Coke, Edward

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[[Category:Lawyers and Jurists]]
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[[image:Coke.JPG|thumb|150pxl|Sir Edward Coke]]
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[[image:Edward Coke.jpg|thumb|150pxl|Sir Edward Coke]]
'''Sir Edward Coke''' (pronounced "cook") ([[1 February]] [[1552]]–[[3 September]] [[1634]]), was an early [[England|English]] colonial [[entrepreneur]] and [[jurist]] whose writings on the [[English common law]] were the definitive legal texts for some 300 years.
 
  
Coke was born at [[Mileham, Norfolk]], the son of a London barrister from a Norfolk family. He was educated at at [[Norwich_School%2C_Norwich|Norwich School]], and then [[Trinity College, Cambridge]].
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'''Sir Edward Coke''' (pronounced "cook") (February 1, 1552 – September 3, 1634), was an early [[England|English]] [[jurist]], [[parliament|parliamentarian]], and [[lawyer]] whose detailed writings on [[Great Britain|British]] [[common law]] served as the definitive legal texts for modern [[law]] thereafter. He remained a lifelong rival of Sir [[Francis Bacon]]. Coke is best known for his prevention of [[monarchy|royal]] interference from manipulating the independence of common law courts, and for his revolutionary interpretation of the [[Magna Carta]], which he applied to all subjects equally. Coke was also prominent in the 1628 drafting of the [[Petition of Right]].
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Coke's works served not only as the definitive legal texts of his time for British common law, they also provided a foundation for the system of [[checks and balances]] enshrined in the [[United States Constitution]]. Coke is famous for his assertion of the "Castle Doctrine"—that one should be safe in one's own house—which in many [[jurisdiction]]s is considered today an exception from the obligation to retreat rather than use violence when threatened. In his legal opinions and in his life, Coke maintained an integrity that proved incorruptible, resisting efforts by those with power to abuse it at the expense of the common people and laying the foundation for the establishment of a peaceful world.
  
He became a [[Member of Parliament]] in [[1589]], [[Speaker of the British House of Commons|Speaker of the House of Commons]] in [[1592]] and was appointed  [[England]]'s [[Attorney General]] in [[1593]], a post for which he was in competition with his rival Sir [[Francis Bacon]]. During this period, he was a zealous prosecutor of Sir [[Walter Raleigh]] and of the [[Gunpowder Plot]] conspirators. He was appointed [[Chief Justice]] of the Court of Common Pleas in [[1606]]. In [[1613]], he was elevated to Chief Justice of the King's Bench, where he continued his defense of the English [[common law]] against the encroachment by the ecclesiastical hierarchy, local courts controlled by the aristocracy, and meddling by the King.
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==Life==
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Coke was born the son of a [[Great Britain|British]] [[barrister]] in 1552, in Mileham, Norfolk. The sole son out of eight children, Coke began his education at the Norwich School and later attended Trinity College, [[Cambridge University|Cambridge]], from 1567 to 1571. Upon completion of his early education, Coke was admitted to the [[Inner Temple]], a prestigious college of the University of Law, where he would quickly rise from student, to barrister, and to the eventual position of senior member.  
  
Bacon encouraged the King to remove Coke as Chief Justice in [[1616]], for refusing to hold a case in abeyance until the King could give his own opinion in it. In [[1620]] Coke became an MP again, and proved so troublesome to the crown that he was imprisoned, along with other Parliamentary leaders, for six months. In [[1628]], he was one of the drafters of the ''[[Petition of Right]]''.
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In 1582, Coke married the wealthy Bridget Paston, whereupon he gained a great fortune in both money and land. The marriage produced seven children, though Bridget died just seven years later in 1589. Shortly after, Coke married the young Lady Elizabeth Hatton, granddaughter to close friend Baron Burghley, chief minister to [[Queen Elizabeth I]]. The marriage, which produced one daughter, ended in separation.  
  
