SECTION I LAW COURTS j. The Central Common-Law Courts* the Circuit Courts, and their Procedure.—As soon as the early dis- order resulting from, the Norman Conquest had subsided, the attempts to bridge the gap between central and local government began. Kings who had a conquered country before them, who felt their strength, would not be long in finding occasion to make themselves felt at ever}7" point. William II. brutally and directly seized wealth and power. Neither he nor his famous minister was a statesman, and, although they accomplished some things of importance in their application of feudal principles to the church and in developing the details of feudal obligation,1 then- expedients, for the most part, appear gross and temporary. A king and a minister of a different sort followed them. The combined work of Henry 1 and Roger of Salisbury, his justiciar, was fundamental. Their aim was the orderly, peaceful, and efficient government of the whole country and the strengthening and aggrandising of the central power. The king had more work to do and the king acted offi- cially through his court. Hence this feudal council felt keenly the pressure of business. In the earlier reigns, it had been a comparatively simple and undifferentiated body/but as it had more to do it developed. This de- velopment was the institutional manifestation of a grow- ing activity and effectiveness of the central power, and 1 See above, p, 121. 139