Albert Venn Dicey (1835-1922) was a British jurist and constitutional theorist. He had been a graduate of Balliol College, Oxford and became Vinerian Professor of English Law at Oxford and a leading constitutional scholar of his day. He became a lawyer in 1863 and was appointed to the Vinerian Chair of English Law at Oxford in 1882. The principles expounded in his first major work, the seminal An Introduction to the Study of the Law of the Constitution (1885) are considered part of the uncodified British constitution. Dicey warned that freedom was under attack by modern incursions against the Rule of Law. He understood that the freedom British subjects enjoyed was dependent on the sovereignty of Parliament, the impartiality of the courts free from governmental interference and the supremacy of Common Law. He later left Oxford and went on to become one of the first Professors of Law at the then new London School of Economics. There he published in 1896 his Conflict of Laws.