In [[1606]], Coke apparently helped write the charter of the [[Virginia Company]], a private venture granted a royal charter to found settlements in [[North America]]. He became director of the [[London Company]], one of the two branches of the Virginia Company.
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In his later years, Coke retired to Stoke Poges, Buckinghamshire, where he died at the age of 82. Upon his death, Coke’s papers were seized by [[King Charles I]]. When released, his reports would serve as a monumental compilation of independent ideals and judicial principles that continue to define modern [[law]] today.
  
One of Coke's greatest contributions to the law was to interpret ''[[Magna Carta]]'' to apply not only to the protection of nobles but to all subjects of the crown equally, which effectively established the law as a guarantor of rights among all subjects, even against Parliament and the King.  He famously asserted: "Magna Carta is such a fellow, that he will have no sovereign."
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==Work==
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In 1589, Coke became a member of [[Parliament]], and in 1592, was appointed the Speaker of the House of Commons. One year later, he was appointed [[England]]'s [[Attorney General]], a prestigious post for which he competed with rival Sir [[Francis Bacon]]. During this period, fiercely loyal to Queen [[Elizabeth I]], Coke remained a zealous [[prosecutor]], accepting famous cases of [[treason]] against Earls [[Henry Wriothesley]] and [[Robert Devereaux]], as well as Sir [[Walter Raleigh]] and the [[Gunpowder Plot]] conspirators.  
  
Among his most famous cases, Coke wrote ''[[Dr. Bonham's Case]]'', which has been much argued about by historians but which is seen by lawyers as the origin of [[judicial review]] of legislation. Coke's opinion in ''[[Calvin's Case]]'' established that subjects of Scotland born after King James VI became [[James I of England]] could hold land in England as well as in Scotland, because both Scots and Englishmen owed allegiance to the same king. This case would be important in supporting the idea that English colonists in North America would have the rights of Englishmen. He also wrote ''[[Semayne's Case]]'', the origin of many of the rights to freedom from arbitrary searches; the ''[[Case of the Monopolies]]'', important in anti-trust; ''[[Sutton's Hospital]]'', a seminal case in corporations law; and ''[[William Aldred's Case]]'', which may be the birth of environmental law. Published after his death, the ''Prohibitions del Roi'' detail his discussion with the King in which he (briefly) convinced a reluctant James that the law is based on "artificial reason" and must be left to lawyers to decide, rather than to the monarch.
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After the ascension of the [[Stuart]]s to the throne, Coke's opinions with regard to the monarchy and their authority changed. In 1606, Coke was appointed [[Chief Justice]] of the [[Court of Common Pleas]], and, in 1613, was elevated to Chief Justice of the [[King's Bench]], where he continued his defense of the English [[common law]]. It was during his time as Chief Justice that Coke first ruled common law to serve as supreme law for all parties, including the [[monarchy]]. In a celebrated opinion, he stated that the monarchy could not, by proclamation, change any part of the common law, nor create any new offense that was not already an offense in common law.
  
Copies of Coke's writings arrived in [[North America]] on the [[Mayflower (ship)|Mayflower]] in 1620, and every lawyer in the English colonies and early United States was trained from Coke's books, particularly his ''Reports'' and ''[[Institutes of the Lawes of England|Institutes]]'' (see [[#References]] section below), the most famous of which was his property book, ''The First Institute of the Lawes of England, or a Commentary on Littleton''. Both [[John Adams]] and [[Patrick Henry]] argued from Coke treatises to support their revolutionary positions against the Mother Country in the [[1770s]].
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Coke’s political rise came at the expense of rival Sir Francis Bacon, and in 1616, at the encouragement of Bacon, Coke was removed from the position of Chief Justice by [[King James I]] for his refusal to weigh the King’s judicial opinion in legal matters. In 1620, Coke again served as a member of parliament, but proved so troublesome to the crown that he was imprisoned for six months. Coke’s [[radicalism]] persisted, and in 1628, became influential in helping to draft the British ''[[Petition of Right]],'' a charter of liberties defining the supremacy of common law over the sentiments of [[aristocracy]]. Inclusive in these articles was a required parliamentary consent for [[taxation]], and a statement of charges against those under [[arrest]].  
  
