Seventeen Provinces . The reign of the Roman Catholic Queen Mary from July 1553 to November 1558 brought Story back into public life. He became amember of parliament again, and after Mary's death opposed the Act of Supremacy of 1559. He was again imprisoned, escaped, was recaptured, and fled again to the Low Countries, where he became a subject ofPhilip II of Spain . He waskidnap ped by agents of Queen Elizabeth I, imprisoned in theTower of London , where he wastorture d, and finally in 1571 washanged, drawn and quartered . [http://saints.sqpn.com/saintjau.htm JOHN STOREY] online at saints.sqpn.com (accessed 23 February 2008)]Story was beatified by
Pope Leo XIII in 1886.Period of Decline
Although prestigious, the Regius Chair has not always been effective for teaching purposes. In 1846, a Select Committee of the House of Commons began to inquire into the state of legal education in the United Kingdom, and its report later the same year showed the emptiness of the title of Regius Professor of Civil Law at Oxford at that time. Dr Joseph Phillimore, who had held the Chair since 1809 and who continued to hold it until his death in 1855 at the age of eighty, admitted in a series of evasive replies to the Select Committee that his subject had not been taught at Oxford for almost a hundred years. Dr Philip Bliss, Registrar of the University, revealed that the University had no examinations in any "legal science". Although the degree of
Bachelor of Civil Law was still awarded, the "disputations" which led to such an award were an empty formality.Aston, T. H. (ed.), "The History of the University of Oxford, Volume VII, Part 2" (Oxford, 1984) [http://books.google.com/books?id=OfjghCa3CnMC&pg=RA2-PA395&lpg=RA2-PA395&dq=%22joseph+phillimore%22+%22regius+professor%22&source=web&ots=EEf8LMJQig&sig=lBDwr5BFlVI8upjOZdTJkUosBF4 p. 395] online at books.google.com (accessed 23 February 2008)]One of Phillimore's eighteenth century predecessors, Robert Vansittart, a noted
antiquarian and rake, was appointed Regius Professor in 1767 and held the chair until his death in 1789. He published antiquarian works, was a close acquaintance ofSamuel Johnson ,William Hogarth andPaul Whitehead , and was a participant in the debauchery of theHellfire Club .Carlyle, E. I., & Brown, Robert, "Vansittart, Robert (1728–1789)" in "Oxford Dictionary of National Biography ", Oxford University Press, 2004] Vansittart's successor,Thomas Francis Wenman (1745–1796), Regius Professor from 1789 until his death, is described in the "Dictionary of National Biography " as "one of the few students of natural history at Oxford" and was drowned in theRiver Cherwell on 8 April, 1796, while collecting botanical specimens.Lee, Sidney (ed.) "Wenman, Thomas Francis (1745–1796)" in "Dictionary of National Biography", [http://books.google.com/books?id=8bT6Tq8qj1oC&pg=PA256&lpg=PA256&dq=%22Wenman&source=web&ots=XNOp7lvWff&sig=sBqIkBIGzASZMmxbKwc1o_7Syng p. 256] online at books.google.com (accessed 23 February 2008)]Modern Period
After the death of Phillimore in 1855, the situation improved somewhat. Although the next professor, Sir Travers Twiss, held degrees in
Mathematics andLiterae Humaniores , he came to the post directly from three years as professor ofinternational law at King's College, London, where the teaching of law was taken more seriously than at Oxford. His international reputation led to Leopold II, king of the Belgians asking him to draft the constitution of theCongo Free State . ["Twiss, Sir Travers" inEncyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition ]Twiss was succeeded in 1870 by
James Bryce, 1st Viscount Bryce , a distinguishedhistorian and Liberal politician who for a period combined the Regius chair of civil law with holding office asUnder-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs and who resigned the chair only in 1893, a year after joiningWilliam Gladstone 'sCabinet . ["Bryce, James, 1st Viscount" in Encyclopædia Britannica, Eleventh Edition]In 1955, the distinguished German academic lawyer
David Daube (1909–1999), a native of Freiburg im Breisgau, became the first foreign-born Regius Professor of Civil Law at Oxford since the 17th century. He was later a professor-in-residence at theUniversity of California, Berkeley . ["Daube, David", in Who Was Who 1996–2000 (London, A. & C. Black, 2001, ISBN 0-7136-5439-2)]Daube was succeeded in 1971 by
