34 résultats
1663524751663. Frankfurt 1663. Frankfurt 1663. Uncommon Large-Paper Edition of the Code and Related Works with Important Notes by Denis Godefroy Justinian I 483-565 CE Emperor of the East. Godefroy Denis 1549-1622 Editor and Annotator. Codicis Dn. Justiniani Sacratissimi Principis PP. Aug. Repetitae Praelectionis Libri XII. Postrema Editio Prioribus Auctior et Emendatior. Frankfurt: Sumptibus Societis. Imprimebat Hieronymus Polichius 1663. xvi pp. 1024 cols. 4 pp. 456 cols. 13 pp. 78 cols. 2 pp. 282 cols. Folio 14" x 9". Recent period-style quarter calf over marbled boards raised bands and lettering piece to spine endpapers renewed. Large woodcut printer device head-pieces tail-pieces and decorated initials. Faint dampstaining to head of text block light foxing and browning to portions of text internally clean. $1500. Large-paper edition. Includes the Authenticae; Seu Novellae Constitutiones Feudorum Consuetudines Constitutiones Friderici II. Imp. Extravagantes Liber de Pace Constantiae Epitome Feudorum and related writings and notes by Godefroy. Commissioned by the Emperor Justinian in 530 CE the body of writings known collectively as the Corpus Juris Civilis preserved and restated all existing Roman law. Compiled in three years under the direction of Tribonium it was both a critical restatement of earlier law and jurisprudential writings and a complete collection of recent legislation. It is divided into four books the Institutes Digest Code and Novels. The Code contains the laws in force during Justinian's reign. It is divided into 12 books. Book 1 deals with ecclesiastical law the sources of law and the duties of high officials. Books 2-8 deal with private law. Book 9 deals with criminal law. Books 10-12 deal with administrative law. It received a great deal of commentary during the medieval and early modern eras. That of Denis Godefroy was influential well into the twentieth century. Godefroy was a jurist humanist historian scholar of Roman law and professor at the Universities of Geneva and Heidelberg. He was also the first to apply the collective name Corpus Juris Civilis to Justinian's works. KVK locates 5 copies of this imprint but all seem to be trimmed to a quarto format. Das Verzeichnis der im. unknown books
1830710651830. Classroom Notes on the Codex Justinianus Manuscript. Justinian I 483-565 CE Emperor of the East. Codicis Justiniani SS. Principis. France c.1830. 564 11 pp. Folio 12" x 8". Contemporary quarter calf over marbled boards vellum-covered corners to boards. Moderate rubbing to boards crease to upper corner of front board below vellum heavier rubbing to extremities corners bumped and somewhat worn spine perished revealing printer's waste dated 1822 boards partially detached but secure. Moderate toning occasional faint stains to margins. Text in neat hand occasional later annotations and a few doodles in same hand. $2500. With its careful arrangement and index this manuscript appears to be a fair copy of class notes on the first five books of Justinian's Code. The titles are in Latin the text in French. Based on class lectures the notes are paraphrases of each title. The later notes in the margins are clarifications or statements of main points. The first page has a large Roman numeral "I" which suggests the compiler had another notebook covering the rest of the Code Books 6-12. Also known as the Codex Justiniani the Code contains the laws in force during Justinian's reign. It is divided into 12 books. Book 1 deals with ecclesiastical law the sources of law and the duties of high officials. Books 2-8 deal with private law. Book 9 deals with criminal law. Books 10-12 deal with administrative law. It is one of the four components of the Corpus Juris Civilis. unknown books
2010547112010. ISBN-13:9781584779780; ISBN-10: 1584779780. Justinian I Emperor of the East. Krueger Paul. Mommsen Theodor. Schoell Rudolf. Kroll Wilhelm. Corpus Iuris Civilis. Originally published: Berlin: Apud Weidmannos 1895. 3 Vols. 8-1/2" x 11." xxxii 882; xxx 513; xvi 810 pp. Reprinted 2010 by The Lawbook Exchange Ltd. ISBN-13:9781584779780; ISBN-10: 1584779780. Hardcover. New. $295. Reprint of the standard Latin language edition of the Corpus Juris Civilis and the basis for all modern English translations. Originally published from 1872 to 1895 this is one of the finest examples of German philology and legal scholarship. In this edition sometimes called the "Berlin Edition" Krueger edited the Institutes Mommsen edited the Digest; the Code and Novels were edited by Schoell and Kroll. Commissioned by the Emperor Justinian in 530 CE the body of writings known collectively as the Corpus Juris Civilis reformed restated and preserved Roman law. Its subsequent influence on European and international jurisprudence is difficult to overestimate. It has four components. The Code is the reformed legal system. The Institutes is an elementary textbook about it. The Digest is a collection of commentary by leading jurisconsults. The Novels is a compilation of laws and amendments subsequent to the Code. unknown books