Under Coke's leadership, in [[1628]] the House of Commons forced [[Charles I of England]] to accept Coke's ''Petition of Right'' by withholding the revenues the king wanted until he capitulated. The [[Petition of Right]] was the forerunner of the [[English Bill of Rights]] and the [[U.S. Bill of Rights]].
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Under Coke's leadership, the British [[House of Commons]] forced [[Charles I of England]] to accept the ''Petition of Right'' by withholding the King’s revenues until he capitulated. The Petition of Right served as the forerunner of the [[English Bill of Rights]] and the [[United States Bill of Rights]].
  
The [[Delta Chi]] Fraternity considers Sir Edward Coke as its Spiritual Founder.
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==Legacy==
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Perhaps Coke's most lasting contribution to [[Great Britain|British]] [[law]] was his interpretation of the [[Magna Carta]], which he applied to the protection not only of [[nobility|nobles]] but of all subjects equally. This interpretation effectively established the law as a guarantor of rights among all subjects, including cases against [[Parliament]] and the [[King]]. Coke famously asserted: "Magna Carta is such a fellow, that he will have no sovereign."
  
==Quotes==
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Coke’s influential ''Reports'' (1600-1611, 1650-1659), compiled over forty years, served as the definitive legal texts of the time and continue to influence aspects of modern law today. These volumes, which incorporate notes on every case heard by Coke, also include judicial sentiments of earlier legislative hearings and are the basis for the modern legal reports. Additionally, Coke’s influential ''Institutes of the Laws of England'' (1628-1664) stands as the first accessible body of law to be published.  
* The quote believed to have led to the "castle exception" of [[Self-defense (theory)|self-defense]]:
 
** "A man's [[house]] is his [[castle]] – ''et domus sua cuique est tutissimum refugium''  i.e. [[Latin]] for "and where shall a man be safe if it be not in his own house?” Sir Edward Coke, ''The First Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England, or, A Commentary on Littleton'' (London, 1628, ed. F. Hargrave and C. Butler, 19th ed., London, 1832)
 
