2000
DOI: 10.1093/ehr/115.463.791
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The Early History of the Court of Chancery: A Comparative Study

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Cited by 9 publications
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“…Writs were issued by the court of Chancery during the course of a case so the number of surviving writs suggests that the vast majority of bills have not survived, although Tucker does moot that the survival rate of bills might have improved by the last quarter of the fifteenth century. 25 Haskett's ECCE project also reports that women only made up 7 percent of respondents in Chancery, which suggests that when women are found in the court's records, it is likely because they chose to take the case there, lending support to Hawkes's argument. 26 Haskett further found that from the 1430s to the 1510s the proportion of female petitioners to female respondents shifted from 80:20 to 52:48, which might "reflect increasing participation in matters of property and inheritance or a more vulnerable state as executors or heirs … [and] some diminished capacity to act at law."…”
Section: Women and Chancery: The Debatesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Writs were issued by the court of Chancery during the course of a case so the number of surviving writs suggests that the vast majority of bills have not survived, although Tucker does moot that the survival rate of bills might have improved by the last quarter of the fifteenth century. 25 Haskett's ECCE project also reports that women only made up 7 percent of respondents in Chancery, which suggests that when women are found in the court's records, it is likely because they chose to take the case there, lending support to Hawkes's argument. 26 Haskett further found that from the 1430s to the 1510s the proportion of female petitioners to female respondents shifted from 80:20 to 52:48, which might "reflect increasing participation in matters of property and inheritance or a more vulnerable state as executors or heirs … [and] some diminished capacity to act at law."…”
Section: Women and Chancery: The Debatesmentioning
confidence: 99%