William Fulbecke

William Fullbecke (1560–1603?) was an English playwright, historian, lawyer and legal scholar, who did pioneering work in international law. He described himself as "maister of Artes, and student of the lawes of England."

Life

He was a younger son of Thomas Fulbeck, who was mayor of Lincoln, was born there. He studied at St Alban Hall, Christ Church and Gloucester Hall, Oxford, proceeding B.A. 1581, and M.A. 1584. In 1584 he moved to London and entered Gray's Inn,[1] where he became a bencher.

Writings

Fulbecke's "Direction..." (1600), discussed study methods for law students, techniques for arguing a case, and suggestions for further reading. It is also full of advice, such as admonishing law students not to study at night, because:

"for when the stomach is full and stuffed with meat, the abundance of humours is carried to the head, where it sticketh for a time and layeth as it were a lump of lead upon the brain."

This book has been very popular and has been reprinted over and over and is still in print.[2] It demonstrates that Fulbecke was more comfortable with written civil law rather than the ambiguities that characterized common law at the time. Fulbeck displays his knowledge of medieval lawyers such as Bartolus of Sassoferrato, and 16th-century French legal scholars Guillaume Budé and François Hotman.

Fulbecke's "Pandectes" (1602) was one of the first books on international law.[3]

Fulbecke collaborated with lawyer Thomas Hughes on the play The Misfortunes of Arthur for Queen Elizabeth I at Gray's Inn on 28 February 1588. The Misfortunes of Arthur was an imitation of a Senecan tragedy.[4]

Fulbecke also wrote books on Roman history, including his popular 1601 version. Fulbecke describes it as:

The use of this historie is threefold: first the revealing of the mischeifes of discord and civill discention… Secondly the opening of the cause hereof, which is nothing else but ambition, for out of this seed groweth a whole harvest of evils. Thirdly the declaring of the remedie, which is by humble estimation of our selves, by living well, not lurking well: by conversing in the light of the common weale with equals, not by complotting in darke conventicles against superiors.

Works by Fullbecke

References

  1.  "Fulbeck, William". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
  2. Direction or Preparative to the Study of the Law; Wherein is Shewed, What Things Ought to be Observed and Used of Them That Are Addicted to the Study of the Law, And What, on the Contrary Part, Ought to be Eschewed and Avoided., William Fullbecke, Second Edition, Revised, by T.H. Stirling. London: Printed for J. and W.T. Clark, 1829. [xii], 252 pp. Folding table. Reprinted 2004 by The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd. ISBN 1-58477-371-5.
  3. The Legacy of Nuremberg: Sustaining Human Rights , Daniel Smith, Cornell Law Forum, vol. 25, no. 3, March 1999
  4. Elizabethan Themes in The Misfortunes of Arthur, William A. Armstrong, The Review of English Studies, New Series, Vol. 7, No. 27 (Jul., 1956), pp. 238-249
Attribution

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: "Fulbeck, William". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900. 

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