166385301Amsterdam: Blaeu 1663. hardcover. Cum notis integris.Dionysii Gothofredi. Engraved half-title title vignette. 2 volumes. Thick folios contemporary calf spines and corner edges quite worn; lower right corner lacking to first few and last leaf of vol. II with no loss of text. Amstelodami: Joannem Blaeu. Ludovicum & Danielem Elzevirios 1663. Very good.<br/><br/> This work consists of four books: "The authorized collection of imperial ordinances Codex constitutionium the authorized collection of extracts from the great jurists Digesta or Pandectae the elementary handbook Institutiones and the unauthorized collection of constitutions subsequent to the Codex Novellae." Ency. Britannica XV p.598. Brunet III p.608. Graesse III p.503.<br/><br/> Blaeu unknown books
17331335799Erfordiae Erfurt: Caroli Friderici Jungnicolii 17330. Hardcover. Octavo 422 1 pages; VG; bound in quarter vellum marbled paper covered boards faded ink writing to spine; spine vellum with a tear near top of spine wear and chipping to boards; ex-library with usual markings including stamps to title page removed bookplate from front pastedown; private embossed stamp to title page page 99; black ink dot to bottom edge of text block; text in Latin; scarce; shelved case 3. Scarce only 3 copies listed on Worldcat.;. 1335799. Shelved Dupont Bookstore. Caroli Friderici Jungnicolii hardcover books
1598710761598. Venice: Giunta 1598. 6 vols in 5 bks. Venice: Giunta 1598. 6 vols in 5 bks. Impressive 1598 Edition of the Corpus Iuris Civilis Corpus Juris Civilis Justinian I 485-565CE Emperor of the East Accursius c.1182-c.1260 Glossator. Leconte Antoine 1517-1586 Commentary. Cujas Jacques 1522-1590 Commentary. Douaren Francois 1509-1559 Commentary. De Bottis Jacopo Anello 1524-1581 Commentary. Caravita Agostino d.1580 Commentary. D. Iustiniani Imperatoris Opus Prudentum Responsa Caesarumque Rescripta Complectens. Quinque Voluminibus Distinctum Multis Legibus Additis Ac Iuris Consultorum Cuiacii Dyonisii Gothofredi & Iacobi Anelli de Bottis Augustinque Caravitae Glossis Additionibus Atque Nonnullis Aliis Illustratum. Utieorum Omnium Elenchus Indicabit. Novissima Editio Juntarum. Venice: Apud Iuintas 1598. Six volumes in five books. Complete set. Main text in parallel columns with linear glosses. Each volume preceded by title page title page of Volume I preceded by general title page. Folio 9-1/2" x 6-3/4". Contemporary vellum early hand-lettered titles and volume numbers to spines speckled edges. Some spotting and staining light wear to extremities corners and spine ends bumped front joint of Book IV cracked a few small wear holes to front boards of Books IV and V early armorial bookplates to front pastedowns small early owner stamp to front free endpapers vellum beginning to crack through pastedowns of a few volumes front free endpaper lacking from Book I. General title page is a copperplate with an architectural border volume title pages each with large woodcut Giunta device printed in red and black. Light to moderate toning faint dampstaining and light foxing in places early repair to leaf a1 in Book II with content replaced in manuscript chipping and edgewear to general title page with some loss to image early owner signatures to title pages of each volume except Volume VI. $4500. Commissioned by the Emperor Justinian I the body of works known as the Corpus Iuris Civilis reformed restated and preserved Roman law. The Code is the reformed legal system. The Novels is a compilation of additional laws and amendments. The Institutes is an elementary textbook about it. And the Digest is a collection of commentary by leading jurisconsults. unknown books
