The Corpus Juris Civilis

52
College of William & Mary Law School William & Mary Law School Scholarship Repository Library Staff Publications e Wolf Law Library 2015 e Corpus Juris Civilis Frederick W. Dingledy William & Mary Law School, [email protected] Copyright c 2015 by the authors. is article is brought to you by the William & Mary Law School Scholarship Repository. hps://scholarship.law.wm.edu/libpubs Repository Citation Dingledy, Frederick W., "e Corpus Juris Civilis" (2015). Library Staff Publications. 118. hps://scholarship.law.wm.edu/libpubs/118

Transcript of The Corpus Juris Civilis

Page 1: The Corpus Juris Civilis

College of William & Mary Law SchoolWilliam & Mary Law School Scholarship Repository

Library Staff Publications The Wolf Law Library

2015

The Corpus Juris CivilisFrederick W. DingledyWilliam & Mary Law School, [email protected]

Copyright c 2015 by the authors. This article is brought to you by the William & Mary Law School Scholarship Repository.https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/libpubs

Repository CitationDingledy, Frederick W., "The Corpus Juris Civilis" (2015). Library Staff Publications. 118.https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/libpubs/118

Page 2: The Corpus Juris Civilis

The Corpus Juris Civilisby

Fred DingledySenior Reference Librarian

College of William & Mary Law Schoolfor Law Library of Louisiana and

Supreme Court of Louisiana Historical SocietyNew Orleans, LA – November 12, 2015

Page 3: The Corpus Juris Civilis
Page 4: The Corpus Juris Civilis

What we’ll cover

�History and Components of the Corpus Juris

Civilis

�Relevance of the Corpus Juris Civilis

�Researching the Corpus Juris Civilis

Page 5: The Corpus Juris Civilis

{ {Diocletian (r. 284-305)

Codex Gregorianus(ca. 291)

Codex Hermogenianus(295)

Theodosius II(r. 408-450)

Codex Theodosianus (438)

Previously…

Page 6: The Corpus Juris Civilis

Byzantine Empire in 500

Page 7: The Corpus Juris Civilis

Emperor Justinian I(r. 527-565)

“Arms and lawshave always flourished by the reciprocal help of each other.”

Page 8: The Corpus Juris Civilis

528: Justinian appoints Codex commission

Tribonian

Page 9: The Corpus Juris Civilis

529: Codex first ed.

Imperial constitutionesI: Ecclesiastical, legal system, adminII-VIII: PrivateIX: CriminalX-XII: Public

Page 10: The Corpus Juris Civilis

{ {Codex Liber

Page 11: The Corpus Juris Civilis

530: Digest commission532: Nika (Victory) Riots

Theodora (500-548)

Page 12: The Corpus Juris Civilis

533: Digest/Pandects

Digest: Writings by jurists

I: Public

II-XLVII: Private

XLVIII: Criminal

XLIX: Appeals + Treasury

L: Municipal, specialties, definitions

“Appalling arrangement”--Alan Watson

Page 13: The Corpus Juris Civilis

533: Justinian’s Institutes

First-year legal textbook

I: Persons

II: Things

III: Obligations

IV: Actions

Page 14: The Corpus Juris Civilis

533: Reform of Byzantinelegal education

First year: Institutes

Fifth year: Codex

Digest & Novels

Page 15: The Corpus Juris Civilis

{The Novels (novellae

constitutiones): Justinian’s constitutiones

534: Codex 2nd ed.565: Justinian dies

Page 16: The Corpus Juris Civilis

Justinian’s Empire in 555

Page 17: The Corpus Juris Civilis

Byzantine Empire in 717

Page 18: The Corpus Juris Civilis

The medieval revival

Holy Roman Emperor

Henry IV,

Abbot of Cluny, and Matilda of Canossa

Page 19: The Corpus Juris Civilis

1583: Dionysius Gothofredus, Corpus Juris Civilis

Page 20: The Corpus Juris Civilis

1753: George Harris, The Four

Books of Justinian’s Institutions

Page 21: The Corpus Juris Civilis

The 19th-century critical editions

Theodor Mommsen: Digest (1870)

Page 22: The Corpus Juris Civilis

{ {Justinian’s Institutes Codex

Paul Krueger: Institutes (1867) and

Codex (1877)

Page 23: The Corpus Juris Civilis

{ {Novels Wilhelm Kroll

Rudolf Schöll & Wilhelm Kroll: Novels (1895)

