This article considers the influence of legal education based on the Dutch tradition of legal humanism on a Scottish student of the late seventeenth-century. An annotated textbook retained by Charles Binning contains notes from his studies with the Utrecht professor Cornelis van Eck and provides evidence for Van Eck’s teaching practices. Their education abroad equipped Scottish legal students for the professional, intellectual and cultural lives they would lead when they returned home. Exposure to the ideas contained in the books they studied and their relationships with the Continental learned gave Scottish scholars admission into the international Republic of Letters. This had significance for the development of the Scottish Enlightenment.
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publication
Titel
Auteur
Abstract
Trefwoorden
Jaar
2015
Gepubliceerd in
Tijdschrift voor Rechtsgeschiedenis / Revue d'Histoire du Droit / The Legal History Review, vol. 83 (2015), issue 1-2, p. 179–201
Impressum
2015
Literatuuropgave
Ja