Parliament
King's Counsel. has written: 'The common law of England' '\\'
Helen M. Cam has written: 'The hundred and the hundred rolls' 'Law-finders and law-makers in medieval England' 'Liberties and communities in medieval England'
Michiatsu Kaino has written: 'A study of the Law of Landownership in modern England'
Jason Taliodoros has written: 'Law and theology in twelfth-century England'
== == No, England has no real constitution as the continental countries have. England's law system was based on the common law, no written law. (common law: everyone knows this is the law, but there is no written proof that that IS indeed the law. Trough the times this law can be changed, altered,.. by new evolution in the citizen's world) The continental law system was based on civil law, thus Code Napoleon, Codex Julianus,... all written down laws. Though many think that the Magna Charta was THE basics of all constitutions, this is not true. This was mere a practical charter, not a real constitution.
The Romans did not have a written constitutions. They only had written codes of law.
John Exton has written: 'The Maritime Dicaeologie, Or, Sea-Jurisdiction Of England' -- subject(s): Admiralty, Maritime law, England and Wales, England and Wales. Admiralty
They didn't. They based it upon the Common Law from England.
P. T. O'Neill has written: 'The law of reinsurance in England and Bermuda' -- subject(s): Reinsurance, Law and legislation
D. M. Dean has written: 'Law-making and society in late Elizabethan England' -- subject(s): England and Wales, England and Wales. Parliament, History, Law reform, Legislation, Parliamentary practice, Relations with legislators, Sources
The earliest written Roman civil law was written on twelve tablets.
It varies from country to country. The first copyright law was written in England in 1709, and most contemporary laws are based on the Berne Convention of 1886.