Balancing The Scales Of Justice: Local Courts And Rural Society In Southwest France, 17501800

Balancing The Scales Of Justice: Local Courts And Rural Society In Southwest France, 17501800

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Brand: Penn State University Press
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Recent revisionist history has questioned the degree of social change attributable to the French Revolution. In Balancing the Scales of Justice, Anthony Crubaugh tests this claim by examining the effects of revolutionary changes in local justice on the inhabitants of one region in rural France.Crubaugh illuminates two poorly understood institutions in eighteenthcentury France: seigneurial justice and the revolutionary justice of the peace. He finds that justice was typically slow and expensive in the lords courts, thus making it difficult for rural inhabitants to benefit from official channels of justice. By contrast, revolutionary reforms gave people the opportunity to submit quarrels to trusted and elected justices of the peace who adjudicated disputes quickly and inexpensively.By juxtaposing seigneurial justice in the ancien rgime with the institution of the justice of the peace after 1789, Crubaugh highlights how revolutionary changes in the system of dispute resolution profoundly affected members of rural French society and their relations with the French state. Over time rural dwellers came to accept the primacy of the state in resolving disputes, and the state thereby partially achieved its longstanding goal of penetrating rural areas.

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