1756704151756. With Interesting Comparisons Between Roman and English Law Justinian I 483-565 CE Emperor of the East. Harris George 1722-1796 Editor and Translator. D. Justiniani Institutionum Libri Quatuor: The Four Books of Justinian's Institutions Translated Into English With Notes. London: Printed for C. Bathurst and E. Withers 1756. xv 1 73 1; 121 1; 100; 92; 11 5 pp. Copperplate table of descents. Quarto 11-1/4" x 9". Contemporary paneled calf with early rebacking raised bands and lettering piece to spine. Light rubbing and some shallow scuffing to boards heavier rubbing to extremities and spine wear to spine ends and corners boards partially detached owner bookplate of Charles Frost of Hull to front pastedown title page partially detached but secure. Moderate toning and light foxing to text early annotations most likely by Frost to several leaves offsetting to margins of preliminaries and rear endleaves. $950. First edition. This well-respected edition is notable for its elegant parallel translation. Harris an advocate of Doctor's Commons provides an interesting historical introduction and notes that compare the rules of Roman and English law. The final section is a translation of "Concerning the Succession of Descendents" Book 118 of the Novels. This work was owned by many sophisticated lawyers in Great Britain and America such as Thomas Jefferson. Second and third editions were published in 1761 and 1811. Frost 1781-1862 an English lawyer was a notable legal writer and antiquary. He is known today for his research into the early history of Hull England. Sowerby Catalogue of the Library of Thomas Jefferson 2191 second edition. English Short-Title Catalogue N8181. unknown books
1811704201811. 3rd and final ed. 3rd and final ed. Final Edition of Harris's Edition of the Institutes. Justinian I Emperor of the East 483-565 CE. Harris George 1722-1796 Editor and Translator. D. Justiniani Institutionum Libri Quatuor. The Four Books of Justinian's Institutions Translated Into English With Notes. Oxford: Printed by Collingwood Newman And Baxter 1811. 11 370 2 pp. Copperplate table of descents. Quarto 10-1/2" x 8-1/4". Recent period-style quarter calf over cloth gilt fillets and lettering piece to spine endpapers renewed. Some toning to text light foxing in places. An attractive copy. $1250. Third and final edition. This well-respected edition is notable for its elegant parallel translation. Harris an advocate of Doctor's Commons provides an interesting historical introduction and notes that compare the rules of Roman and English law. The final section is a translation of "Concerning the Succession of Descendents" Book 118 of the Novels. This work was owned by many sophisticated lawyers in Great Britain and America such as Thomas Jefferson who owned a copy of the second edition. Sowerby Catalogue of the Library of Thomas Jefferson 2191 second edition. English Short-Title Catalogue T102256. unknown books
1761704191761. London: J. Purser; for M. Withers 1761. 2nd. ed. London: J. Purser; for M. Withers 1761. 2nd. ed. With Interesting Comparisons Between Roman and English Law Justinian I Emperor of the East 483-565 CE. Harris George 1722-1796 Editor and Translator. D. Justiniani Institutionum Libri Quatuor: The Four Books of Justinian's Institutions Translated Into English With Notes. London: Printed by J. Purser; for M. Withers 1761. xv 1 73 1 121 1 100 92 11 5 pp. Copperplate table of descents. Quarto 10" x 8". Contemporary mottled tree calf rebacked in period style with gilt fillets and retained existing lettering piece hinges mended. Light rubbing to boards corners bumped and somewhat worn. Copperplate allegorical vignette featuring Lady Justice at head of dedication iii. Moderate toning to text somewhat heavier in places light foxing light soiling to preliminaries and rear endleaves small tear to lower margin of table two leaves of contemporary manuscript notes laid-in. $950. Second edition. This well-respected edition is notable for its elegant parallel translation. Harris an advocate of Doctor's Commons provides an interesting historical introduction and notes that compare the rules of Roman and English law. The final section is a translation of "Concerning the Succession of Descendents" Book 118 of the Novels. This work was owned by many sophisticated lawyers in Great Britain and America such as Thomas Jefferson. who owned a copy of this edition. The first edition was published in 1756 its final edition the third in 1811. One of the laid-in manuscript leaves is a copy of the table of descents and its accompanying text from pp. 28-31. The other is an itemized bill or estimate for spinning and weaving cloth with a crude diagram of a spinning wheel. Sowerby Catalogue of the Library of Thomas Jefferson 2191. English Short-Title Catalogue T102256. unknown books
