I | | The rise of professional canonists and development of the Ius Commune | | |
II | | The ethics of the legal profession : medieval canonists and their clients | | |
III | | The ethics of advocacy : confidentiality and conflict of interest in medieval canon law | | |
IV | | The calumny oath and ethical ideals of canonical advocates | | |
V | | Entry to the ecclesiastical bar at Ely in the fourteenth century : the oath of admission | | |
VI | | The monk as lawyer | | |
VII | | Teaching canon law | | |
VIII | | Universities and the Ius Commune in medieval Europe | | |
IX | | The canon law curriculum in medieval Cambridge | | |
X | | The Cambridge faculty of canon law and the ecclesiastical courts of Ely | | |
XI | | From classroom to courtroom : Parisian canonists and their careers | | |
XII | | The profits of the law : legal fees of university-trained advocates | | |
XIII | | Taxation of costs in medieval canonical courts | | |
XIV | | Legal aid for the poor and the professionalization of law in the middle ages | | |
XV | | Contingent fees and the Ius Commune | | |
XVI | | The bar of the Ely consistory court in the fourteenth century : advocates, proctors, and others | | |
XVII | | Latin Jurists in the levant : the legal elite of the Crusader states | | |
XVIII | | The lawyers of the military orders | | |