Part I. the Legacy of Roman Law
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Spine for Bulletin of Medieval Canon Law
Spine for Bulletin of Medieval Canon Law Top to Bottom Vol. 32 Bulletin of Medieval Canon Law 2015 THE STEPHAN KUTTNER INSTITUTE OF MEDIEVAL CANON LAW MÜNCHEN 2015 BULLETIN OF MEDIEVAL CANON LAW NEW SERIES VOLUME 32 AN ANNUAL REVIEW PUBLISHED BY THE CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY OF AMERICA PRESS FOR THE STEPHAN KUTTNER INSTITUTE OF MEDIEVAL CANON LAW BULLETIN OF MEDIEVAL CANON LAW THE STEPHAN KUTTNER INSTITUTE OF MEDIEVAL CANON LAW MÜNCHEN 2015 BULLETIN OF MEDIEVAL CANON LAW NEW SERIES VOLUME 32 AN ANNUAL REVIEW PUBLISHED BY THE CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY OF AMERICA PRESS FOR THE STEPHAN KUTTNER INSTITUTE OF MEDIEVAL CANON LAW Published annually at the Stephan Kuttner Institute of Medieval Canon Law Editorial correspondence should be addressed to: STEPHAN-KUTTNER INSTITUTE OF MEDIEVAL CANON LAW Professor-Huber-Platz 2 D-80539 München PETER LANDAU, Editor Universität München [email protected] or KENNETH PENNINGTON, Editor The School of Canon Law The Catholic University of America Washington, D.C. 20064 [email protected] Advisory Board PÉTER CARDINAL ERDP PETER LINEHAN Archbishop of Esztergom St. John’s College Budapest Cambridge University JOSÉ MIGUEL VIÉJO-XIMÉNEZ ORAZIO CONDORELLI Universidad de Las Palmas de Università degli Studi Gran Canaria Catania FRANCK ROUMY KNUT WOLFGANG NÖRR Université Panthéon-Assas Universität Tübingen Paris II Inquiries concerning subscriptions or notifications of change of address should be sent to the Bulletin of Medieval Canon Law Subscriptions, PO Box 19966, Baltimore, MD 21211-0966. Notifications can also be sent by email to [email protected] Telephone (410) 516-6987 or 1-800-548-1784 or fax 410-516-3866. -
ABSTRACT the Apostolic Tradition in the Ecclesiastical Histories Of
ABSTRACT The Apostolic Tradition in the Ecclesiastical Histories of Socrates, Sozomen, and Theodoret Scott A. Rushing, Ph.D. Mentor: Daniel H. Williams, Ph.D. This dissertation analyzes the transposition of the apostolic tradition in the fifth-century ecclesiastical histories of Socrates, Sozomen, and Theodoret. In the early patristic era, the apostolic tradition was defined as the transmission of the apostles’ teachings through the forms of Scripture, the rule of faith, and episcopal succession. Early Christians, e.g., Irenaeus, Tertullian, and Origen, believed that these channels preserved the original apostolic doctrines, and that the Church had faithfully handed them to successive generations. The Greek historians located the quintessence of the apostolic tradition through these traditional channels. However, the content of the tradition became transposed as a result of three historical movements during the fourth century: (1) Constantine inaugurated an era of Christian emperors, (2) the Council of Nicaea promulgated a creed in 325 A.D., and (3) monasticism emerged as a counter-cultural movement. Due to the confluence of these sweeping historical developments, the historians assumed the Nicene creed, the monastics, and Christian emperors into their taxonomy of the apostolic tradition. For reasons that crystallize long after Nicaea, the historians concluded that pro-Nicene theology epitomized the apostolic message. They accepted the introduction of new vocabulary, e.g. homoousios, as the standard of orthodoxy. In addition, the historians commended the pro- Nicene monastics and emperors as orthodox exemplars responsible for defending the apostolic tradition against the attacks of heretical enemies. The second chapter of this dissertation surveys the development of the apostolic tradition. -
Marriage in Roman Law
YALE LAW JOURNAL VOL. XVI. MARCH, 1907. No. 5 MARRIAGE IN ROMAN LAW. 