Tony Honoré (born 1921), ajurist known for his work onownership , causation andRoman law , who remained in post until 1988. Although born inLondon , he was brought up inSouth Africa , fought in theSecond World War and was severely wounded at theFirst Battle of El Alamein . His contributions to legal philosophy include sixteen books and more than a hundred articles.In 1988,
Peter Birks was appointed, holding office until his death in 2004. He was a specialist on the law ofRestitution . [http://ouclf.iuscomp.org/articles/In_Memoriam_Peter_Birks.shtml In Memoriam Peter Birks (1941–2004)] online at ouclf.iuscomp.org (accessed 23 February 2008)]After a vacancy of more than a year, Professor Boudewijn Sirks was appointed in December 2005 and took up the post in 2006, his previous career having been in teaching
philosophy and law at the universities of Leiden, Amsterdam, Utrecht, and Frankfurt.List of Regius Professors of Civil Law
*c. 1541-1557:
John Story (for much of that time jointly with Robert Weston and William Aubrey)cite web|url=http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/887 |title=Aubrey, William (c.1529–1595) |last=Watkin |first=Thomas Glyn |work=Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online edition, subscription required) |publisher=Oxford University Press |date=January 2008| accessdate=2008-02-24]
*1546-1553: Robert Weston (jointly with John Story)
*1553-1559:William Aubrey (for some of that period jointly with John Story)
*1559-1566: John GriffithAston, T. H. (ed.), "The History of the University of Oxford, Volume III: The Collegiate University", pp. 358-360]
*1566-1577:Robert Lougher
*1577-1586:Griffith Lloyd
*1586-1587: William Mowse (d. 1588) [Cooper, Charles Henry, "Memorials of Cambridge" (Cambridge, William Metcalfe, 1860) vol. 1, p. 125]
*1587-1608: Albericus Gentilis [Aston, "op. cit.", pp. 360-361] [ [http://www.bartleby.com/213/1903.html English Universities, Schools and Scholarship in the Sixteenth Century : Civil law at the universities] at bartleby.com (accessed 22 February 2008)]
*1620-1661:Richard Zouch [ [http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9078463/Richard-Zouche Richard Zouche] at britannica.com (accessed 22 February 2008)]
*1767-1789: Robert Vansittart [ [http://www.berkshirehistory.com/bios/rvansittart.html Robert Vansittart] at berkshirehistory.com (accessed 22 February 2008)]
*1789-1796:Thomas Francis Wenman
*1796–1809:French Laurence Lee, Sidney (ed.) "Laurence, French (1757–1809)" in "Dictionary of National Biography", [http://books.google.com/books?id=KiYJAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA205&lpg=PA205 p. 205] online at books.google.com (accessed 26 February 2008)]
*1809-1855:Joseph Phillimore (1775–1855)
*1855-1870: Sir Travers Twiss [http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/Sir_Travers_Twiss Sir Travers Twiss] at 1911encyclopedia.org (accessed 23 February 2008)]
*1870-1893:James Bryce, 1st Viscount Bryce [ [http://www.archiveshub.ac.uk/news/0212bry.html Papers of James, Viscount Bryce, 1826-1958] at archiveshub.ac.uk (accessed 23 February 2008)]
*1893-1919: Henry Goudy [ [http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/Henry_Goudy Henry Goudy] at 1911encyclopedia.org (accessed 22 February 2008)]
*1919-1948: Francis de Zulueta [ [http://www.britac.ac.uk/fellowship/directory/archive.asp?fellowsID=2052 British Academy Fellows Archive : Record for: de ZULUETA, Professor F] at britac.ac.uk (accessed 23 February 2008)]*1955-1970:
David Daube [ [http://www.law.berkeley.edu/library/daube/independent.html Obituary of David Daube] at law.berkeley.edu (accessed 22 February 2008)]
*1971-1988:Tony Honoré [ [http://www.britac.ac.uk/fellowship/directory/archive.asp?fellowsID=266 British Academy Fellows Archive : Record for HONORÉ, Professor A M, QC] at britac.ac.uk (accessed 22 February 2008)]
*1989-2004:Peter Birks
*July 2004 - February 2006: vacant
*2006 to date:Boudewijn Sirks ee also
*
List of Professorships at the University of Oxford
*Regius Professor of Civil Law (Cambridge) References
* [http://books.google.com/books?id=mgmK4ngry9QC&pg=PA358&lpg=PA358&dq=%22Regius+Professor+of+Civil+Law%22&source=web&ots=Q0FtR2Jp-G&sig=fu_FX9FWc-5y9JZJRH1j4WDI-dM#PPA358,M1 The History of the University of Oxford, Volume III: The Collegiate University] pp. 358-361----
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