In Learning Law and Travelling Europe, Marianne Vasara-Aaltonen offers an account of the study journeys of Swedish lawyers in the early modern period, and their connection to the state-building process and the development of the Swedish legal profession.
Author(s): Marianne Vasara-Aaltonen
Series: The Northern World: North Europe and the Baltic c. 400–1700 ad. Peoples, Economies and Cultures
Publisher: Brill
Year: 2020
Language: English
Pages: 444
City: Leiden
Learning Law and Travelling Europe: Study Journeys and the Developing Swedish Legal Profession, c. 1630–1800
Copyright
Contents
Acknowledgements
List of Figures and Tables
Part 1: Setting the Scene for Swedish Lawyers' Travels
1 Introduction
1 Research Questions
2 Previous Research
3 Sources and Methods
3.1 University Matriculation Records as Sources
3.2 The Academy of Turku in Finland as Representing the Swedish Situation
3.3 On Law Students and Universities
3.4 Comparisons
4 The Structure of the Book
2 Studies Abroad as a European Phenomenon
1 Universities in Europe
1.1 The Character of Medieval and Early Modern Universities
1.2 Teaching Law and the Emergence of a Legal Profession
2 The Travelling Student throughout the Centuries
2.1 The Peregrinatio Academica
2.2 The Noble Traveller
2.3 Swedes in Europe before the Seventeenth Century
3 Issues of Religion
3.1 The Universities and Confessional Questions
3.2 Religious Control of Student Travels
4 Summary
Part 2: Swedish Lawyers' Education Abroad
3 Turku Law Students at Dutch Universities
1 Leiden
1.1 The University of Leiden
1.2 Legal and Political Education in Leiden
1.3 Backgrounds of Turku Students in Leiden
1.4 Information on the Studies of Turku Students in Leiden
1.5 Careers of Turku Students in Leiden
2 Other Dutch Universities
3 Summary
4 Turku Law Students at German Universities
1 Rostock
1.1 The University of Rostock
1.2 Legal Education in Rostock
1.3 Backgrounds of Turku Students in Rostock
1.4 Information on the Studies of Turku Students in Rostock
1.5 Careers of Turku Students in Rostock
2 Jena
2.1 The University of Jena
2.2 Legal Education in Jena
2.3 Backgrounds of Turku Students in Jena
2.4 Information on the Studies of Turku Students in Jena
2.5 Careers of Turku Students in Jena
3 Halle
3.1 The University of Halle
3.2 Legal Education in Halle
3.3 Backgrounds of Turku Students in Halle
3.4 Information on the Studies of Turku Students in Halle
3.5 Careers of Turku Students in Halle
3.6 The Francke Foundations in Halle
4 Greifswald
4.1 The University of Greifswald
4.2 Legal Education in Greifswald
4.3 Backgrounds of Turku Students in Greifswald
4.4 Information on the Studies of Turku Students in Greifswald
4.5 Careers of Turku Students in Greifswald
5 Other German Universities
6 Summary
5 Beyond the Netherlands and Germany: Some Examples of Other Destinations
1 Dorpat
2 Rome
3 "Other Travels Abroad"
Part 3: Reasons and Consequences
6 Seventeenth-Century Sweden and the Rush to Study Abroad
1 The Political Setting in Seventeenth-Century Sweden
1.1 The Political Reality at the Turn of the Seventeenth Century
1.2 Building a Great Power
1.3 The Position of the Nobility
1.4 Early Modern Diplomacy and the Swedish Lawyer
2 The Restructuring of the Judiciary
2.1 The Courts of Appeal
2.2 The Local Courts of the Towns and Countryside
2.3 Advocacy
3 Educational Efforts in the Seventeenth Century
3.1 Swedish Universities
3.2 The Educated Nobleman
3.3 Encouraging Studies Abroad in the Seventeenth Century
4 Student Networks
4.1 Networks of Turku Law Students
4.2 Networks Abroad
4.3 Patronage, Advancement, and Upward Social Mobility
5 Summary
7 The Choice of University
1 Geography and War
2 Religion
2.1 Religious Control of Studies Abroad
2.2 Pietism and Turku Law Students
3 Swedish-Dutch Relations
4 Summary
8 The Decrease in Studies Abroad in the Eighteenth Century
1 Changes in the Political Situation
1.1 Absolutism, a Weakened Aristocracy, and the Great Northern War
1.2 From the "Age of Liberty" to Gustav iii's Absolutism
2 The Changing Swedish Universities
3 A More Established Judiciary
3.1 State Bureaucracy and Advancement in the Administrative System
3.2 Courts of Appeal and Town Courts Compared
4 From Reception of Foreign Law to Nationalist Inclinations?
5 Summary
9 Comparative Aspects
1 The Swedish Way?
2 The Lawyers' Way?
10 Conclusions
Appendix 1 Swedish Monarchs 1523-1809
Appendix 2 The Structure of the Swedish Central Administration
Sources and Bibliography
Archival Sources
Printed Sources
Literature
Online Sources
Unpublished Presentations
Index of names
Index of subjects and places