1744417751744. The Institutes with Commentaries by Notable French Scholars Justinian I 483-565 CE Emperor of the East. Cujas Jacques 1522-1590 Editor. Lacoste Jean c.1560-1637 Commentator. Marcile Theodore 1548-1617 Commentator. Muret Marc-Antoine 1526-1585 Commentator. van de Water Johannes d.1689 Editor. D.N. Justiniani Perpetui Augusti Institutionum Sive Elementorum per Tribunianum Virum Magnificum Magistrum & Exquaestore Sacri Palatii & Theophilum & Dorotheum Viros Illustres & Antecessores Libri Quatuor Emendatissimi ex Editione Jacob Cujacii. In Eosdem.& Antecessoris Clariss. Commentarius. Accedunt Huic Editioni Annotationes & Notae Theodori Marcilii & Marci Antonii Mureti Ut & M. Tatii Alpini Dessertatio de Surto per Lancem & Licium Concepto. Adjecti Quoque Sunt Varii Indices Curante Joanne van de Water. Leiden: Apud Samuelem Luchtmans 1744. xxxxviii 667 1 pp. Fold-out table of descents. Quarto 9-1/2" x 7-1/2". Contemporary vellum raised bands ornate gilt double frames enclosing heraldic device to boards gilt ornaments to spine. Soiling some wear to corners and spine ends front endleaf or half-title lacking. Title page printed in red and black. Handsome woodcut tail-pieces and decorated initials. Partial split between preliminary gathering and title page. Interior notably fresh. $400. An edition of the Institutes by Cujas with extensive commentary and notes by Jean Lacoste Theodore Marcile and Marc-Antoine Muret. These jurists who followed Cujas' example were leaders of the French humanistic school which aimed to purge Roman sources of later corruptions. Their pioneering methods did much to establish the field of philology. Compiled around 161 CE the Institutes is an elementary treatise on Roman private law that served as a standard text for 300 years. After its rediscovery during the medieval era it became a staple of European legal education. Not in the British Museum Catalogue. unknown books
165849004Amstelodami: ex officina Elseviriana 1658. 12mo pp. 24 643 1; engraved title page printer's woodcut device on printed title several woodcut initials and ornaments; contemporary full calf gilt-decorated spine in 5 compartments gilt-lettered direct in 1; spine worn but generally good and sound. This is the third Elzevier edition. Copinger 2552; Willems 1231. <br/><br/> ex officina Elseviriana unknown books
1562710271562. Paris 1562. Interleaved and annotated. Paris 1562. Interleaved and annotated. Interleaved Copy Annotated by a French Nobleman Justinian I 485-565 CE Emperor of the East. Hotman Francois 1524-1590 Editor. Digestorum seu Pandectarum Libri Quinquaginta ex Pandectis Florentinis Nuper in Lucem Emissis Quoadeius Fieri Potuit Repraesentati & In Septem Partes Justiniani Sententia Distincti Adjectis Brevibus Francisci Hotomanni Parisiensis I.C. Clarissimi Summariis. Paris: Apud Guilielmum Merlin in ponte nummulariorum et Guilielmum Desboys 1562. civ 258 pp. Interleaved. Octavo 6-1/2" x 4-1/4". Contemporary vellum armorial devices to boards lettering piece to spine. Soiling and a few stains and minor nicks some wear to spine ends pastedowns loose a few chips to vellum along fore-edge of front board early owner bookplate to front pastedown early owner signature dated 1729 to front free endpaper crack in text block between front free endpaper and title page. Moderate toning to text light foxing to a few leaves occasional faint dampstaining to foot of text block. Annotations in neat contemporary hand some quite extensive to several leaves and about a third of the interleaves occasional early underlining. $750. This volume is first of a seven-volume edition of the Novels one of the four components of the Corpus Juris Civilis. It belonged to a French noble Charles Du Ruisseau "in supremo senatu Patroni." Excepting one page in Latin in a different hand the annotations most likely by Du Ruisseau are in French. Mostly analytical they reflect considerable engagement with the text. Several include cross-references and references to other sections of the Corpus Juris Civilis. unknown books
1572D4701Venice: F. Rampazeto 1572. Hardcover. Very Good. 8vo 175 x 120mm. 48 366pp. Signatures: a-f 8; A-YY 8; ZZ 8 -ZZ7-8 blank. Woodcut printers device on title of basilisk fighting a bird with motto Terrena coelestibus obsunt; in an architectural frame and woodcut historiated headpiece woodcut vignette beginning book of the Institutiones; on leaf 212r a full-page representation of the arbor civilis. Text is all-around gloss; printed in black and red. Dedicatory letter of H. Messaggius to Senator Federicus Baduarius prelim. leafs 2 is dated 1558. Period vellum three raised bands; leaves slightly offset slightly browned; hinge cracked at rear some quires loose rear pastedown glue-stained. The Corpus Iuris Civilis or the Justinian Code was the result of Emperor Justinians desire that existing Roman law be collected into a simple and clear system of laws or code. Tribonian a legal minister under Justinian lead a group of scholars in an effort to codify existing Roman law. The result was the first Justinian Code completed in 529. This code was later expanded to include Justinians own laws as well as two additional books on areas of the law. In 534 the Justinian Code made up of the Code the Digest and the Institutes was completed. Justinians collections were in ancient times always copied separately and afterwards they were printed in the same way. This part of the Institutiones falls under the whole Corpus Iuris Civilis is an early example before the unification under this heading. The present name of Justinians codification was only adopted in the 16th century when it was printed in 1583 by Dionysius Gothofredus. The legal thought behind the Corpus Juris Civilis served as the backbone of the single largest law reform of the modern age the Napoleonic Code which marked the abolition of feudalism. <br/><br/> [F. Rampazeto] hardcover books