Page 24: The Corpus Juris Civilis

1904: Partial Englishtranslation of Digest

Charles Henry Monro

Page 25: The Corpus Juris Civilis

1932: Englishtranslation of CJC

S.P. Scott

Page 26: The Corpus Juris Civilis

1985: English translation of Digest

Alan Watson

Page 27: The Corpus Juris Civilis

ca. 1952: English translation of Codex

and Novels

Justice Fred H. Blume

Page 28: The Corpus Juris Civilis

{ {France Germany

European influence

Page 29: The Corpus Juris Civilis

{ {Spain Italy

European Influence

Page 30: The Corpus Juris Civilis

Bracton on the Laws and Customs of England

Page 31: The Corpus Juris Civilis

{“Secondly, Homonymiae, (as Justinian calleththem,) cases merely of iteration and repitition, are to be purged away…”

Sir Francis Bacon, A Proposition to His Majesty

Page 32: The Corpus Juris Civilis

{“I am this Day about beginning JustiniansInstitutions with Arnold Vinnius’sNotes.”

Diary of John Adams

Page 33: The Corpus Juris Civilis

{Dawson v. Winslow, Wythe 114, 119 (1791)

Page 34: The Corpus Juris Civilis

{Idaho v. Coeur d’Alene Tribe of Idaho, 521 U.S. 261, 284 (1997)

Modern U.S. references

Page 35: The Corpus Juris Civilis

William C.C. Claiborne

Edward Livingston

Page 36: The Corpus Juris Civilis

{

Batiza:

Code Napoleon: 709 provisions

Institutes:27 provisions

Digest:16 provisions

Civil Code of 1808

Page 37: The Corpus Juris Civilis

Corpus Juris Civilis

Code of 1808

Code Napoleon Las SietePartidas

Batiza Pascal

Page 38: The Corpus Juris Civilis

Louisiana Civil Codeof 1870, Art. 1621

Novel 115.3

Page 39: The Corpus Juris Civilis

La. Civil Code. (current)

Novel 115.3

La. Civil Code (current)

Page 40: The Corpus Juris Civilis

Researching the CJC

"Classification was not a strength of Roman jurisprudence. It was a methodology that the Romans borrowed enthusiastically from the Greeks, but in which they generally proved to be relatively inept."

- Andrew Borkowski & Paul du Plessis, Textbook on Roman Law (3d ed.), 153.

Page 41: The Corpus Juris Civilis

CJC research

�Secondary Sources

�Borkowski’s Textbook on Roman Law

�Cambridge Companion to Roman Law

�Justinian’s Institutes

�Thomas or Sandars translation

Page 42: The Corpus Juris Civilis

CJC Cite format(Edward Gibbon)

D 47.2.15.3

Part of CJC Book

Title

Law

Paragraph/Section

Older cites may only give Law+paragraph/section number

Page 43: The Corpus Juris Civilis

Bluebook Style (Rule T2.34)

�CODE JUST. 2.45.3 (Diocletian & Maximian290/293).

�DIG. 9.2.23 (Ulpian, Ad Edictum 18).

� J. INST. 2.23.1.

�NOV. 15.1 (535)

Page 44: The Corpus Juris Civilis

Online sources – Blume’s Codeand Novels (U. of Wyoming)

Page 45: The Corpus Juris Civilis

Online Sources – Watson’s Digest translation (Penn Press)

Page 46: The Corpus Juris Civilis

Online sources – archive.org

Page 47: The Corpus Juris Civilis

Online sources -- Hein

Page 48: The Corpus Juris Civilis

Tables of Contents

�Almost always present in print-first editions

�Often English+Latin

�Sometimes just English

Page 49: The Corpus Juris Civilis

Indexes

�Not in Monro’s or Watson’s Digest

�Other print-first parts of CJC have them

Page 50: The Corpus Juris Civilis

Pictures used

� Slide 4: Diocletian. In Diocletian's Palace, Split, Croatia, Hrvatska by User Alecconnell, Wikimedia Commons. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Diocletian_Bueste.JPG (Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0)

� Slide 4: Bust of Byzantine Empreror Theodosius II (reigned 408–450 AD) photo by Marie-Lan Nguyen. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Theodosius_II_Louvre_Ma1036.jpg (Licensed under CC BY 2.5)

� Slide 5: Rome and its Empire: From the Founding of Rome to the Downfall of the Empire by The Map as History. http://www.the-map-as-history.com/demos/tome12/12_03_founding_of_rome_downfall_empire.php

� Slide 6: Justinian’s Head. Mosaic from S. Vitale of Justinian and his Court. S. Vitale, Ravenna. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justinian_I#/media/File:Meister_von_San_Vitale_in_Ravenna.jpg (Public Domain)