'TRANSLATED FROM THE ORIGINAL FRENCH TEXT BY ANDREW I'. BIRRKAN, D. C. L.; EDITED BY CHARLES P. SHERMAN, D. C. L., INSTRUCTOR IN ROMAN LAW, YALE LAW SCHOOL Monogamy was, among the Romans, a traditional custom, ordained by the positive law: Neminem, qui sub dicione sit Romani nominis, binas uxores habere posse vulgo patet, cum et in edicto praetoris huiusmodi viri infamia notati sint. Quam rem covpetensjudex, inultam esse non patietur. (Cod. 5, 5, 2.) In Roman Law, marriage is a status created by a simple pri- vate agreement. Its validity results from this understanding and is absolutely independent of the betrothal which ordinarily precedes, of physical cohabitation (nuptias non concubitus, sed con- sensusfadt, says Ulpian in the Digest), of the festivities or of the religious ceremony by which it may be accompanied; it is finally independent of any settlement which confirms the pecuniary terms of the union and serves as its evidence. However, accord- ing to the opinion of many authors, Roman marriage, even of the last period, was never formed simply by the mere exchange of consents; it presupposed a mode of living characterized by public acts of various kinds. That the concordant wills alone did not suffice is, in the first place, shown by the fact, that marriage may take place outside of the presence of the future husband, providing the bride should be brought to his house; finally, and above all, it could not take place in the absence of the bride, since in this case she could not possibly be at the hus- band's disposal. -
Justinian's Redaction
JUSTINIAN'S REDACTION. "Forhim there are no dry husks of doctrine; each is the vital develop- ment of a living germ. There is no single bud or fruit of it but has an ancestry of thousands of years; no topmost twig that does not greet with the sap drawn from -he dark burrows underground; no fibre torn away from it but has been twisted and strained by historic wheels. For him, the Roman law, that masterpiece of national growth, is no sealed book ..... ... but is a reservoir of doctrine, drawn from the watershed of a world's civilization!'* For to-day's student of law, what worth has the half- dozen years' activity of a few Greek-speakers by the Bos- phorus nearly fourteen centuries ago? Chancellor Kent says: "With most of the European nations, and in the new states of Spanish America, and in one of the United States, it (Roman law) constitutes the principal basis of their unwritten or common law. It exerts a very considerable influence on our own municipal law, and particularly on those branches of it which are of equity and admiralty jurisdiction, or fall within the cognizance of the surrogate or consistorial courts . It is now taught and obeyed not only in France, Spain, Germany, Holland, and Scotland, but in the islands of the Indian Ocean, and on the banks of the Mississippi and St. Lawrence. So true, it seems, are the words of d'Agnesseau, that 'the grand destinies of Rome are not yet accomplished; she reigns throughout the world by her reason, after having ceased to reign by her authority?'" And of the honored jurists whose names are carved on the stones of the Law Building of the University of Pennsyl- vania another may be cited as viewing the matter from a different standpoint. -
An Eirenicon
THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND A PORTION OF CHRIST’S ONE HOLY CATHOLIC CHURCH, AND A MEANS OF RESTORING VISIBLE UNITY. AN EIRENICON, In a Letter TO THE AUTHOR OF “THE CHRISTIAN YEAR.” BY E. B. PUSEY, D.D., REGIUS PROFESSOR OF HEBREW, AND CANON OF CHRIST CHURCH, OXFORD. NEW YORK: D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, 1866 Project Canterbury AD 2003 An Eirenicon, by Edward Bouverie Pusey (1866) MY DEAREST FRIEND, You think that, Dr. Manning’s last letter having been addressed to myself, it is desirable that I should in some way reply to it. It would cost me much, not to undertake any task which you might wish me to essay. You know how long it has been my wish to part with all controversy, and to consecrate the evening of my life to the unfolding of some of the deep truths of God’s Holy Word, as God might enable me, by aid of those whom He has taught in times past. This employment, and practical duties which God has brought to me, were my ideal of the employments of the closing years of a laborious life. The inroad made upon the Gospel by unbelievers, or half-believers, compelled me in part to modify this my hope. Still, since there is a common foe, pressing alike upon all who believe in Jesus, I the more hoped, at least, to be freed from any necessity of controversy with any who hold the Catholic faith. The recent personal appeal of Dr. Manning to myself seems, as you and other friends think, to call for an exception to this too; yet, since “the night cometh when no man can work,” I trust that I shall not be thought to shrink from duty, if, hereafter, I should maintain a silence, in order to give myself to that which seems to me more especially my calling. -
Catalog 2019-2020
