Original antique prints depicting legal subjects, the legal profession, courtroom scenes, lawyers, judges and the institutions of justice, produced by European engravers from the 17th to the 19th century.

1787

1793

1793

1794

1794

1799
![Lord Ankerville [David Ross] Legal Lord Ankerville [David Ross]](https://i0.wp.com/antiqueprintmaproom.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/mg_7332_copy.jpg?fit=208%2C270&ssl=1)
1799

1799

1799

1799

1799

1799

1799

1799

1799

1799

1799

1799

1799

1799

1800
![Advocates. [Who Plead without wigs.] Legal Advocates. [Who Plead without wigs.]](https://i0.wp.com/antiqueprintmaproom.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/mg_8192_copy.jpg?fit=202%2C270&ssl=1)
1811

1812

1814

1814

1818

1829

1831

1839

1840

1847

1854

1860

1860

1866

1867

1872

1872

1872

1874

1874

1876

1876

1876

1877

1878

1879

1880
Antique Prints of Legal Subjects — Lawyers, Courts and the Institutions of Justice
This category brings together original antique prints depicting legal subjects — the courts of law, the legal profession, judicial proceedings and the broader institutions of justice — produced by European engravers, illustrators and publishers from the 17th through the 19th century. These works document the visual culture of the law in the pre-modern world, capturing the ceremony, costume and setting of legal proceedings at a time when the courtroom and its inhabitants were subjects of genuine public fascination and considerable artistic attention.
The legal profession generated its own tradition of illustrated documentation, from the formal portraits of judges and eminent lawyers that appeared in engraved portrait series to the satirical prints that depicted the law’s practitioners and proceedings with irreverence and comic observation. William Hogarth’s celebrated series depicting the corruption and inefficiency of the 18th-century English legal system established a tradition of legal satire in print that continued through the work of Rowlandson, Gillray and the Victorian illustrators who found in the lawyer and the judge inexhaustible comic material. These satirical legal prints occupy the intersection of the caricature tradition and the social observation that defines the best British genre printmaking of the period.
Formal documentation of legal proceedings — the trial, the sentencing and the execution — generated prints of a more sober character, recording the administration of justice as a public spectacle in the era before photography transformed the documentation of public events. Prints depicting famous trials, scenes of courtroom procedure and the public punishment of offenders carry a documentary importance as records of the legal culture of their period alongside their interest as works of graphic art.
The costume and regalia of the legal profession — the wigs, gowns, robes and ceremonial dress that distinguished judges, barristers, solicitors and court officials across different jurisdictions and periods — appear in prints produced as documentation of professional dress as well as in more incidental depictions of legal proceedings. These costume prints connect the documentation of the legal profession to the broader tradition of occupational illustration.
Antique legal prints are collected for their social historical content, their connection to the satirical and documentary traditions of antique print-making, and their documentary value as records of legal culture and the institutions of justice in the centuries before modern legal systems took their present form.
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