Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2019
In his Introduction to the study of the Law of the Constitution, which appeared in its first edition in 1885, Professor A. V. Dicey of the University of Oxford emphasized in particular the doctrine of Parliamentary sovereignty and the concept of the Rule of Law as guiding principles of the constitution. His exposition was clear and trenchant, inspired by the self-confidence of late Victorian Britain, and through nine editions it provided the authoritative text which to this day has influenced judges and lawyers, politicians, observers from abroad, and many others in their interpretation of the constitutional law of the United Kingdom.
1 See Davies, Rees, “The Matter of Britain and the Matter of England” (Inaugural Lecture as Chichele Professor of Medieval History, University of Oxford, 29 February 1996) (Oxford Clarendon Press 1996) at 17ff. Professor Davies also spoke (at 23) of “the often claustrophobically proprietorial attitude of historians of Ireland, Scotland and Wales towards ‘their own’ history.”Google Scholar
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