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LES FACULTÉS DE DROIT FRANÇAISES AU Xvr SIÈCLE ÉLÉMENTS DE BIBLIOGRAPHIE (2E Partie)
LES FACULTÉS DE DROIT FRANÇAISES AU xvr SIÈCLE ÉLÉMENTS DE BIBLIOGRAPHIE (2e partie) Nous poursuivons la publication de la bibliographie de M. Jean Louis Thireau, Maître de conférences à l'Université de Paris XII (1). Faculté de droit de Cahors Articles • BAUDEL M.-J., MALINOWSKI J.-Ph., ((Histoire de l'Université de Cahors», Bull. Soc. Etudes litt., sci. artist. Lot, t. 2 (1875), p. 135-192, 288-320; t. 3 (1876), p. 201-240, 273-300; t. 4 (1878), p. 126-176. • BAUDEL M.-J., « François Roaldès, docteur régent de l'Université de Cahors (1513-1589), biographie», Bull. Soc. Etudes litt., sci, artist. Lot, t. 3 (1876), p. 190-200. • BRESSOLES G., « Un manuscrit de François Roaldès, professeur à l'Université de Cahors, sur le droit de fouage », Rec. Acad. Législ. Toulouse, t. 27 (1878), p. 302-314. ·• CAILLEMER E., « Etude sur Antoine de Govéa », Mém. Acad. impé riale Sei., Arts Belles Lettres Caen, 1865, p. 79-120. • SERRAO J.-V., «Antonio de Gouveia e o seu tempo», Boletim da Faculdade de Direito da Universidade de Coimbra, t. 42 (1966), p. 25-224; t. 43 (1967), p. 1-131. • « Texte d'un contrat passé en 1585 entre l'Université de Cahors et François Roaldès par lequel ce dernier s'engageait à professer pen dant neuf ans le droit civil et le droit canon dans cette Université», Rec. Acad. Législ. Toulouse, t. 10 (1861), p. 545-548. (1) V. la première partie, cette revue, 1987, n° 5, pp. 101 ss. 178 REVUE D'HISTOIRE DES FACULTÉS DE DROIT Faculté de droit de Dole Ouvrages • APPLETON Ch., Coup d'œil bibliographique sur deux jurisconsultes français du XVI• siècle. -
Conférence 24-03-2015
TRAVAUX DE NOS ADHERENTS QUAND L'ESPRIT DE LA RENAISSANCE SOUFFLAIT SUR TOULOUSE... 10 A Toulouse, 1'arch itecture et la décoration des hôtels particuliers sont autant de témoignages de l' esprit de la Renaissance comme l'a montré Bruno Tollon, professeur honoraire d 'histoire de 1'art, lors d 'une conférence donnée ici-même le 22 mars 2014. Ce soir, je vous proposerai une toute autre approche : nous ferons la traversée du XVIe siècle guidés par trois figures emblématiques de 1'humanisme toulousain, Jean de Pins, Jean de Coras et Mathieu de Chalvet. Nous arriverons jusqu'au début du XVIIe siècle car l'esprit de la Renaissance n'est pas limité. Jean de Pins Nous commencerons chronologiquement par Jean de Pins, prélat, diplomate et homme de lettres. Né en 1470 au château familial11 situé non loin de Muret, il manifeste très tôt un goût pour l' étude contrairement à ses frères qui se distinguent dans la carrière des armes. Il commence ses études à l'université de Toulouse et les poursuit en fréquentant celles de Cahors, Bourges et Paris. En 1497, il règle généreusement 1' héritage familial en faveur de son frère aîné Barthélémy en lui cédant ses droits sur les terres de Pins et de Muret en échange d'une rente de 300 livres tournois. Il peut ainsi étancher sa soif de connaissance en Italie et se rend à Venise, à Padoue et à Ferrare. Mais c'est à Bologne, siège de la plus ancienne université d'Europe fondée en 1088 et réputée pour l' étude du droit romain qu'il suit un double cursus littéraire et juridique pendant deux années où il obtient le doctorat en droit canon. -
Scholars and Literati at the University of Valence (1452–1793)
Repertorium Eruditorum Totius Europae - RETE (2021) 2:13–20 13 https://doi.org/10.14428/rete.v2i0/Valence Licence CC BY-SA 4.0 Scholars and Literati at the University of Valence (1452–1793) David de la Croix Alice Fabre IRES/LIDAM, UCLouvain AMSE, Marseille This note is a summary description of the set of scholars and literati who taught at the University of Valence (France) from its inception in 1452 to its abolishment during the French Revolution in 1793. 