FA-52091-05 | Research Programs: Fellowships for University Teachers | Paul Delaney Halliday | Habeas Corpus and English Society, 1500-1800 | 6/1/2005 - 12/31/2005 | $40,000.00 | Paul | Delaney | Halliday | | | | University of Virginia | Charlottesville | VA | 22903-4833 | USA | 2004 | British History | Fellowships for University Teachers | Research Programs | 40000 | 0 | 24000 | 0 |
A study recasting the history of habeas corpus--the means for testing the legality of imprisonment--through a survey of previously unstudied writ files and an exploration of court records, manuscript case reports, and non-legal texts. Contrary to earlier accounts, local tyrannies proved more dangerous than royal ones. Rather than a threat, the king's prerogative provided the ideological ground on which habeas stood, permitting the writ's defense of the liberty of the subject. Only through the political transformations of Civil War and changes in law wrought by popular use of the writ would ideas about liberty change from a liberty arising from one's subject status to a liberty arising from one's humanity. |