, 1888. Maine wrote journalism in 1851 for the
Morning Chronicle, edited by
John Douglas Cook. With Cook and others, in 1855, he then founded and edited the
Saturday Review, writing for it to 1861. Like his close friend
James Fitzjames Stephen, he enjoyed occasional article-writing, and never quite abandoned it. Maine contributed to the
Cambridge Essays an essay on Roman law and legal education, republished in the later editions of
Village Communities. Lectures delivered by Maine for the Inns of Court were the groundwork of
Ancient Law (1861), the book by which his reputation was made at one stroke. Its object, as stated in the preface, was "to indicate some of the earliest ideas of mankind, as they are reflected in ancient law, and to point out the relation of those ideas to modern thought." He published the substance of his Oxford lectures:
Village Communities in the East and the West (1871);
Early History of Institutions (1875);
Early Law and Custom (1883). In all these works, the phenomena of societies in an archaic stage are brought into line to illustrate the process of development in legal and political ideas (see
freedom of contract). As vice-chancellor of the
University of Calcutta, Maine commented on the results produced by the contact of Eastern and Western thought. Three of these addresses were published, wholly or in part, in the later editions of
Village Communities; the substance of others is in the
Rede lecture of 1875, in the same volume. An essay on India was his contribution to the composite work entitled
The Reign of Queen Victoria (editor
Thomas Humphry Ward, 1887). His brief work in international law is represented by the posthumous volume
International Law (1888). Maine had published in 1885 his one work of speculative politics, a volume of essays on
Popular Government, designed to show that democracy is not in itself more stable than any other form of government and that there is no necessary connexion between democracy and progress. In 1886, there appeared in the
Quarterly Review an article on the posthumous work of
J. F. McLennan, edited and completed by his brother, entitled "The Patriarchal Theory". The article, though unsigned by the rule of the
Quarterly at the time, was Maine's reply to the McLennan brothers' attack on the historical reconstruction of the Indo-European family system put forward in
Ancient Law and supplemented in
Early Law and Custom. Maine charged McLennan in his theory of
primitive society with neglecting and misunderstanding of the Indo-European evidence. A summary of Maine's writings was in
Sir Mountstuart Grant Duff's memoir.
Selected publications •
Ancient Law: Its Connection with the Early History of Society, and Its Relation to Modern Ideas. London: John Murray, 1861. •
Village-Communities in the East and West. London: John Murray, 1871. •
The Early History of the Property of Married Women. Manchester: A. Ireland and Co., 1873. •
Lectures on the Early History of Institutions. New York: Henry Holt and Company, 1875. •
Dissertations on Early Law and Custom: Chiefly Selected from Lectures Delivered at Oxford. London: John Murray, 1883. •
Popular Government: Four Essays. London: John Murray, 1885. •
International Law: A Series of Lectures Delivered Before the University of Cambridge, 1887. London: John Murray, 1888. •
Plato: A Poem. Cambridge: Privately Printed, 1894.
Selected articles • "Mr. Fitzjames Stephen's Introduction to the Indian Evidence Act,"
The Fortnightly Review, Vol. XIX, 1873. • "South Slavonians and Rajpoots,"
The Nineteenth Century, Vol. II, 1877. • "The King and his Successor,"
The Fortnightly Review, Vol. XXXVII, 1882. ==Notes==