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"The ten or so inns of chancery were all founded in the century after 1340, and for some 300 years were a part of the so-called 'third university of England'. Most that has been written about them relates to their later history when they had largely ceased to be involved in legal education. But recent research in manuscript sources shows something of them in their heyday as schools of law, including their governing regulations." -- Publisher's website.
Excerpt from Inns of Court: An Historical Description of the Inns of Court and Chancery of England One can step aside from busy, modern Fleet Street, the famous journalistic centre of London, and in a minute he in the midst of stately mediaeval buildings, spacious lawns and flower gardens, and sombre old quadrangles having all the appearances of a university town in the middle ages. This is the Temple where are situated two of the four ancient Inns of Court, Middle Temple, and Inner Temple. These Inns of Court with the two others, Lincoln's Inn in Chancery Lane, and Gray's Inn in Holborn, are voluntary non-corporation legal societies seated in London, having their origin some time about the...