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Jurists and jurisprudence in medieval Italy : texts and contexts /

"Jurists and Jurisprudence in Medieval Italy is an original collection of texts exemplifying medieval Italian jurisprudence, known as the ius commune. Translated for the first time into English, many of the texts exist only in early printed editions and manuscripts. Featuring commentaries by le...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Otros Autores: Cavallar, Osvaldo (Compilador, Traductor), Kirshner, Julius (Compilador, Traductor)
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Toronto ; Buffalo : University of Toronto Press, [2020]
Colección:Toronto studies in medieval law ; 4.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Cover
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Preface
  • Acknowledgments
  • Abbreviations
  • Short Titles
  • Introduction
  • 1. Professors and Students
  • 1. Foundations
  • 1.1. The Constitution Habita of Emperor Frederick I Barbarossa (1155/58)
  • 1.2. Accursius's Glosses to the Constitution Habita
  • 1.3. Students as Citizens in the Statutes of Modena (1327)
  • 2. "We Give You the Licence to Teach Here and Everywhere"
  • 2.1. Baldus de Ubaldis, Consilium on the Studium Generale of Milan (ca. 1393−1396)
  • 3. Privileges of Doctors and Students
  • 3.1. Simon of Borsano, Privileges of Doctors and Students (1361−1370)
  • 4. How to Teach and Study Canon and Civil Law
  • 4.1. Franciscus de Zabarellis, How to Teach and Study Canon and Civil Law (ca. 1410)
  • 5. The Many Dwelling Places of Civil Wisdom
  • 5.1. Bartolus of Sassoferrato, Oration on Conferring the Doctorate of Law
  • 6. Death Benefits
  • 6.1. Consilium of Jacobus Niccoli (1400)
  • 7. Hired Hands
  • 7.1. Azo, Hiring (1208−1210)
  • 7.2. Rainerius of Perugia, Leasing out a Work to Be Copied (1242)
  • 7.3. Salatiele, Copyists, and Other Persons Obligating Themselves to Perform Services [Contract and Glosses] (1248−1254)
  • 7.4. Rolandinus de Passegeriis, Hiring Another Person's Services to Copy a Work (1273)
  • 8. Law Students' Books
  • 8.1. Baldus de Ubaldis, Consilium [I] (ca. 1393-1396)
  • 8.2. Baldus de Ubaldis, Consilium [II] (ca. 1393-1396)
  • 9. "Many Books"
  • 9.1. Oldradus de Ponte, Whether It Is Advantageous to Have Many Books (ca. 1320s)
  • 10. Nobility, Usefulness, and Origin of Law
  • 10.1. Doctoral Oration (ca. 1450)
  • 2. Legal Profession
  • 11. Advocates
  • 11.1. Guilelmus Durantis, Mirror of Law (ca. 1284−1289)
  • 12. Fees
  • 12.1. Azo, Quaestio disputata
  • 13. Proof of a Doctoral Degree
  • 13.1. Certifying a Judge's Doctoral Degree in Florence (1374)
  • 14. Bella Figura: Florentine Jurists and Their Wives
  • 14.1. Deliberation of the Guild of Judges and Notaries of Florence (9 Sept. 1366)
  • 14.2. Provisions of Florence's Sumptuary Laws, 1377 and 1388
  • 14.3. Stephanus de Bonacursis and Others, Consilium on the Exemption of Jurists and Their Wives from Florence's Sumptuary Laws (1390)
  • 15. A Waste of Time
  • 15.1. Franco Sacchetti, Novella XL (ca. 1392−1393)
  • 16. "From the Mouth of God"
  • 16.1. Eulogy of Marianus Socinus the Elder of Siena (1467)
  • 3. Civil and Criminal Procedure
  • 17. Civil Procedure
  • 17.1. Civil Procedure in the Statutes of Florence (1415)
  • 18. Consilium Sapientis
  • 18.1. Requesting a consilium sapientis, Statutes of Florence (1415)
  • 19. Witnesses
  • 19.1. Treatise on Witnesses (Scientiam) (ca. 1230s)
  • 20. False Testimony
  • 20.1. Franciscus de Guicciardinis, Consilium (ca. 1505−1516)
  • 21. Criminal Procedure
  • 21.1. Albertus Gandinus, Tract on Crimes (1300)