Stories of famous (and infamous) trials and legal events, with commentary, political cartoons, and information about legal history and legal rights. www.lawbuzz.com
Accounts, maps, photos, transcript excerpts and other materials relating to famous American trials. Assembled by Professor Douglas Linder, UMKC School of Law. www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/FTrials/ftrials.htm
Information and discussion about some of the most famous and controversial trials in American history, from HistoryChannel.com. www.historychannel.com/trial
The Laws and Customs of England, attributed to Henry of Bratton, c. 1210-1268. The first substantial treatise of English law, written in the time of Henry III. This is an electronic full-text version of Samuel Thorne's translationof George Woodbine's coll bracton.law.cornell.edu/bracton/Common/index.html
Transcripts, images and links to primary and secondary sources addressing the state's experience with the death penalty and why it has eschewed capital punishment longer than any other. freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/../McCaffreyFrame1Source1.htm
Unannotated links with an emphasis on ancient law, from Bernard J. Hibbitts, University of Pittsburgh School of Law. www.law.pitt.edu/hibbitts/connect.htm
Excerpts from the memoir of a Supreme Court clerk who served the notorious Justice James C. McReynolds during the year that FDR threatened to pack the Court. www.press.uchicago.edu/Misc/Chicago/448622.html
List covering teaching and research in the history of all legal traditions, although participants generally focus on common-law and other Western systems. Site includes information about the American Society for Legal History, an archive of postings, book www.h-net.org/~law