Buddhist Law in Burma is a major contribution to the study of Buddhist textual history, jurisprudence, and Southeast Asian history. It will be a valued contribution to scholarship that will not be surpassed for decades as Lammerts has nearly unparalleled experience in textual research and language skills in this field. This is not only a radical reexamination of Burmese law, but possibly the most subtle and original inquiry we have into precolonial Burmese intellectual life. No other scholar has produced so massive and painstaking an analysis of the evolution of Burmese law over some six centuries with such erudition and sensitivity. Lammerts’ archival and bibliographic expertise, his multilingualism, and the care and judiciousness with which he examines various hypotheses combine to inspire total confidence in his scholarship. Withal, he writes with vigor, grace, and clarity. Buddhist Law in Burma presents a wealth of fascinating information clearly and elegantly, without being sidelined by fashionable polemics or jargon. The legal texts that Lammerts presents to us so deftly may have fallen into disuse, but the ideas and ideologies that underlie them continue to inform the intellectual and social bodies of Myanmar today. Buddhist Law in Burma introduces us for the first time to this rich legal corpus and shows just how important it is. Readable, engaging, and immensely relevant, Buddhist Law in Burma sets new fresh standards and deserves to remain at the top of the reading list for decades to come.