1602EPL78Saint Gervais near Geneva: Officina Vignoniana 1602. Paperback. Very Good. Cols. 653-668. Given new world expansion 17th-century jurists in England and France were enormously interested in the codification of existing common law. In a longstanding attempt to establish a single legal code their aims required the reprinting of several classic texts which they hoped could influence contemporary and later opinion on prominent social issues ie. the morality in holding slaves. Double column and ruled borders. Extensive printed gloss. Woodcut initials and foliate book headpiece. Size: 400 x 260 mm. <br/><br/> Officina Vignoniana paperback books
1501707701501. Venice: Per Paganinum de Paganinis May 25 1501. Venice: Per Paganinum de Paganinis May 25 1501. 1501 Venetian Edition of the Institutes in a Contemporary Binding Justinian I 485-565 CE Emperor of the East. Accursius Accorso Francisco c.1182-c.1260 Glossator. Gradibus Johannes de active 15th-16th c. Instituta cum Summariis. Venice: Per Paganinum de Paganinis May 25 1501. 152 i.e. 140 ff. Text in parallel columns with linear gloss. Octavo 6-3/4" x 4-3/4". Contemporary calf blind frames and ornaments to boards raised bands to spine clasps lower clasp lacking strap and buckle endpapers renewed inner margins of title page and leaf s1 fol. 137 reinforced. Light rubbing to boards light gatoring to spine rubbing and light wear to spine ends rubbing with heavier wear to corners. Printed throughout in red and black "I" of "Instituta" on title page colored red. Moderate toning faint in some places very faint dampstaining some edgewear to preliminaries and final three leaves annotations in early hand to title page and its verso the verso of final leaf and some leaves of the text. $7500. Commissioned by the Emperor Justinian in 530 CE the body of writings known collectively as the Corpus Juris Civilis restated all existing Roman law. It has four components: the Code Novels Institutes and Digest. Intended for students the Institutes is a synopsis of the reformed legal system. Rediscovered during the late middle ages it became the standard textbook of Roman law. The main text of our 1501 imprint is accompanied by Accorso's great Glossa Ordinaria or Magistralis. A Professor of Law at Bologna and a leading figure in the revival of classical jurisprudence Accorso examined every extant note and commentary when he prepared his epochal edition of Justinian's Institutes Digest and Code. This massive effort eliminated much of the obscurity and contradiction introduced by earlier writers. His editions which superseded all previous attempts remained definitive until the 1583 revision by Denis Godefroy. OCLC locates 3 copies 1 in North America Library of Congress. Not in Adams. Censimento Nazionale delle Edizioni Italiane del XVI Secolo CNCE 14113. unknown books
1505707811505. 1505 Paris Edition of the Institutes Justinian I 485-565 CE Emperor of the East. Accursius Accorso Francisco c.1182-c.1260 Glossator. Chappuis Jean Editor. Institutiones Imperiales: Ordinate Glosis Textuales Divisiones Habentur. Patescit Grecum Utile cum Expositione Succincta. Universi Tituli Alphabetico Ordine Ponuntur. Summaria Rubra Multis Adiectis Sunt Textibus Immixta. Orbibus Variis Vallata Civilis Arbor hic exaratur fo. cxvij. Plurima et Textuum et Glosarum Turpis Menda Expurgatur. Tituli Continuatione Patenti Redduntur Clari. Involute Materie Nectuntur Tabula Singulari. Medulle Glosarum Omnibus in Marginibus Sunt Extracte. Versibus Rubrice Iuris Cesarei Leguntur Aperte. Multiplices bone Glose plerisque Locis Sunt Apposite. Paris: Per Udalricum Gering et Magistrum Bertholdum Rembolt December 5 1505. xii 117 ff. Text in parallel columns with linear gloss. First letters of the verses that follow Institutiones Imperiales on title page from an anagram "opus optimum." Two-page table of descents. Folio 10" x 7". Contemporary blind-stamped calf raised bands to spine clasps lacking hasps present. Moderate rubbing and a few minor scuffs to boards