1 The University The University of Valence was founded in 1452, thanks to the pugnacity of the city’s consuls (al- dermen) and the will of the French Dauphin Louis, future Louis XI, who liked to stay in the region. In its early days, the university recruited several law professors from Italy. It reached its golden age in the 16th century, thanks to eminent jurists, like Cujas, who specialized in civil law and legal humanism, while being strongly shaken by outbreaks of plague and the religious wars; Valence was one of the rst French centers of Calvinism. In 1565, it absorbed the neighboring rival university, located in Grenoble, but ended up declining, due to conicts, and a lack of means and attractiveness, while training local jurists and trying to attract famous professors, mainly in law. “The abolition of the university in 1793 only conrmed its current state of aairs.” (Guénée 1981) 2 Sources The main source is Nadal (1861), which traces the history of the university since its creation, based on remaining archival documents. Two important bibliographic complements are the Dictionnaire biographique du département de la Drôme by Brun-Durand (1901), a biographical dictionary in two volumes which provides the portraits of illustrious individuals, mainly born in the department, and the historical dictionary of French jurists (12th-20th centuries) by Arabeyre, Halpérin, and Krynen (2007). -
Social Context for Religious Violence in the French Massacres of 1572
Wright State University CORE Scholar Browse all Theses and Dissertations Theses and Dissertations 2010 Social Context for Religious Violence in the French Massacres of 1572 Shannon L. Speight Wright State University Follow this and additional works at: https://corescholar.libraries.wright.edu/etd_all Part of the Arts and Humanities Commons Repository Citation Speight, Shannon L., "Social Context for Religious Violence in the French Massacres of 1572" (2010). Browse all Theses and Dissertations. 370. https://corescholar.libraries.wright.edu/etd_all/370 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Theses and Dissertations at CORE Scholar. It has been accepted for inclusion in Browse all Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of CORE Scholar. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Social Context for Religious Violence in the French Massacres of 1572 A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Humanities By SHANNON LEE SPEIGHT B.A., University of Texas at Arlington, 2005 2010 Wright State University WRIGHT STATE UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF GRADUATE STUDIES July 8, 2010 I HEREBY RECOMMEND THAT THE THESIS PREPARED UNDER MY SUPERVISION BY Shannon Lee Speight ENTITLED Social Context for Religious Violence in the French Massacres of 1572 BE ACCEPTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF Master of Humanities, ____________________________________ Kirsten Halling, Ph.D. Co-Thesis Director ____________________________________ Ava Chamberlain, Ph.D. Co-Thesis Director ____________________________________ Ava Chamberlain, Ph.D. Director, Master of Humanities Program Committee on Final Examination _______________________________ Kirsten Halling, Ph.D. Committee Member _______________________________ Ava Chamberlain, Ph.D. -
Bio-Bibliographical Note
Bio-bibliographical Note ABBAS PANORMITANUS Niccolo` de’ Tedeschi or Tudeschi (Catania, 1386 – Palermo, 24 February 1445) – A Benedictine, he was among the most eminent canonists of his day. A disciple of Zabarella in Bologna, he taught canon law at several studia in Parma, Siena, Bologna, and Florence, and earned the epithet Lucerna iuris. In 1435 he was at the Council of Basel, among the envoys of Pope Eugene IV, to uphold the theses through which to dismantle the council, even though in the Tractatus de concilio Basiliensi, written specifically for the occasion, he argued for the doctrine of the supremacy of the council over the pope. When Eugene IV was declared deposed by the antipope Felix V, Tedeschi allied himself with the latter, who commissioned him to draft the Decretals for the application of the decrees of the Councils of Constance and Basel. At the Diet of Frankfurt, he upheld the theses of the council against Nicholas of Cusa. Lectura super I. et II. libris Decretalium, Venetiis 