Gratian has long been called the Father of Canon Law. This latest volume in the ongoing History of Medieval Canon Law series covers the period from Gratian\u27s initial teaching of canon law during the 1120s to just before the promulgation of the Decretals of Pope Gregory IX in 1234. Gratian\u27s contributions to the birth of canon law and European jurisprudence were significant: he introduced a new methodology of teaching law by using hypothetical cases and by integrating--and inserting in the texts themselves--his own comments on the canons. He also used the dialectical method to analyze legal problems that he raised in his cases. Though this methodology was first developed by Peter Abelard and others in the schools of Northern France, Gr...
Around 1140, a canon lawyer named Gratian published a legal collection titled Concordia Discordantiu...
In the Medieval period, Roman law and canon law formed ius commune or the common European law. The s...
The father of canon law, Gratian, compiled and explained previous ecclesiastical jurisprudence using...
Gratian’s Decretum was one of the most significant legal collections in the history of canon law and...
The modern Western legal tradition owes a great debt to the medieval canon law of the Church, severa...
Abstract Gratian of Bologna, later bishop of Chiusi (died c. 1145), was a remarkably influe...
The book deals with the most important 150 printed books in the history of Western legal culture. Be...
The century between c. 1130 and 1234 was a time of great renewal and transformation in canon law whe...
The research on the pre-Vulgate manuscripts has been enormously interesting and, not surprisingly, h...
At some point in the 1180s a scribe in south-west England copied out sixty-five folios of papal lett...
Gilles (Henri), The clerics and the teaching of Roman law. From very early on, canon law started to...
A significant number of Pope Alexander III’s decretal letters were incorporated into the "Liber Extr...
This chapter explores a significant period in the formation, teaching, and application of canon law....
By the twelfth century canon and civil law formed part of an international legal system and culture ...
Primarily, Gratian is known as the author of the Concordia discordantium canonum and is regarded as ...
Around 1140, a canon lawyer named Gratian published a legal collection titled Concordia Discordantiu...
In the Medieval period, Roman law and canon law formed ius commune or the common European law. The s...
The father of canon law, Gratian, compiled and explained previous ecclesiastical jurisprudence using...
Gratian’s Decretum was one of the most significant legal collections in the history of canon law and...
The modern Western legal tradition owes a great debt to the medieval canon law of the Church, severa...
Abstract Gratian of Bologna, later bishop of Chiusi (died c. 1145), was a remarkably influe...
The book deals with the most important 150 printed books in the history of Western legal culture. Be...
The century between c. 1130 and 1234 was a time of great renewal and transformation in canon law whe...
The research on the pre-Vulgate manuscripts has been enormously interesting and, not surprisingly, h...
At some point in the 1180s a scribe in south-west England copied out sixty-five folios of papal lett...
Gilles (Henri), The clerics and the teaching of Roman law. From very early on, canon law started to...
A significant number of Pope Alexander III’s decretal letters were incorporated into the "Liber Extr...
This chapter explores a significant period in the formation, teaching, and application of canon law....
By the twelfth century canon and civil law formed part of an international legal system and culture ...
Primarily, Gratian is known as the author of the Concordia discordantium canonum and is regarded as ...
Around 1140, a canon lawyer named Gratian published a legal collection titled Concordia Discordantiu...
In the Medieval period, Roman law and canon law formed ius commune or the common European law. The s...
The father of canon law, Gratian, compiled and explained previous ecclesiastical jurisprudence using...