The father of canon law, Gratian, compiled and explained previous ecclesiastical jurisprudence using, among other sources, the Bible. This dissertation presents the principles of Gratian\u27s biblical interpretation. It is based on an analysis and explanation of representative passages in the Decretum Gratiani, 628 citations in all
The search for the earliest manuscripts of the Vulgate text of Gratian’s Decretum can be aided by tw...
Ecclesiastical law as an objectivation of the Church's understanding of its own spiritual and social...
Drawing on a broad array of contributors, volume seven of the Scripture and Hermeneutics Series asse...
The main work of canon law in the medieval period, the Decretum Gratiani, used the Bible at the hear...
Gratian has long been called the Father of Canon Law. This latest volume in the ongoing History of M...
The book deals with the most important 150 printed books in the history of Western legal culture. Be...
The research on the pre-Vulgate manuscripts has been enormously interesting and, not surprisingly, h...
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...
This contribution reviews the book, Atria A. Larson, Master of Penance: Gratian and the Development ...
Since Anders Winroth and Carlos Larrainzar discovered earlier versions of Gratian’s Decretum, legal ...
Primarily, Gratian is known as the author of the Concordia discordantium canonum and is regarded as ...
The Anglo-Norman canonist Ricardus Anglicus (de Mores or de Morins), as Giulio Silano’s 1982 P...
This thesis takes part in what some scholars have called a 'mini revolution.' Since Anders Winroth f...
The search for the earliest manuscripts of the Vulgate text of Gratian’s Decretum can be aided by tw...
Ecclesiastical law as an objectivation of the Church's understanding of its own spiritual and social...
Drawing on a broad array of contributors, volume seven of the Scripture and Hermeneutics Series asse...
The main work of canon law in the medieval period, the Decretum Gratiani, used the Bible at the hear...
Gratian has long been called the Father of Canon Law. This latest volume in the ongoing History of M...
The book deals with the most important 150 printed books in the history of Western legal culture. Be...
The research on the pre-Vulgate manuscripts has been enormously interesting and, not surprisingly, h...
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...
This contribution reviews the book, Atria A. Larson, Master of Penance: Gratian and the Development ...
Since Anders Winroth and Carlos Larrainzar discovered earlier versions of Gratian’s Decretum, legal ...
Primarily, Gratian is known as the author of the Concordia discordantium canonum and is regarded as ...
The Anglo-Norman canonist Ricardus Anglicus (de Mores or de Morins), as Giulio Silano’s 1982 P...
This thesis takes part in what some scholars have called a 'mini revolution.' Since Anders Winroth f...
The search for the earliest manuscripts of the Vulgate text of Gratian’s Decretum can be aided by tw...
Ecclesiastical law as an objectivation of the Church's understanding of its own spiritual and social...
Drawing on a broad array of contributors, volume seven of the Scripture and Hermeneutics Series asse...