1473 [Vindelini (de Spira) labore]. ABBEN EZRA Abraham ben Meir ibn Ezra (Tudela, Navarra, 1092 – Calahorra (?), 23 or 28 January 1167) – A Jewish poet, grammarian, and commentator, he travelled extensively through Europe, England, North Africa, and Palestine. Of enduring importance are his commentaries on the Bible and his edition of the Hebrew Bible. ACCURSIUS Accursio da Bagnolo (Impruneta, 1184 – Bologna, 1263) – A glossator of Floren- tine birth, he taught at the University of Bologna. He was the author of the so-called Magna Glossa, the collection of all major glosses (some 97,000 of them) issued by the School of Bologna over a century of teaching and exegesis of the Justinian texts: these glosses he organized and arranged in the margins of the legal text itself. -
See B. Gordon, the Swiss Reformation (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2002), 283–316
Notes Introduction 1. For ‘International Zwinglianism’ see B. Gordon, The Swiss Reformation (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2002), 283–316. D. MacCulloch, Reformation. Europe’s House Divided, 1490–1700 (London: Penguin, 2003), 253. 2. H. Oberman, ‘Calvin and Farel: the dynamics of legitimation in early Calvinism’, Journal of Early Modern History 2 (1998), 35. P. Benedict, Christ’s Churches Purely Reformed. A Social History of Calvinism (New Haven [CT]: Yale University Press, 2002), xxii–xxiii. 3. ‘Approbatae Constitutiones’, in Magyar Törvénytár. 1500–1848 évi erdélyi törvények (eds) S. Kolozsvári, K. Óvári, D. Márkus (Budapest, 1900), ‘Pars prima’, article 1/1/2. Chapter 1: Reformed Ideas 1. John Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion (Geneva, 1559) (ed.) H. Beveridge (2 vols), (Edinburgh: Calvin Translation Society, 1845), vol. 1, preface. For Calvin’s sermons, see for example Sermons of Maister John Calvin upon the Booke of Job (tr.) Arthur Golding (London, 1574). A. Ganoczy, The Young Calvin (Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1988). Q. Breen, John Calvin: a study in French humanism (London: Archon, 1968). F. Wendel, Calvin. The origins and development of his religious thought (London: Collins, 1963). 125 126 NOTES 2. P. McNair, Peter Martyr in Italy. An anatomy of apostasy (Oxford: Clarendon, 1967). F. C. Church, The Italian Reformers, 1534–1564 (New York: Columbia University Press, 1932). 3. J. P. Donnelly, Calvinism and Scholasticism in Vermigli’s doctrine of man and grace (Leiden: Brill, 1976). R. A. Muller, The Unaccommodated Calvin. Studies in the foundation of a theological tradition (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000). D. Steinmetz, Calvin in Context (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995). -
University Microfilms International
INFORMATION TO USERS This was produced from a copy of a document sent to us for microfilming. While the most advanced technological means to photograph and reproduce this document have been used, the quality is heavily dependent upon the quality of the material subm itted. The following explanation of techniques is provided to help you understand markings or notations which may appear on this reproduction. 1. The sign or “target” for pages apparently lacking from the document photographed is “Missing Page(s)’’. If it was possible to obtain the missing page(s) or section, they are spliced into the film along with adjacent pages. This may have necessitated cutting through an image and duplicating adjacent pages to assure you of complete continuity. 2. When an image on the film is obliterated with a round black mark it is an indication that the film inspector noticed either blurred copy because of movement during exposure, or duplicate copy. Unless we meant to delete copyrighted materials that should not have been filmed, you will find a good image of the page in the adjacent frame. If copyrighted materials were deleted you will find a target note listing the pages in the adjacent frame. 3. When a map, drawing or chart, etc., is part of the material being photo graphed the photographer has followed a definite method in “sectioning” the material. It is customary to begin filming at the upper left hand corner of a large sheet and to continue from left to right in equal sections with small overlaps. If necessary, sectioning is continued again—beginning below the first row and continuing on until complete. -