� Slide 7: Tribonian bas-relief in the U.S. House of Representatives chamber, sculpture by Brenda Putnam, photo by Architect of the Capitol, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tribonian_bas-relief_in_the_U.S._House_of_Representatives_chamber.jpg (Public Domain)

� Slide 9: Selected Virginia legal titles including Daniel Call's copy of George Wythe's Decisions of Cases in Virginia by the High Court of Chancery (1795). http://lawlibrary.wm.edu/wythepedia/index.php/File:RarebooksWithWytheDecisionsOfCases.jpg

� Slide 9: Byzantine liturgical parchement scroll, 13th century. Exhibited in the Byzantine and Christian Museum in Athens. Picture by Giovanni Dall'Orto, November 12, 2009. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:2049_-_Byzantine_Museum,_Athens_-_Parchement_scroll,_13th_century_-_Photo_by_Giovanni_Dall%27Orto,_Nov_12.jpg

Page 51: The Corpus Juris Civilis

Pictures used (cont.)� Slide 10: Winner of a Roman chariot race by unknown, Wikimedia Commons.

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Winner_of_a_Roman_chariot_race.jpg (Public Domain)

� Slide 10: Theodora. Detail from the 6th-century mosaic "Empress Theodora and Her Court" in the Basilica of San Vitale in Ravenna photo by The Yorck Project. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Meister_von_San_Vitale_in_Ravenna_008.jpg (Public Domain)

� Slide 15: The Eastern Roman Empire (red) and its vassals (pink) in 555 AD during the reign of Justinian I byuser Tataryn77, Wikimedia Commons. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Justinian555AD.png

(Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0)

� Slide 16: Byzantine Empire in 717 A.D. by users Amonixinator and Hoodinski, Wikimedia Commons. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:ByzantineEmpire717%2Bextrainfo%2Bthemes.svg (Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0)

� Slide 17: Life of the Countess Matilda of Canossa by unknown miniaturist, Italian (active 1160s). https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:12th-century_painters_-_Life_of_the_Countess_Matilda_of_Canossa_-_WGA15961.jpg (Public Domain)

� Slide 18: Half-title from volume one of Corpus Juris Civilis. From William & Mary Law Library, user Lktesar. (Licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 3.0) http://lawlibrary.wm.edu/wythepedia/index.php/File:CorpusJurisCivilis1663v1HalfTitle.jpg

� Slide 19: Title page for D. Justiniani Institutionum Libri Quator, The Four Books of Justinian's Institutions. http://lawlibrary.wm.edu/wythepedia/index.php/File:DJustinianiInstitutionum1761.jpg

� Slide 20: Theodor Mommsen in 1863 by Louis Jacoby. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theodor_Mommsen?oldformat=true#/media/File:Theodor_Mommsen_02.jpg (Public Domain)

Page 52: The Corpus Juris Civilis

Pictures used (cont.)

� Slide 21: Wilhelm Kroll by anonymous. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Wilhelm_Kroll.jpg� Slide 24: Samuel Parsons Scott by unknown.

http://romanlegaltradition.org/blog/index.php?post/2014/11/02/S.-P.-Scott%2C-translator-of-The-Civil-Law� Slide 25: Professor Alan Watson by user Soloviev1, Wikimedia Commons.

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Alan_watson_scholar.jpg (Public Domain)� Slide 26: From “About Fred H. Blume and the Annotated Justinian Code,”

http://www.uwyo.edu/lawlib/blume-justinian/� Slide 27: Frontispiece from Volume One of The Works of Francis Bacon,

http://lawlibrary.wm.edu/wythepedia/index.php/File:BaconWorks1740v1Frontispiece.jpg� Slide 31: A Painting of President John Adams by Asher B. Durand. Released by U.S. Navy.

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:US_Navy_031029-N-6236G-001_A_painting_of_President_John_Adams_(1735-1826),_2nd_president_of_the_United_States,_by_Asher_B._Durand_(1767-1845)-crop.jpg (Public Domain)

� Slide 32: Portrait of George Wythe by David Silvette. http://lawlibrary.wm.edu/wythepedia/index.php/File:SilvetteWythe1979.jpg

� Slide 34: William C. C. Claiborne, Governor of Louisiana. Author unknown. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:William_C_C_Claiborne_rectangleLAState.jpg (Public Domain)

� Slide 34: Edward Livingston (1764 - 1836) of New York, USA (picture about 1823). Library of Congress. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Edward_Livingston_of_New_York.jpg (Public Domain)

� Slide 36: Flag of France. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Flag_of_France.svg (Public Domain)� Slide 36: Flag of Spain. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Flag_of_Spain.svg (Public Domain)

With thanks to Michael Umberger for his help.