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How modern was Roman law?
#2
Ave Stefan,

perhaps ‚ius civile’ is the most important connection to the past. While studying German law 20 year ago, I had still much to learn about the Roman roots of civil law in continental Europe. The Romans were the first to make law a discipline of science, developing some very theoretical and abstract ways of thinking…

Ownership, property, achievement of contracts, declarations of intentions, law of successions… For example simply to buy something means in theory two separated kinds of contracts: the purchase contract and the transition of ownership, with lots of problems, if only one part is judged ‘okay’…

Roman law was forgotten for centuries after the Empire was gone. But in later medieval times, their civil law had a come back and dominated the continental legal system, mostly basing on East Roman emperor Iustinian’s ‘Corpus Iuris Civilis’ (6th century A.D.) England, off course :wink: , was going it’s own way, being only partially influenced by Roman law, later causing effects to the US-system of law).

In some Regions of Germany, Roman civil law was still in force until 1900. So even today German lawyers and judges have to learn some basic Latin…and lots of 'dusty' technical terms :wink:
Greetings from germania incognita

Heiko (Cornelius Quintus)

Quantum materiae materietur marmota monax si marmota monax materiam possit materiari?
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Messages In This Thread
How modern was Roman law? - by Eleatic Guest - 06-23-2006, 04:06 PM
Re: How modern was Roman law? - by Cornelius Quintus - 06-23-2006, 10:58 PM

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