Why did Louis XIV establish High Courts ...
Document type :
Article dans une revue scientifique: Article original
Permalink :
Title :
Why did Louis XIV establish High Courts of Justice in North America? The Sovereign Council of Quebec (1663) and the Superior Council of Louisiana (1712) through the prism of legal transplant theories
Author(s) :
Journal title :
Tijdschrift voor Rechtsgeschiedenis / Revue d'Histoire du Droit / The Legal History Review
Abbreviated title :
Tijdschrift voir Rechtsgeschiedenis
Volume number :
88
Pages :
440-468
Publisher :
Brill | Nijhoff
Publication date :
2020-12-23
Article status :
Publié
ISSN :
0040-7585
English keyword(s) :
Légal transplant
High Court
Sovereign Council
Colonial law
Mercantilism
Colbert
Louis XIV
New France
Louisiana
High Court
Sovereign Council
Colonial law
Mercantilism
Colbert
Louis XIV
New France
Louisiana
HAL domain(s) :
Sciences de l'Homme et Société/Histoire
Sciences de l'Homme et Société/Droit
Sciences de l'Homme et Société/Droit
English abstract : [en]
Why did Louis XIV establish high courts in the distant and sparsely populated North-American colonies? The logic of the establishment of the Sovereign Council of Québec in 1663 and the Superior Council of Louisiana in 1712 ...
Show more >Why did Louis XIV establish high courts in the distant and sparsely populated North-American colonies? The logic of the establishment of the Sovereign Council of Québec in 1663 and the Superior Council of Louisiana in 1712 is indeed in no way similar to the one which led to the creation of high courts in the metropolitan territories previously under foreign sovereignty. In the colonies, there was no need to safeguard the provincial privileges, in particular that to be judged in accordance with the local customs and procedural rules. Historians have emphasized the idea that justice foremost asserted the king’s authority on his overseas territories and France’s position on the international scene. Colonial institutions were thus merely considered as extensions of the metropolitan model. This paper proposes to study the high courts of New France through the prism of legal transplant theories, focusing on the objectives and expectations of the donor rather than on their objects or on the obstacles faced by the receiver. We assert that the overseas high courts were a means to define and orientate the French colonial policy rather than an end in themselves. Their judicial and, above all, regulatory competences made them indeed a particularly suitable instrument for the fulfillment of the monarchy’s political and economic expectations.Show less >
Show more >Why did Louis XIV establish high courts in the distant and sparsely populated North-American colonies? The logic of the establishment of the Sovereign Council of Québec in 1663 and the Superior Council of Louisiana in 1712 is indeed in no way similar to the one which led to the creation of high courts in the metropolitan territories previously under foreign sovereignty. In the colonies, there was no need to safeguard the provincial privileges, in particular that to be judged in accordance with the local customs and procedural rules. Historians have emphasized the idea that justice foremost asserted the king’s authority on his overseas territories and France’s position on the international scene. Colonial institutions were thus merely considered as extensions of the metropolitan model. This paper proposes to study the high courts of New France through the prism of legal transplant theories, focusing on the objectives and expectations of the donor rather than on their objects or on the obstacles faced by the receiver. We assert that the overseas high courts were a means to define and orientate the French colonial policy rather than an end in themselves. Their judicial and, above all, regulatory competences made them indeed a particularly suitable instrument for the fulfillment of the monarchy’s political and economic expectations.Show less >
Language :
Anglais
Peer reviewed article :
Oui
Audience :
Internationale
Administrative institution(s) :
Université de Lille
CNRS
CNRS
Collections :
Submission date :
2021-01-05T11:32:04Z
2021-01-05T12:52:54Z
2021-01-05T12:52:54Z
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