In the celebrated words of the Severan jurist Ulpian – echoed three hundred years later in the opening passages of Justinian’s Institutes – knowledge of the law entails knowledge of matters both human and divine. This essay explores how relations between the human and divine were structured and ordered in the Imperial codex of Theodosius II (438 CE). Deliberately side stepping vexed categories such as ‘Christian’, ‘pagan’, ‘heresiological’ etc., the essay self-consciously frames the question as one of ‘knowledge-ordering’ in order to develop a broader framework concerning relations between emperors and the divine. How was knowledge about the divine textualised in Book XVI of the Codex Theodosianus and with what implications for a late Roman...
Since at least the legal humanists in the sixteenth century, lawyers and historians have attempted t...
The Codex of Emperor Theodosius II, dating from the 5th century A.D., is generally considered to be ...
Taking as its starting point the oration delivered in honor of Constantine in Trier by an anonymous ...
In the celebrated words of the Severan jurist Ulpian – echoed three hundred years later in the openi...
The idea that a knowledge of Roman legal techniques would lead to a correct understanding of Christi...
Roman emperors communicated a number of qualities which constituted an ideological basis for their u...
La iuris prudentia ou « prudence du droit » désignait le savoir des jurisconsultes romains. Bien que...
The Romans commanded the largest and most complex empire the world had ever seen, or would see until...
Ludwig Feuerbach (1804–1872) has said that there are three books in the entire European history whic...
This article examines what the historians have called the “imperial cult” to describe a wide variety...
It has long been known that most of the private law content of the Theodosian Code has not been pres...
Jurisprudence would form an important formal source of law, as, in the classical age, it would beco...
This thesis proposes a new model of situating Roman jurisprudence in the intellectual world of the E...
When Justinian became sole ruler of the Byzantine Empire in A.D. 527, he ordered the preparation of ...
The Codex of Emperor Theodosius II, dating from the 5th century A.D., is generally considered to be ...
Since at least the legal humanists in the sixteenth century, lawyers and historians have attempted t...
The Codex of Emperor Theodosius II, dating from the 5th century A.D., is generally considered to be ...
Taking as its starting point the oration delivered in honor of Constantine in Trier by an anonymous ...
In the celebrated words of the Severan jurist Ulpian – echoed three hundred years later in the openi...
The idea that a knowledge of Roman legal techniques would lead to a correct understanding of Christi...
Roman emperors communicated a number of qualities which constituted an ideological basis for their u...
La iuris prudentia ou « prudence du droit » désignait le savoir des jurisconsultes romains. Bien que...
The Romans commanded the largest and most complex empire the world had ever seen, or would see until...
Ludwig Feuerbach (1804–1872) has said that there are three books in the entire European history whic...
This article examines what the historians have called the “imperial cult” to describe a wide variety...
It has long been known that most of the private law content of the Theodosian Code has not been pres...
Jurisprudence would form an important formal source of law, as, in the classical age, it would beco...
This thesis proposes a new model of situating Roman jurisprudence in the intellectual world of the E...
When Justinian became sole ruler of the Byzantine Empire in A.D. 527, he ordered the preparation of ...
The Codex of Emperor Theodosius II, dating from the 5th century A.D., is generally considered to be ...
Since at least the legal humanists in the sixteenth century, lawyers and historians have attempted t...
The Codex of Emperor Theodosius II, dating from the 5th century A.D., is generally considered to be ...
Taking as its starting point the oration delivered in honor of Constantine in Trier by an anonymous ...