Dr Anne McLaren has disputed the interpretation of the Vindiciae, contra tyrannos (1579) as a work in which Roman and canon law were fundamental. She correctly identifies Quentin Skinner and me with this interpretation. She bases her case on two sorts of evidence: the alleged paucity of Roman law citations, as compared with scriptural ones, in the margins of the original text; and our alleged failure to appreciate the 'context' of the Vindiciae, which, she suggests, means how it was translated and used in England, primarily in the seventeenth century. This response argues that she has seriously underestimated the number of legal citations, ignored the use of legal material which is not cited in the margins, and failed to appreciate that Scr...
Even today the authorship and the date of the Collatio legum Mosaicarum et Romanarum or Lex Dei cont...
This article offers a reading of the acceptance of Roman law in the European legal systems since the...
Much has been written on the possible influence of Roman or canon law on the early English common la...
Dr Anne McLaren has disputed the interpretation of the Vindiciae, contra tyrannos (1579) as a work i...
This chapter explores Maitland’s essays collected as ‘Roman Canon Law in the Church of England’. It ...
The Right Reverend William Stubbs, D.D. (1825-1901), was the Anglican Bishop of Oxford, sometime Reg...
Medieval people wrote and copied numerous law books, custumals and borough charters, which, however,...
It is a commonplace that Rome\u27s greatest contribution to the modern world is its law. Whether thi...
Both condictio and vindicatio are effective remedies of protecting subjective civil rights. However,...
In this Article, I offer a case study of one of the hazards presented by legal scholarship in law re...
It is commonplace among scholars to link in thought the growth of Roman law and of English law. S.F....
The lesson of the Italian humanists in the fifteenth century was not in vain: the effort to historic...
"Approaching the Collatio Legum Mosaicarum et Romanorum (or Lex Dei as an Example of Late Antique Cu...
This is an electronic reprint from Roman Law Resources (www.IusCivile.com). Copyright © 2000 by Dunc...
grantor: University of TorontoThe Pseudo-Augustinian treatise De vera et falsa penitentia ...
Even today the authorship and the date of the Collatio legum Mosaicarum et Romanarum or Lex Dei cont...
This article offers a reading of the acceptance of Roman law in the European legal systems since the...
Much has been written on the possible influence of Roman or canon law on the early English common la...
Dr Anne McLaren has disputed the interpretation of the Vindiciae, contra tyrannos (1579) as a work i...
This chapter explores Maitland’s essays collected as ‘Roman Canon Law in the Church of England’. It ...
The Right Reverend William Stubbs, D.D. (1825-1901), was the Anglican Bishop of Oxford, sometime Reg...
Medieval people wrote and copied numerous law books, custumals and borough charters, which, however,...
It is a commonplace that Rome\u27s greatest contribution to the modern world is its law. Whether thi...
Both condictio and vindicatio are effective remedies of protecting subjective civil rights. However,...
In this Article, I offer a case study of one of the hazards presented by legal scholarship in law re...
It is commonplace among scholars to link in thought the growth of Roman law and of English law. S.F....
The lesson of the Italian humanists in the fifteenth century was not in vain: the effort to historic...
"Approaching the Collatio Legum Mosaicarum et Romanorum (or Lex Dei as an Example of Late Antique Cu...
This is an electronic reprint from Roman Law Resources (www.IusCivile.com). Copyright © 2000 by Dunc...
grantor: University of TorontoThe Pseudo-Augustinian treatise De vera et falsa penitentia ...
Even today the authorship and the date of the Collatio legum Mosaicarum et Romanarum or Lex Dei cont...
This article offers a reading of the acceptance of Roman law in the European legal systems since the...
Much has been written on the possible influence of Roman or canon law on the early English common la...