He said of the Inns of Court that they were the most famous Universitie for profession of law only, or of any one human Science that is in the world.

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okanf

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Hi,

I have a qustion for you.

"He said of the Inns of Court that they were the most famous Universitie for profession of law only, or of any one human Science that is in the world."

I am not sure about the meaning of this sentence. I think that its language is a little bit old. Can you rephrase it more simply or more modern way, please? So that I can understand it better.

The source: https://www.jstor.org/stable/4502804 (on page 1 (332)).
 
I went to the website, but I didn't see any more context for that.

Added: Without additional context it's rather mysterious to me. (It's from the Cambridge Law Journal, 1935, so it is a bit old. (The spelling is rather antiquated.))
 
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