  
* His famous quote about the [[common law]]:
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In 1620, copies of Coke's writings arrived in [[North America]] via the ''[[Mayflower (ship)|Mayflower]].'' Each practicing lawyer within the English colonies and early [[United States]] was trained from Coke's writings, particularly his ''Reports'' and ''Institutes.'' His radical ideas also played a large role in the [[American Revolution]], influencing leaders such as [[John Adams]], [[James Otis Jr.]], and [[Patrick Henry]]. These revolutionists used many of Coke’s ideas to nullify Parliament’s harmful regulations, to develop the [[U.S. Constitution]], and to define the power of [[Judicial Review]], which served to abolish any legislation in violation of the [[Constitution]]:
** "Reason is the life of the law; nay, the common law itself is nothing else but reason.... The law which is perfection of reason." (First Institute)
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<blockquote>Since the days of Sir Edward Coke, the legislative body of England has been recognized as holding an essential constitutional check against excessive executive and judicial power, a check that was later written into Article III of our own Constitution of the United States of America (1787). Essentially because of the stalwart actions of Coke and other English jurists, our nation inherited a governing system that refused to recognize the decrees of any one person, of any one court, or of any one branch of government as the organic laws of the land (Ford 2004).</blockquote>
* "The King himself should be under no man, but under God and the Law."
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* "The Law is the surest sanctuary that a man can take, and the strongest fortress to protect the weakest of all; ''Lex est tutissima cassis''."
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In 1794, Coke famously asserted within ''The Institutes of the Laws of England'' that "A man's house is his castle…and where shall a man be safe if it be not in his own house?" This concept, later known as the [[Castle Doctrine]], is currently applied within sections of U.S. law today. Under Coke’s reasoning, the Castle Doctrine designates one's home, or any place legally occupied such as one's car or place of work, as a place in which one enjoys protections from both prying and violent attack. In the [[United States]], laws impose an obligation to retreat before using force to defend oneself. The Castle Doctrine provides for an exception to this duty—provided one is attacked in one's own home, vehicle, or place of business, in [[jurisdiction]]s where "castle laws" are in effect, one may stand one's ground against an assailant without fear of prosecution.
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==Bibliography==
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*Coke, Edward. 1794. ''Coke's Institutes of the Laws of England''. 7 vols. London: E. & R. Brooke.  
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*Coke, Edward. 1823. ''The First Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England''. London: R. Pheney & S. Brooks. ISBN 1584770333
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*Coke, Edward. 1929. ''Oracle of the Law''. Houghton Mifflin Co.
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*Coke, Edward. 1972. ''The Lord Coke and His Speech and Charge''. Da Capo Press.  
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*Coke, Edward. 1979. ''Coke on Magna Carta: The Common Law''. Gordon Press Publishing. ISBN 084902885X
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*Coke, Edward. 2002. ''The Second Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England: Containing the Exposition of Many Ancient and Other Statues''. Lawbook Exchange.
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*Coke, Edward. 2002. ''The Third Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England: Concerning High Treason, and Other Pleas of the Crown and Criminal Causes''. Lawbook Exchange. ISBN 1584772018
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*Coke, Edward. 2002. ''The Fourth Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England: Concerning the Jurisdiction of Courts''. Lawbook Exchange. ISBN 1584772026
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*Coke, Edward. 2002. ''The Reports of Sir Edward Coke''. Lawbook Exchange. ISBN 1584772395
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*Coke, Edward and S. Sheppard (Editor). 2004. ''The Selected Writings of Sir Edward Coke''. Liberty Fund Publishing, 2004. ISBN 0865973164
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
* ''The Lion and the Throne'', a biography (ISBN 0-316-10393-4) of Coke by [[Catherine Drinker Bowen]], won the [[National Book Award]]. 
 
* Three volumes of Coke's writings, with translations, notes, commentary, and an introduction, have been published as ''The Selected Writings of Sir Edward Coke,'' edited by Steve Sheppard (ISBN 0-86597-316-4). They are available individually as [[Portable Document Format|PDF]] files:<br />[http://www.dominiopublico.gov.br/download/texto/0462-01_Bk.pdf vol&nbsp;1] (pp.&nbsp;1&ndash;520), [http://www.dominiopublico.gov.br/download/texto/0462-02_Bk.pdf vol&nbsp;2] (pp.&nbsp;521&ndash;1184), [http://www.dominiopublico.gov.br/download/texto/0462-03_Bk.pdf vol&nbsp;3] (pp.&nbsp;1185&ndash;1468).<br />These also contain “The First Part of the Institutes of the Lawes of England: Or A Commentary upon Littleton, Not the name of the Author only, but of the Law it selfe”.
 
  
{{Credit1|Edward_Coke|85337981|}}
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*Bowen, Catherine D. 1990. ''The Lion and the Throne: The Life and Times of Sir Edward Coke, 1552-1634.'' Little Brown and Co. Publishing: Boston. ISBN 0316103934
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*Coke, Edward & Steve Sheppard (Ed.). 2004. ''The Selected Writings of Sir Edward Coke''. Liberty Fund: Indianapolis, 2004. ISBN 0865973164
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*Ford, Dan. 2004. "Edward Coke and Righteous Interposition" in ''Vision Forum Ministries.''
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*''West’s Encyclopedia of American Law.'' 1998. "Sir Edward Coke." The Gale Group, Inc.
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==External links==
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All links retrieved February 12, 2024.
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*[http://www.bookrags.com/biography/edward-coke-sir/ Encyclopedia of World Biography: Edward Coke]. Bookrags.com.
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{{Credits|Edward_Coke|85337981|Castle_Doctrine|123670506|}}

Latest revision as of 18:22, 12 February 2024


Sir Edward Coke

Sir Edward Coke (pronounced "cook") (February 1, 1552 – September 3, 1634), was an early English jurist, parliamentarian, and lawyer whose detailed writings on British common law served as the definitive legal texts for modern law thereafter. He remained a lifelong rival of Sir Francis Bacon. Coke is best known for his prevention of royal interference from manipulating the independence of common law courts, and for his revolutionary interpretation of the Magna Carta, which he applied to all subjects equally. Coke was also prominent in the 1628 drafting of the Petition of Right.

