History GCSE: The Strange Case of the Law

A series of 12 short films in which barrister Harry Potter looks at the history of English justice.

This series looks at English justice from the early concept of compensation, through to the development of the jury to the founding of the police.

Suitable for teaching GCSE history and social studies. This topic appears in OCR, AQA, Edexcel, WJEC KS4/GCSE in England and Wales, CCEA GCSE in Northern Ireland and SQA National 4/5 in Scotland.

Saxon Law - Compensation. video

Exploring Anglo-Saxon compensation for injuries from the Rochester Book, the first English law code 600AD.

Saxon Law - Compensation

Saxon Law - Courts. video

Exploring the organisation of Anglo-Saxon society into hundreds and how courts enforced the law through the use of oaths.

Saxon Law - Courts

Saxon Law - Punishments. video

Exploring physical evidence of how justice worked in Anglo-Saxon England from the execution cemetery at Harestock.

Saxon Law - Punishments

Saxon Law - Trial by Ordeal. video

A look at Anglo-Saxon trial by ordeal of fire or water and Norman trial by combat.

Saxon Law - Trial by Ordeal

Henry II, Thomas Becket and the Church Courts. video

A look at Henry II’s attempts to deal with the problem of church courts and the consequences of the murder of Archbishop Thomas Becket.

Henry II, Thomas Becket and the Church Courts

The Jury. video

A look at the development of the jury under Henry II and its growing significance with the end of trial by ordeal in 1215.

The Jury

Star Chamber and the Rack. video

A look at the origins of the Star Chamber under Henry VII and its abuse by Charles I. Also, the use of the rack to gain confessions.

Star Chamber and the Rack

The Petition of Right and Habeas Corpus. video

A look at the significance of the Petition of Right and the development of civil liberties, in particular habeus corpus.

The Petition of Right and Habeas Corpus

John Lilburne and Habeas Corpus. video

Looking at habeas corpus in practice and its use by John Lilburne.

John Lilburne and Habeas Corpus

The Conventicle Act of 1664 and the Independence of the Jury. video

A look at the breaking of the Conventicle Act and how the use of habeus corpus led to the independence of the jury.

The Conventicle Act of 1664 and the Independence of the Jury

The Bloody Code. video

Exploring the Bloody Code and the practice of ‘pious perjury’ by juries.

The Bloody Code

The Founding of the Police Force. video

A look at Robert Peel’s reform of the criminal justice system and the creation of a professional police force.

The Founding of the Police Force

Habeas Corpus and Slavery. video

A look at the use of habeus corpus to prevent the transportation of a slave out of the country in 1771, which ended slavery in England.

Habeas Corpus and Slavery