Catalog 2019-2020 1 Calendar 2019-2020 FALL SEMESTER August 19-23 Orientation for New Students August 25-30 Third Year Retreat August 258-30 Fall Seminary Retreat September 2 Fall Semester Begins September 4 Mass of the Holy Spirit September 4 Candidacy September 14-15 Family Weekend October 18-21 Long Weekend October 25-27 Exploring Priesthood Weekend November 4 Institution of Lector Nov 22-Dec 1 Thanksgiving Break Begins (after classes) December 2 Classes Resume December 9 Patronal Feast Day/Prayer Day (no classes) December 20 Semester Break (after classes) SPRING SEMESTER January 13 Spring Semester Begins January 24-25 Exploring Priesthood Weekend February 1 Pastoral Internship Begins February 14-17 Long Weekend March 20-22 Exploring Priesthood Weekend April 3 Easter Break Begins (after classes) April 14 Classes Resume May 1 Last Day of Classes May 2 University Convocation May 9 Diaconate (Chicago) May 16 Priesthood Ordination (Chicago) SUMMER June 8-July 17 STL/Liturgical Institute, M.A.P.S. Programs 2 Table of Contents Academic Calendar Inside Cover History 4 Chancellor 6 University Administration 7 Directories Faculty 8 Adjunct/Visiting Faculty 21 Pastoral Internship Supervisors 22 Diocese and Bishops Represented 23 Board of Advisors 24 Administration and Staff 26 Mission Statements/Objectives 31 Accreditation and Affiliations 33 Association of Chicago Theological Schools 33 The Northside Chicago Theological Institute 34 Margaret and Chester Paluch Professor 35 Albert Cardinal Meyer Lectureship 36 James and Mary Perry Jr., Chair of Theology 37 Cardinal George Chair of Faith and Science 38 Professor Emerita of Dogmatic Theology 39 General Information Campus 40 Welcome Center/Bookstore 40 Library 40 Other Facilities 40 Admissions to Mundelein Seminary 41 Tuition and other Financial Matters 42 Mundelein’s Pilgrimage Program 43 Inter Cultural Competencies 44 Formation Spiritual Life 45 Human Formation 46 Intellectual Life 46 Collaboration 46 Fraternity 47 Stewardship 47 Academic Regulations 49 Academic Programs Pre-Theology 54 Pre-Theology M.A. -
Staging Morality: Studies in the Lex Iulia De Adulteriis of 18 BCE
Staging Morality: Studies in the Lex Iulia de Adulteriis of 18 BCE by Mary Alana Deminion B.A., University of Victoria, 2007 B.A., University of Ottawa, 2001 A Thesis Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of MASTER OF ARTS in the Department of Greek and Roman Studies Mary Alana Deminion University of Victoria All rights reserved. This thesis may not be reproduced in whole or in part, by photocopy or other means, without the permission of the author. ii Supervisory Committee Staging Morality: Studies in the Lex Iulia de Adulteriis of 18 BCE by Mary Alana Deminion B.A., University of Victoria, 2007 B.A., University of Ottawa, 2001 Dr. Gregory D. Rowe, Supervisor (Department of Greek and Roman Studies) Dr. Cedric A. J. Littlewood, Departmental Member (Department of Greek and Roman Studies) iii Abstract Supervisory Committee Dr. Gregory D. Rowe, Supervisor (Department of Greek and Roman Studies) Dr. Cedric A. J. Littlewood, Departmental Member (Department of Greek and Roman Studies) The lex Iulia de adulteriis of 18 BCE, which for the first time made adultery a criminal offence and created a standing court, was touted by the Augustan regime as a return to the moral customs of the Republican past. However, the new reform in fact represented a significant shift away from the traditional authority of the Roman paterfamilias to punish transgressions privately at his discretion and towards the legal power of the emperor and Senate to define and regulate morality on a public scale. Using a variety of primary source evidence, I explore the provisions of the adultery law and place the resulting criminal trials within the context of public staging of the Roman aristocracy. -
NPNF2-03. Theodoret, Jerome, Gennadius, & Rufinus
