In the early middle ages, specific protective rights were granted, among others, to church buildings. While legal historians investigating the legal protection of church buildings up till now stressed the jurisdictional concept of a "higher peace", cultural history has drawn attention to the concepts of sanctuary and immunity. Drawing upon sources spanning from the Lex Salica to the capitularies and canon law of the 9th century, the present article argues that peace, sanctuary and immunity are not to be understood as rooted in one concept, as is generally done, but rather they have to be understood as different legal concepts that only occasionally come together. Furthermore, I propose that the protection of church buildings is not an expre...
Photios’s contribution to the "Introduction to the law" is a "proem" and two titles on secular and r...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Cambridge University Press via the DOI in t...
In the Modern Age the relationship between ecclesiastical architecture and the city was regulated by...
In the early middle ages, specific protective rights were granted, among others, to church buildin...
This project will argue that the symbolic significance of sanctuary, which demonstrated undeniably t...
I argue that the symbolic significance of sanctuary, which demonstrated undeniably the Church\u27s p...
Edited by Thomas Benedict Lambert and David W. Rollason. Includes chapter by College at Brockport fa...
The paper at the panel "Sacred Places and Multiple Religious Identities: Past and Present" deals wit...
'Ill-defined and incomprehensible to contemporaries': these are two of the charges scholarship has l...
This paper examines the normative character of monastic exemption in the Latin West, that is to say,...
While immunities were perhaps the most important form of religious exemption in the medieval West th...
The right to freedom of religion or belief is explicitly recognised in various instruments of intern...
In this Article, Mr. Feeley, discusses the historical roots of the power of the Church to provide sa...
One of the main aspects of space in the medieval town consisted of various kinds of sacred structure...
This Article discusses the institution of sanctuary that was recognized under the Common Law of Engl...
Photios’s contribution to the "Introduction to the law" is a "proem" and two titles on secular and r...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Cambridge University Press via the DOI in t...
In the Modern Age the relationship between ecclesiastical architecture and the city was regulated by...
In the early middle ages, specific protective rights were granted, among others, to church buildin...
This project will argue that the symbolic significance of sanctuary, which demonstrated undeniably t...
I argue that the symbolic significance of sanctuary, which demonstrated undeniably the Church\u27s p...
Edited by Thomas Benedict Lambert and David W. Rollason. Includes chapter by College at Brockport fa...
The paper at the panel "Sacred Places and Multiple Religious Identities: Past and Present" deals wit...
'Ill-defined and incomprehensible to contemporaries': these are two of the charges scholarship has l...
This paper examines the normative character of monastic exemption in the Latin West, that is to say,...
While immunities were perhaps the most important form of religious exemption in the medieval West th...
The right to freedom of religion or belief is explicitly recognised in various instruments of intern...
In this Article, Mr. Feeley, discusses the historical roots of the power of the Church to provide sa...
One of the main aspects of space in the medieval town consisted of various kinds of sacred structure...
This Article discusses the institution of sanctuary that was recognized under the Common Law of Engl...
Photios’s contribution to the "Introduction to the law" is a "proem" and two titles on secular and r...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Cambridge University Press via the DOI in t...
In the Modern Age the relationship between ecclesiastical architecture and the city was regulated by...