The Anglo-Norman canonist Ricardus Anglicus (de Mores or de Morins), as Giulio Silano’s 1982 PhD thesis and provisional edition argues, was as interested in biblical theology as he was in canon law. This wide interest was a product of his time in the Parisian schools. How then did his influential commentary on Gratian’s Decretum, the Distinctiones decretorum, use Scriptural sources to explicate ostensibly canonistic concepts? This paper attempts to explore these issues in the context of the interaction of law and theology in the mid-to-late twelfth-century schools, courts, and ecclesial familiae of Bologna and England
The book deals with the most important 150 printed books in the history of Western legal culture. Be...
A significant number of Pope Alexander III’s decretal letters were incorporated into the "Liber Extr...
Law and Theology in the Thirteenth Century. In the High Middle Ages, Law and Theology were perceiv...
Gratian has long been called the Father of Canon Law. This latest volume in the ongoing History of M...
Presents a study of Burchard\u27s Decretum , a popular book of Catholic canon law compiled just aft...
By the twelfth century canon and civil law formed part of an international legal system and culture ...
At some point in the 1180s a scribe in south-west England copied out sixty-five folios of papal lett...
The main work of canon law in the medieval period, the Decretum Gratiani, used the Bible at the hear...
Abstract Gratian of Bologna, later bishop of Chiusi (died c. 1145), was a remarkably influe...
R. Sohm' s assertions about the incompatibility between the Church and law ( "The Church according t...
Geoffrey, abbot of the Trinity of Vendôme (1093-1132), who takes a prominent part in the Gregorian R...
Around 1140, a canon lawyer named Gratian published a legal collection titled Concordia Discordantiu...
Gratian’s Decretum was one of the most significant legal collections in the history of canon law and...
Gilles (Henri), The clerics and the teaching of Roman law. From very early on, canon law started to...
The father of canon law, Gratian, compiled and explained previous ecclesiastical jurisprudence using...
The book deals with the most important 150 printed books in the history of Western legal culture. Be...
A significant number of Pope Alexander III’s decretal letters were incorporated into the "Liber Extr...
Law and Theology in the Thirteenth Century. In the High Middle Ages, Law and Theology were perceiv...
Gratian has long been called the Father of Canon Law. This latest volume in the ongoing History of M...
Presents a study of Burchard\u27s Decretum , a popular book of Catholic canon law compiled just aft...
By the twelfth century canon and civil law formed part of an international legal system and culture ...
At some point in the 1180s a scribe in south-west England copied out sixty-five folios of papal lett...
The main work of canon law in the medieval period, the Decretum Gratiani, used the Bible at the hear...
Abstract Gratian of Bologna, later bishop of Chiusi (died c. 1145), was a remarkably influe...
R. Sohm' s assertions about the incompatibility between the Church and law ( "The Church according t...
Geoffrey, abbot of the Trinity of Vendôme (1093-1132), who takes a prominent part in the Gregorian R...
Around 1140, a canon lawyer named Gratian published a legal collection titled Concordia Discordantiu...
Gratian’s Decretum was one of the most significant legal collections in the history of canon law and...
Gilles (Henri), The clerics and the teaching of Roman law. From very early on, canon law started to...
The father of canon law, Gratian, compiled and explained previous ecclesiastical jurisprudence using...
The book deals with the most important 150 printed books in the history of Western legal culture. Be...
A significant number of Pope Alexander III’s decretal letters were incorporated into the "Liber Extr...
Law and Theology in the Thirteenth Century. In the High Middle Ages, Law and Theology were perceiv...