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  2. French court - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_court

    The French court in the Middle Ages was itinerant, as encapsulated by historian Boris Bove's statement: “where the king is, there the court is”. [5] Apart from the Palais de la Cité and later (under Louis IX and the last direct Capetians ) the Château du Louvre , the main residences of medieval monarchs were Vincennes , Compiègne ...

  3. Judiciary of France - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judiciary_of_France

    The Labour Court (France) (conseil de prud'hommes) hears disputes and suits between employers and employees (apart from cases devoted to administrative courts); the court is said to be paritaire because it is composed of equal numbers of representatives from employer unions, e.g., MEDEF and CGPME, and employee unions.

  4. Legal history of France - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_history_of_France

    "The legislative work of the French Revolution has been qualified as intermediary law since it formed the transition between the old French law and the new, the law covered by the Napoleonic codes." [1] "The private law of the French Revolution is to-day no longer considered an intermediary law. Yet from a positivist point of view, most of the ...

  5. Court of Cassation (France) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Court_of_Cassation_(France)

    The building of the Court of Cassation. The prosecution, or parquet général, is headed by the Chief Prosecutor (procureur général). [c] The Chief Prosecutor is a judicial officer, but does not prosecute cases; instead, his function is to advise the Court on how to proceed, analogous to the Commissioner-in-Council's [d] role within the Conseil d'État (lit.

  6. Honneurs de la Cour - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honneurs_de_la_Cour

    From 1715 to 1790, [3] 942 families were granted the Honors of the Court; 880 of them were French. François Bluche, who studied the royal genealogical archives, said that among the 942 families "462 were able to prove a noble lineage dating back to 1400, if excluding sovereign houses and foreign nobles who, unlike one can think, made up more ...

  7. Cour d'assises - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cour_d'assises

    In France, a cour d'assises, or Court of Assizes or Assize Court, is a criminal trial court with original and appellate limited jurisdiction to hear cases involving defendants accused of felonies, meaning crimes as defined in French law. It is the only French court that uses a jury trial. [1] [2]

  8. The Jesuits in North America in the Seventeenth Century

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Jesuits_in_North...

    The book is largely sourced from the writings of François Le Mercier, a principal member of the Jesuit mission to New France who held the title of Rector at the Jesuit college in Quebec and the General Superior of the missions in New France from 1653 to 1656 and again from 1665 to 1671 when he was appointed procurator and primary of the Jesuit college in Quebec which he held for a year before ...

  9. Real tennis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Real_tennis

    It is also known as court tennis in the United States, [1] royal tennis in England and Australia, [2] and courte-paume in France (to distinguish it from longue-paume, and in reference to the older, racquetless game of jeu de paume, the ancestor of modern handball and racquet games). Many French real tennis courts are at jeu de paume clubs.