• assizes The Oxford English Dictionary, in its twelfth subsection under the substantive "assize,"
    explains these courts of trial as follows: The sessions held periodically in each
    county of England, for the purpose of administering civil and criminal justice, by
    judges acting under certain special commissions (chiefly and usually, but not exclusively,
    being ordinary judges of the superior courts, or, after 1875, of the Supreme Court).
    It was provided by Magna Carta that the judges should visit each county once every
    year to take assizes (i.e. try writs of assize) of novel disseisin, mort d'ancestre,
    and darreine presentment (so that the jury who constituted the Grand Assize . . .
    might not be obliged to travel from remote corners of England to appear in court at
    Westminster). Thence the names assizes, and justices or judges of assize, still retained
    by these circuit courts and itinerant judges, after their judicial functions had been
    greatly extended in various directions, especially in that of the trial of felonies
    and offences. Assizes were abolished by the Courts Act, 1971; their criminal jurisdiction
    was transferred to the Crown Courts. Of course, Ireland in the eighteenth-century
    had not yet been joined administratively to the mechanisms of the United Kingdom as
    it would become with the Act of Union of 1801. But in practical effect the nominally
    independent country, in its administration of justice, modeled itself on the English
    system.