Debt, Seduction, and Other Disasters: The Birth of Civil Law in Convict New South WalesFederation Press, 1996 - 238 lappuses Based on a detailed study of Australia's earliest civil court records - a million handwritten words about daily life and trade - Debt, Seduction and Other Disasters covers the turbulent years in the penal colony. This was a period when starvation was barely averted, emancipated convicts contended with one another to become wealthy through trade, and Aborigines fought for their land. Soldiers and governors struggled for power, culminating in the overthrow of Governor Bligh, the only military coup on Australian soil. In this important and entertaining book, Kercher: shows the remarkable egalitarianism of life in the colony, even for serving convicts and married women discusses the invention and legal consequences of tickets of leave and the central role of law in creating the local version of freedom reveals details of daily social and economic life unavailable elsewhere: the seduction cases and sexual scandals; details of the wheat farm at Woolloomooloo; the problems of the grain growers at the Hawkesbury provides unique information about working conditions of: convicts the seal killers in New Zealand and Macquarie Island sailors the very few Aborigines who worked alongside Europeans details:the first case in Australia in which an Aborigine sued (he lost) the first recorded sale of a wife (at Windsor in 1811; sale void) the case in which Mary Reibey was alleged to have blown up the bakery next door (she won) the sharp practices of Tommy the Banker, Dick the Needle and the petty bankers who deliberately wrote their documents in fading ink describes the lives of the convict women who lived with officers but were abandoned explodes the myth that rum was a major currency and explains the use of alternative currencies, such as wheat, and establishes the crucial role of pigs in town life. |
No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 36.
5. lappuse
... accepted Bentham's arguments : WB Campbell . See Windeyer , 1961 , 647-650 . Restricted powers : Castles , 1982 , 496 , and see 497 ; see also Else - Mitchell , 3 . argument , was beyond the Crown's lawful powers . Early ENGLISH LAW IN ...
... accepted Bentham's arguments : WB Campbell . See Windeyer , 1961 , 647-650 . Restricted powers : Castles , 1982 , 496 , and see 497 ; see also Else - Mitchell , 3 . argument , was beyond the Crown's lawful powers . Early ENGLISH LAW IN ...
8. lappuse
... accepted in London . In 1823 the legal adviser to the Colonial Office , James Stephen , declared that the 1819 Port Regulations of Van Diemen's Land were illegal . He did so on the broad ground that the governors had no power to ...
... accepted in London . In 1823 the legal adviser to the Colonial Office , James Stephen , declared that the 1819 Port Regulations of Van Diemen's Land were illegal . He did so on the broad ground that the governors had no power to ...
9. lappuse
... accepted , or if a new rule of law were made in the Court of Civil Jurisdiction and the Governor confirmed it in the Court of Appeal , then it became the law in New South Wales regardless of Imperial views of legality . In the early ...
... accepted , or if a new rule of law were made in the Court of Civil Jurisdiction and the Governor confirmed it in the Court of Appeal , then it became the law in New South Wales regardless of Imperial views of legality . In the early ...
17. lappuse
... accepted Macquarie's concern about the adverse effects of Privy Council appeals on " honest creditors " . He suggested in 1812 that " it rarely happens that a creditor will not be happy to compound on any terms rather than be exposed to ...
... accepted Macquarie's concern about the adverse effects of Privy Council appeals on " honest creditors " . He suggested in 1812 that " it rarely happens that a creditor will not be happy to compound on any terms rather than be exposed to ...
31. lappuse
Esat sasniedzis šīs grāmatas aplūkošanas reižu limitu.
Esat sasniedzis šīs grāmatas aplūkošanas reižu limitu.
Saturs
23 | |
Freedom in an Unfree Colony | 49 |
From Honour to Wealth | 91 |
Pigs Storms and Fires | 108 |
Chaotic Land Titles Strange Currencies and | 122 |
The Birth of Contract | 148 |
Deceit and Debtors Prison | 180 |
Transferring Law to the Bush | 214 |
Bibliography | 223 |
Index | 235 |
Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
accepted according acted action agreement allowed apparently Appeal applied assignments Atkins August awarded Bent Bligh Book Campbell charter civil court Civil Jurisdiction claimed clear colony colony's common law concerned contract convicts Court of Civil creditors Crossley damages debt debtors December decisions defendant despite Dore early New South effect Ellis enforce England English law evidence example farmers February followed formal gaol George Governor granted held History HRNSW Imperial important imprisonment included insolvency interest issue James January John Judge Advocate judgment July June Justice Kable King land later less Letter litigation Lord Macquarie magistrates March married master military minutes October officers Order paid Palmer parties payment period person practice prison promissory notes records rule September sometimes South Wales sued Sydney Gazette Sydney Magistrates Thomas traders usually women
Atsauces uz šo grāmatu
Natural Justice and the High Court of Australia: A Study in Common Law ... Ian Holloway Fragmentu skats - 2002 |
Misplaced Traditions: British Lawyers, Colonial Peoples Rob McQueen,Wesley W. Pue Priekšskatījums nav pieejams - 1999 |