international law: Beginnings
Beginnings
There was little scope for an international law in the period of ancient and medieval empires, and its modern beginnings coincide, therefore, with the rise of national states after the Middle Ages. Rules of maritime intercourse and rules respecting diplomatic agents (see diplomatic service) soon came into existence. At the beginning of the 17th cent., the great multitude of small independent states, which were finding international lawlessness intolerable, prepared the way for the favorable reception given to the
Sections in this article:
- Introduction
- Recent Developments
- Effect of the World Wars
- Development to World War I
- Beginnings
- Nature and Scope
- Bibliography
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