1. Introduction and structure
2. Distinguished advocates, judges, classical learning and other influences on advocacy in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries
3. Prohibition against counsel in felony trials and the consequences of its erosion
4. Victorian advocacy : emotions, melodrama, floridity and juries
5. Signs of change in style before juries
6. Decline of jury trials in the civil and criminal courts and other key developments
7. The late nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth century
8. A spectacular quartet of leading barristers
9. The silent revolution in methods of advocacy
10. Changes and influences on jury advocacy in England and Wales during the second half of the twentieth century
11. Developments in the second half of the twentieth century influencing advocacy in the civil courts
12. The teaching of advocacy : an important influence
13. Appearances : broadcasting and dress
14. Developments with consequences for advocacy
15. Some conclusions.