heavier rubbing to extremities corners and spine ends worn calf worn away from two spine bands a few cracks to text block signature n ff. 97-104 detached and moderately edgeworn. Printed throughout in red and black large crible printer device and decorative borders to title page crible initials and table of descents. Moderate toning and occasional light soiling and foxing early annotations to endleaves and title page additional early annotations and underlining to some leaves in the text. $5000. Commissioned by the Emperor Justinian in 530 CE the body of writings known collectively as the Corpus Juris Civilis restated all existing Roman law. It has four components: the Code Novels Institutes and Digest. Intended for students the Institutes is a synopsis of the reformed legal system. Rediscovered during the late middle ages it became the standard textbook of Roman law. The main text of our 1501 imprint is accompanied by Accorso's great Glossa Ordinaria or Magistralis. A Professor of Law at Bologna and a leading figure in the revival o. unknown books
17101334187Amstelaedami Amsterdam: Ex Officina Wetsteniana 1710. Hardcover. 12mo. 12 315 pages; VG-; bound in contemporary full calf paneled spine with gilt titling and stamping; moderate wear including chipping to head and tail of spine wear to hinges bumping to corners; additional engraved title page; embossed stamp to title page page 99; damage to front pastedown possible bookplate removal; text in black and red; small ink writing to title page; shelved case 3. The Institutes of Justinian is a unit of the Corpus Juris Civilis the sixth-century codification of Roman law ordered by the Byzantine emperor Justinian I. wikipedia. 1334187. Shelved Dupont Bookstore. Ex Officina Wetsteniana hardcover books
165819828Amstelaedami Amsterdam: Ex Officina Elzeviriana 1658. Hardcover. Very good. 12mo 5.5 x 3.25 inches contemporary full vellum title handwritten in ink on backstrip red speckled edges. xxii 643 pp. Text in Latin. Some paper residue presumably from a removed bookplate on front pastedown otherwise clean and bright internally. Vellum is slightly cracked at joints and lightly soiled but still very good copy overall. Third Elzevir edition; Willems 1231. A respected and popular commentary on Justinian's Institutes first published in 1646. Ex Officina Elzeviriana hardcover books
16587785Amsterdam: Ex Officina Elzeviriana 1658. Later printing. Vellum. Very Good. 12mo. 246431pp. Added copper engraved title. Cont. vellum. Some old light text soiling. Willems # 1231 the third Elzevir edition of the INSTITUTIONUM. Ex Officina Elzeviriana hardcover books
1561709811561. Basel: Per Ioannem Hervagium 1561. First edition. Basel: Per Ioannem Hervagium 1561. First edition. Edited by a "Reformed" Lawyer and Dedicated to Queen Elizabeth I Justinian I 485-565CE Emperor of the East. Haloander Gregor 1501-1531 Translator and Editor. Agylaeus Henricus 1532 or 1533-1595 Editor. Iustiniani Principis Novellae Constitutiones Latine Ex Gregorii Haloandri et Henrici Agylaei Interpretatione Ad Grecum Scrimgeri Exemplar Nunc Primum Edite. Quibus Suis Locis Interferiter Quicquid Vetus Versio Amplius Habet Atque Proximis Editionib. Ex Vetustis Libris Ac Iuliani Epitme Aspersum Est. In qua Editione Henrici Agylaei Opera Diligentem tum Variarum Lectionum Annotationem Tum Haloandrice Versionis Castigationem Invenire est. Item Eiusdem Iustiniani Edicta Iustini Tiberii Leonis Philosophi Constitutiones; & Una Zenonis Quae ad Titulum Codicis de Privatis Aedificiis Pertinet: Henrico Aegylaeo Interprete. Postremo Canones Sanctorum Apostolorum per Clementem in Unum Congesti Gregorio Haloandro Interprete. Basel: Per Ioannem Hervagium 1561. xxxii 598 2 pp. Quarto 9-1/4" x 6-1/2". Contemporary limp vellum early hand-lettered title to spine ties lacking. Minor soiling a few small stains and few tiny worm holes some wear to corners a few minor tears to spine ends front joint starting at ends front pastedown worn and partially detached text block somewhat loose vellum beginning to crack though rear pastedown. Faint dampstaining to head of text block moderate toning foxing and light browning in places mild edgewear to corners of preliminaries recent early owner inscription to front free endpaper. $2500. First edition. This collection of legal texts begins with the first appearance of a revised edition with original commentary by teh Dutch jurist Agylaeus of Gregor Haloander's complete translation of the Novels one of the four components of the Corpus Juris Civilis. This is followed by a group legal texts from other sources edited with commentary by Agylaeus Including: De Indulgentia Tributariorum Reliquorum Tiberii Imperatoris de Divinis Domibus Constitutio Imperatoris Leonis Augusti Novellae Constitutiones Imperatoris Leonis Augusti Novellae Constitutiones and Zenonis Imperatoris de Novis Operibus Constituio Eodem Interprete. He also includes Haoloander's version of the Apostolic Canons of Pope Cleme. unknown books
