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Roman Law

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2020
The Romans developed a sophisticated body of law over one thousand years. The law was consulted and used in medieval and modern Europe, and from Europe it was exported around the world. Many modern legal systems are based, or partly indebted to, Roman law. The Roman legal tradition endured, even as specific rules fell away.
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Roman Law

2014
During the Middle Ages, law loomed large in efforts to manage life situations, beginning with the adaptation of late imperial law to the successor or barbarian kingdoms of the West. Alongside local law and custom, the learned law was increasingly used to answer questions and settle disputes about family issues such as marriages and dowry, property and ...
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Roman Law and Common Law

1952
Roman Law and Common Law was first published in 1936. The second edition, entirely reset, revised throughout and supplemented by Professor F. H. Lawson, Fellow of Brasenose College and Professor of Comparative Law in the University of Oxford, appeared in 1952. This was done at the suggestion of Lord McNair, who read the revised copy. Professor Lawson's
W. W. Buckland, Arnold D. McNair
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Constitutional Background of Roman Law

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2018
The science of law is autonomous but not independent. It cannot live isolated from politics and culture. Law is part of a social structure, of tradition, of a collective human project. Law is a branch of politics in the noblest sense. Legal institutions, concepts, and ideas are so often a natural consequence of political ideals and values.
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“Darkening the Fair Face of Roman Law”: Austin and Roman Law

2012
The chapter shows that Austin’s grasp and interest in Roman law was considerable, going beyond what might have found elsewhere in England at the time. Contrarily to the idea that reference to Roman law in Austin locates him in a bygone age – following the spirit in which the study of Austin’s work is too often approached nowadays – Lewis shows how ...
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Roman Law

University of Pennsylvania Law Review and American Law Register, 1927
Axel Teisen, Max Radin
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2. The Sources of Roman Law

2015
This chapter discusses the sources of Roman law. It covers sources of law in the archaic period; sources of law in the Republic; sources of law in the Empire; the post-classical era; and Justinian’s codification of Roman law. It is difficult to provide a comprehensive and finite list of the sources of Roman law, since the Roman jurists never defined ...
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Roman Law

The American Law Register (1898-1907), 1901
T. J. G., W. H. H. Kelke
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A Corpus Approach to Roman Law Based on Justinian’s Digest

Informatics, 2020
Marton Ribary   +2 more
exaly  

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