Scholars and Literati at the University of Valence (1452–1793)
Repertorium Eruditorum Totius Europae - RETE (2021) 2:13–20 13 https://doi.org/10.14428/rete.v2i0/Valence Licence CC BY-SA 4.0 Scholars and Literati at the University of Valence (1452–1793) David de la Croix Alice Fabre IRES/LIDAM, UCLouvain AMSE, Marseille This note is a summary description of the set of scholars and literati who taught at the University of Valence (France) from its inception in 1452 to its abolishment during the French Revolution in 1793. 1 The University The University of Valence was founded in 1452, thanks to the pugnacity of the city’s consuls (al- dermen) and the will of the French Dauphin Louis, future Louis XI, who liked to stay in the region. In its early days, the university recruited several law professors from Italy. It reached its golden age in the 16th century, thanks to eminent jurists, like Cujas, who specialized in civil law and legal humanism, while being strongly shaken by outbreaks of plague and the religious wars; Valence was one of the rst French centers of Calvinism. In 1565, it absorbed the neighboring rival university, located in Grenoble, but ended up declining, due to conicts, and a lack of means and attractiveness, while training local jurists and trying to attract famous professors, mainly in law. “The abolition of the university in 1793 only conrmed its current state of aairs.” (Guénée 1981) 2 Sources The main source is Nadal (1861), which traces the history of the university since its creation, based on remaining archival documents. Two important bibliographic complements are the Dictionnaire biographique du département de la Drôme by Brun-Durand (1900), a biographical dictionary in two volumes which provides the portraits of illustrious individuals, mainly born in the department, and the historical dictionary of French jurists (12th-20th centuries) by Arabeyre, Halpérin, and Krynen (2007). -
KJ HISTORY of LAW (EUROPE) KJ History of Law
KJ HISTORY OF LAW (EUROPE) KJ History of law (Europe) Class here general and comprehensive works on legal and constitutional history of the region including the legal history of ancient/early nations of the region For legal history of an individual jurisdiction, see the jurisdiction For common law in Europe see KJA1935+ For history of an individual branch of the law see KJC2+ 2 Bibliography <6> Periodicals For periodicals consisting chiefly of articles on the history and development of the law in Europe see K1+ For periodicals consisting predominantly of articles on Germanic law see KJ166 For periodicals consisting predominantly of articles on Roman law see KJA6 54 Encyclopedias 56 Law dictionaries. Terms and phrases. Vocabularies Methodology see KJ195+; KJA190+ Auxiliary sciences 74 General works 75 Diplomatics 76 Paleography Papyrology see KJA190+ 77 Linguistics. Semantics 78 Archaeology. Symbolism in law Class here general works on various manifestations of legal symbolism (80) Inscriptions. Epigraphy see KJ195; KJA190+ 83 Heraldry. Seals. Flags. Insignia. Armory 100 Proverbs. Legal maxims. Brocardica. Regula juris (102) Symbolism in law see KJ78 Formularies (History of law) see KJ615+ Formularies (Roman law) see KJA105 Law and lawyers in literature see subclasses PB-PZ Biography of lawyers Collective For collective national biography, see the subclass for the country 122 General biography 124 Collections of portraits Individual see the subclass for the country of the biographee 135 Congresses. Seminars. By date of the congress 1 KJ HISTORY OF LAW (EUROPE) KJ 147 General works Class here general works on law development, and comparisons (actual comparisons and parallel presentations) of ancient/ early legal systems in Europe, with or without canon law Including compends, essays, festschriften, etc.