16791335008Lugduni Batav Leiden: Felicem Lopez 1679. First Edition. Hardcover. 12mo. 36 316 8 pages; G; bound in contemporary vellum ink titling to spine; vellum with mild soiling small chipping to front edge of tail of spine vellum beginning to peel on the lower fore corner of the rear board; with front and rear free blanks; ex-library with removed sticker from spine removed bookplate from front pastedown small stamp to recto of title page; embossed stamp to title page and page 99; ink stain to ffep; includes index; With added engraved title page with varying date of publication: MDCLXXX; <br /> <br><br /> <br><br /> Profusely extensively and colorfully filled with marginalia. Black red green and yellow are all used for underlining while black and red are used for writing. Beautiful handwriting at times indistinguishable from the printed marginalia.;<br /> <br><br /> <br><br /> AG consignment; scarce; shelved case 3. Böckelmann became a professor in Leiden in 1670 and had a lasting influence with his Compendium Institutionum which taught through a simplified teaching method and shorter summaries rather than Justinian's Corpus Juris Civilis.;. 1335008. Shelved Dupont Bookstore. Felicem Lopez hardcover books
1547WB17559Paris: Vivant Gaultherot 1547. Hardcover. Very Good. 16mo 113 x 80mm. Gaultherots woodcut printers placard and cherub head Avec Privilege on title page. Pagination: 8 332pp. Signatures: dagger8 a-z8 A-S8 T4. Later French calf embossed with heraldic lion passant on covers gilt tooled cornerpieces and five gilt fleurons on spine four raised bands still with manuscript binders waste; good compact copy of this cornerstone publication for 16th century French legal education a rare survival; some light edgewear: headcap slightly chipped corners lightly bumped; internally clean though some minor marginal worming at times in text altogether solid. Title inscribed with former owners initials and dated 1702 possibly von Clodh suggesting German ownership by the early 18th century. <br/><br/>Rare pocket edition of the Institutes of Justinian known as the Institutions impériales in French and printed in Paris by Vivant Gaultherot in 1547; following two earlier editions in 1543 and 1544. There were at least five more editions of this French translation printed between 1547 and 1558. As early as the 12th century French legal students began to refine their study and practice of law toward a perfected Justinian system. This interest was largely owed to the spread of the scientific study of pure Roman law initiated at the University in Bologna. The Bologna revival as it was known made its way first to the law university at Montpellier and then spread elsewhere in France. Over the following centuries demands for new translations of the Justinian Institutes were doubtless tied to the foundation of several new French universities. Nicolaus de LEscut d. 1580 editor and translator of the Institutions impériales was an early modern jurist diplomat and secretary to Antoine the Good Duke of Lorraine. LEscuts translators note states he took grosse peine or great trouble in this undertaking so the reader would understand the text plus facilement. The Bologna revival at medieval universities across Europe and the growing interest in new translations of the Justinian Institutes introduced ideas of Roman law to the provinces. See Sherman Roman Law in the Modern World pp. 227-228. Rare OCLC locates one copy held in the US by the LC no. 77227442. See also Bibliographie des éditions parisiennes du 16e siècle no. BP16_112725. Vivant Gaultherot hardcover books
1772711821772. Liege: Chez J. Dessain 1772. Liege: Chez J. Dessain 1772. A Notable French Edition of the Digest Book 50 Justinian I 483-565 CE Emperor of the East. Dantoine Jean Baptiste 1693-1720 Translator and Editor. Les Regles du Droit Civil Dans le Meme Ordre Qu'Elles sont Disposees au Dernier Titre du Digeste; Traduites en Francois Avec des Explications & Des Commentaires sur Chaque Regle. Et Trois Tables Tres-Exactes l'Une de Tous les Textes du Droit Rapportes & Expliques dans cet Ouvrage l'Autre des Regles du Droit Rangees por Ordre Alphabetique Selon Leur Ordre Naturel La 3me. de Toutes les Matieres. Nouvelle Edition Revue & Corrigee. Liege: Chez J. Dessain 1772. lxiv 502 xxxii pp. Quarto 10" x 8-3/4". Contemporary sheep with cat's-paw decoration gilt spine with raised bands and lettering piece speckled