Coke's works served not only as the definitive legal texts of his time for British common law, they also provided a foundation for the system of checks and balances enshrined in the United States Constitution. Coke is famous for his assertion of the "Castle Doctrine"—that one should be safe in one's own house—which in many jurisdictions is considered today an exception from the obligation to retreat rather than use violence when threatened. In his legal opinions and in his life, Coke maintained an integrity that proved incorruptible, resisting efforts by those with power to abuse it at the expense of the common people and laying the foundation for the establishment of a peaceful world.

Life

Coke was born the son of a British barrister in 1552, in Mileham, Norfolk. The sole son out of eight children, Coke began his education at the Norwich School and later attended Trinity College, Cambridge, from 1567 to 1571. Upon completion of his early education, Coke was admitted to the Inner Temple, a prestigious college of the University of Law, where he would quickly rise from student, to barrister, and to the eventual position of senior member.

In 1582, Coke married the wealthy Bridget Paston, whereupon he gained a great fortune in both money and land. The marriage produced seven children, though Bridget died just seven years later in 1589. Shortly after, Coke married the young Lady Elizabeth Hatton, granddaughter to close friend Baron Burghley, chief minister to Queen Elizabeth I. The marriage, which produced one daughter, ended in separation.

In his later years, Coke retired to Stoke Poges, Buckinghamshire, where he died at the age of 82. Upon his death, Coke’s papers were seized by King Charles I. When released, his reports would serve as a monumental compilation of independent ideals and judicial principles that continue to define modern law today.

Work

In 1589, Coke became a member of Parliament, and in 1592, was appointed the Speaker of the House of Commons. One year later, he was appointed England's Attorney General, a prestigious post for which he competed with rival Sir Francis Bacon. During this period, fiercely loyal to Queen Elizabeth I, Coke remained a zealous prosecutor, accepting famous cases of treason against Earls Henry Wriothesley and Robert Devereaux, as well as Sir Walter Raleigh and the Gunpowder Plot conspirators.

After the ascension of the Stuarts to the throne, Coke's opinions with regard to the monarchy and their authority changed. In 1606, Coke was appointed Chief Justice of the Court of Common Pleas, and, in 1613, was elevated to Chief Justice of the King's Bench, where he continued his defense of the English common law. It was during his time as Chief Justice that Coke first ruled common law to serve as supreme law for all parties, including the monarchy. In a celebrated opinion, he stated that the monarchy could not, by proclamation, change any part of the common law, nor create any new offense that was not already an offense in common law.

Coke’s political rise came at the expense of rival Sir Francis Bacon, and in 1616, at the encouragement of Bacon, Coke was removed from the position of Chief Justice by King James I for his refusal to weigh the King’s judicial opinion in legal matters. In 1620, Coke again served as a member of parliament, but proved so troublesome to the crown that he was imprisoned for six months. Coke’s radicalism persisted, and in 1628, became influential in helping to draft the British Petition of Right, a charter of liberties defining the supremacy of common law over the sentiments of aristocracy. Inclusive in these articles was a required parliamentary consent for taxation, and a statement of charges against those under arrest.

Under Coke's leadership, the British House of Commons forced Charles I of England to accept the Petition of Right by withholding the King’s revenues until he capitulated. The Petition of Right served as the forerunner of the English Bill of Rights and the United States Bill of Rights.

Legacy

Perhaps Coke's most lasting contribution to British law was his interpretation of the Magna Carta, which he applied to the protection not only of nobles but of all subjects equally. This interpretation effectively established the law as a guarantor of rights among all subjects, including cases against Parliament and the King. Coke famously asserted: "Magna Carta is such a fellow, that he will have no sovereign."