edges. Boards slightly bowed rubbing to extremities with minor wear to edges corners bumped and somewhat worn joints just starting at ends moderate toning to interior. A handsome copy. $850. Penultimate edition. The final title of the Digest "De Diversis Regulis Juris Antiqui Concerning Different Rules of Ancient Law" is a collection of 211 maxims derived from Ulpian and other jurists. Dantoine's edition presents the maxims in the original Latin with translations and extensive commentary. First published in 1710 it went through six editions the last in 1775. All are scarce. OCLC locates 3 copies of the 1772 edition in North America Bibliotheque et Archives Nationales du Quebec McGill University UC-Berkeley Law School. Camus Bibliotheque Choisie des Livres de Droit 658. unknown books
1772710291772. Liege: Chez J. Dessain 1772. Liege: Chez J. Dessain 1772. A Notable French Edition of the Digest Book 50 Justinian I 483-565CE Emperor of the East. Dantoine Jean Baptiste Editor. Les Regles du Droit Civil Dans le Meme Ordre Qu'Elles sont Disposees au Dernier Titre du Digeste; Traduites en Francois Avec des Explications & Des Commentaires sur Chaque Regle. Et Trois Tables Tres-Exactes l'Une de Tous les Textes du Droit Rapportes & Expliques dans cet Ouvrage l'Autre des Regles du Droit Rangees por Ordre Alphabetique Selon leur ordre Naturel La 3me. de Toutes les Matieres. Nouvelle Edition Revue & Corrigee. Liege: Chez J. Dessain 1772. lxiv 502 xxxii pp. Quarto 10" x 8-3/4". Nineteenth-century three-quarter calf over paper-covered boards lettering piece and gilt fillets to spine. Some rubbing and faint dampstaining to boards heavier rubbing to extremities with wear to spine ends and corners joints cracked faint crack through center of spine chipping to edges of lettering piece two small later bookplates to front pastedown. Moderate toning to text somewhat heavier in places faint dampstaining to margins of preliminaries. $750. Penultimate edition. The final title of the Digest "De Diversis Regulis Juris Antiqui Concerning Different Rules of Ancient Law" is a collection of 211 maxims derived from Ulpian and other jurists. Dantoine's edition presents the maxims in the original Latin with translations and extensive commentary. First published in 1710 it went through six editions the last in 1775. All are scarce. OCLC locates 3 copies of the 1772 edition in North America Bibliotheque et Archives Nationales du Quebec McGill University UC-Berkeley Law School. Camus Bibliotheque Choisie des Livres de Droit 658. unknown books
1562709451562. Paris 1562. Paris 1562. A Respected Edition of the Novels Justinian I 483-565 CE Emperor of the East. Holoander Gregor 1501-1531 Translator and Editor. Scrimger Henry 1506-1572 Editor and Annotator. Novellarum Constitutionum DN. Iustiniani Principis Volumen Quod Authenticon Vocant Gregorio Haloandro Interprete Ad Scrimgerianam Editionem Diligenter Collatum Ac Sedulo Emendatum: Cui Accesserunt Canones Apostolorum. Feudorum Libri Duo. Constitutiones Lothari III. & Friderichi II. Impp. Extravagantes Henrici VII. Imp. Tractatus de Pace Constantiae: Et Nunc Recens Iustiniani Imperatoris Edicta Henrico Agylaeo Interprete. Paris: Apud Gulielmum Merlin 1562. viii 332 4 ff. Last leaf blank. Octavo 6-1/4" x 4-1/4". Contemporary vellum blind panels enclosing large blind arabesques to boards pastedowns renewed. Negligible light soiling boards slightly bowed spine ends bumped owner signature clipped from upper corner of front free endpaper later owner annotation to following endleaf early owner signature to head of title page. Moderate toning to text a few chips and some edgewear to front endleaves. $1250. Along with the Institutes Code and Digest the Novels is one of the writings known collectively as the Corpus Juris Civilis. The first three books were commissioned by the Justinian I in 530CE. The Code is the restated code of law the Digest is a compilation of legal opinions and the Institutes is an introductory textbook on the Code. The Novels is a compilation of laws enacted after the publication of the Code. The subsequent influence of these books on European jurisprudence is difficult to overestimate. Haloander was one of the great sixteenth-century authorities on Roman law. His edition of the Novels includes the Peace of Constantine Edict of Milan the act that recognized the legitimacy of Christianity in the Roman Empire edicts of the Holy Roman Emperors Henry VII reigned 1165-1197 and Frederick II reigned 1194-1250 and a collection of papal legislation falsely attributed to Pope Clement I reigned 88-99CE the so-called "False Decretals." Adams A Catalogue of Books Printed on the Continent of Europe J685. unknown books