Coke’s influential Reports (1600-1611, 1650-1659), compiled over forty years, served as the definitive legal texts of the time and continue to influence aspects of modern law today. These volumes, which incorporate notes on every case heard by Coke, also include judicial sentiments of earlier legislative hearings and are the basis for the modern legal reports. Additionally, Coke’s influential Institutes of the Laws of England (1628-1664) stands as the first accessible body of law to be published.

In 1620, copies of Coke's writings arrived in North America via the Mayflower. Each practicing lawyer within the English colonies and early United States was trained from Coke's writings, particularly his Reports and Institutes. His radical ideas also played a large role in the American Revolution, influencing leaders such as John Adams, James Otis Jr., and Patrick Henry. These revolutionists used many of Coke’s ideas to nullify Parliament’s harmful regulations, to develop the U.S. Constitution, and to define the power of Judicial Review, which served to abolish any legislation in violation of the Constitution:

Since the days of Sir Edward Coke, the legislative body of England has been recognized as holding an essential constitutional check against excessive executive and judicial power, a check that was later written into Article III of our own Constitution of the United States of America (1787). Essentially because of the stalwart actions of Coke and other English jurists, our nation inherited a governing system that refused to recognize the decrees of any one person, of any one court, or of any one branch of government as the organic laws of the land (Ford 2004).

In 1794, Coke famously asserted within The Institutes of the Laws of England that "A man's house is his castle…and where shall a man be safe if it be not in his own house?" This concept, later known as the Castle Doctrine, is currently applied within sections of U.S. law today. Under Coke’s reasoning, the Castle Doctrine designates one's home, or any place legally occupied such as one's car or place of work, as a place in which one enjoys protections from both prying and violent attack. In the United States, laws impose an obligation to retreat before using force to defend oneself. The Castle Doctrine provides for an exception to this duty—provided one is attacked in one's own home, vehicle, or place of business, in jurisdictions where "castle laws" are in effect, one may stand one's ground against an assailant without fear of prosecution.

Bibliography

  • Coke, Edward. 1794. Coke's Institutes of the Laws of England. 7 vols. London: E. & R. Brooke.
  • Coke, Edward. 1823. The First Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England. London: R. Pheney & S. Brooks. ISBN 1584770333
  • Coke, Edward. 1929. Oracle of the Law. Houghton Mifflin Co.
  • Coke, Edward. 1972. The Lord Coke and His Speech and Charge. Da Capo Press.
  • Coke, Edward. 1979. Coke on Magna Carta: The Common Law. Gordon Press Publishing. ISBN 084902885X
  • Coke, Edward. 2002. The Second Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England: Containing the Exposition of Many Ancient and Other Statues. Lawbook Exchange.
  • Coke, Edward. 2002. The Third Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England: Concerning High Treason, and Other Pleas of the Crown and Criminal Causes. Lawbook Exchange. ISBN 1584772018
  • Coke, Edward. 2002. The Fourth Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England: Concerning the Jurisdiction of Courts. Lawbook Exchange. ISBN 1584772026
  • Coke, Edward. 2002. The Reports of Sir Edward Coke. Lawbook Exchange. ISBN 1584772395
  • Coke, Edward and S. Sheppard (Editor). 2004. The Selected Writings of Sir Edward Coke. Liberty Fund Publishing, 2004. ISBN 0865973164

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Bowen, Catherine D. 1990. The Lion and the Throne: The Life and Times of Sir Edward Coke, 1552-1634. Little Brown and Co. Publishing: Boston. ISBN 0316103934
  • Coke, Edward & Steve Sheppard (Ed.). 2004. The Selected Writings of Sir Edward Coke. Liberty Fund: Indianapolis, 2004. ISBN 0865973164
  • Ford, Dan. 2004. "Edward Coke and Righteous Interposition" in Vision Forum Ministries.
  • West’s Encyclopedia of American Law. 1998. "Sir Edward Coke." The Gale Group, Inc.

External links

All links retrieved February 12, 2024.

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