NPNF2-03. Theodoret, Jerome, Gennadius, & Rufinus: Historical Writings by Philip Schaff About NPNF2-03. Theodoret, Jerome, Gennadius, & Rufinus: Historical Writings by Philip Schaff Title: NPNF2-03. Theodoret, Jerome, Gennadius, & Rufinus: Historical Writings URL: http://www.ccel.org/ccel/schaff/npnf203.html Author(s): Schaff, Philip (1819-1893) Publisher: Grand Rapids, MI: Christian Classics Ethereal Library Print Basis: New York: Christian Literature Publishing Co., 1892 Source: Logos Inc. Rights: Public Domain Status: This volume has been carefully proofread and corrected. CCEL Subjects: All; Proofed; Early Church; LC Call no: BR60 LC Subjects: Christianity Early Christian Literature. Fathers of the Church, etc. NPNF2-03. Theodoret, Jerome, Gennadius, & Rufinus: Philip Schaff Historical Writings Table of Contents About This Book. p. ii Title Page.. p. 1 Preface.. p. 2 The Ecclesiastical History, Dialogues, and Letters of Theodoret.. p. 3 Title Page.. p. 3 Translator©s Preface.. p. 3 Chronological Tables to accompany the History and Life of Theodoret.. p. 4 Prolegomena.. p. 9 Parentage, Birth, and Education.. p. 9 Episcopate at Cyrus.. p. 13 Relations with Nestorius and to Nestorianism.. p. 15 Under the Ban of Theodosius and of the Latrocinium.. p. 19 Theodoret and Chalcedon.. p. 22 Retirement after Chalcedon, and Death.. p. 24 The Condemnation of ªthe Three Chapters.º. p. 26 The Works of Theodoret.. p. 28 Contents and Character of the Extant Works.. p. 30 Manuscripts and Editions of Separate Works.. p. 41 The Anathemas of Cyril in Opposition to Nestorius.. p. 42 Counter-statements of Theodoret.. p. 43 The Ecclesiastical History of Theodoret.. p. 52 Book I. p. 52 Prologue.--Design of the History. -
Christian Emperos' Attitude Towards Concubinage
Person and Family in Roman law and in tradition of European law Edited by: Sebastiano Tafaro, Onorato Bucci, Florian Lempa Persona e Famiglia nel diritto romano e nelle radici dei diritti dell'Europa A cura di: Sebastiano Tafaro, Onorato Bucci, Florian Lempa Taranto - Warszawa 2009 Review I Recensione: Teresa Mróz Redaction I Redazione: Ireneusz St. Bruski, Maria Casola, Sławomir Kursa, Krzysztof Szczygielski, Valentina Perrone Cover by I Copertina: Andrzej Mierzyński Correction I Correzione: Ewa Trąbińska, Krzysztof Pykel ISBN 978-83-930564-0-8 Editore Nunzio Varmence © Articles and translations are published in versions delivered by Autors © Le relazioni e le loro traduzioni sono state pubblicate nelle versioni consegnate dagli Autori 5 Contents I lndice Introduction I Introduzione First part: Person I Parte prima: Persona Sebastiano Tafaro, N ascita e formazione del termine persona ........................... 11 lolanda Palazzo, Common law ed equitylaw e tutela della persona fratradi- zione giuridica anglo-sassone e tradizione giuridica romano-canonica ............... 45 Fiore Fontanarosa, I diritti fondamentali della persona nel nuovo Trattato dell'Unione europea e le sue radici cristiane ........................................................ 85 Florian Lempa, Uomo (persoha umana) come soggetto di diritto nell'insegnamento di Giovanni Paolo II ............................................................. 101 Mirella Mazzeo, Filius familias-persona e sua presenza nel mondo del lavoro nella Roma antica ................................................................................... -
History 2080 (Formerly 2126) Law 96730–31 (Medieval Law) (Legal History Seminar: the “Common Law” of the European Continent)
MEDIEVAL LAW Spring 2011 The “Learned Law”: 1000-1600 Spring 2011 Tentative Syllabus and Assignments History 2080 (formerly 2126) Law 96730–31 (Medieval Law) (Legal History Seminar: The “Common Law” of the European Continent) Professor Donahue Spring, 2013 Requirements Week 3 Week 6 Week 9 Week 12 Week 1 Week 4 Week 7 Week 10 Papers Week 2 Week 5 Week 8 Week 11 Requirements If you have not taken Medieval Studies 119 (=Law 42100–31) (or had equivalent preparation elsewhere), you should attend the lectures in that course (Mon. and Wed. at 11:00) in the Yard, room Sever 102. Law students should sign up for an hour of “optional written work,” unless you are writing your third-year paper in conjunction with this seminar. It would also be useful for you to attend the “section” for graduate and law students in that course (Tues. 10:40–12:00) [room WCC 3018]. The sessions of this reading course will focus on the “primary readings” listed below in the light of the “secondary readings.” The primary materials will come either from my “coursepack,” Documents on Continental Legal History (Mats.), or from xeroxes or online documents that I will provide. A research paper is not required (except for those law students who are doing their third-year papers in conjunction with this seminar). Rather, you should prepare three five-page papers each focusing on one or more of the texts to be discussed in the seminar. (More on this requirement below under “Papers.”) Syllabus: Normally, this syllabus is quite loose. I have in the past accommodated particular interests of the participants in the seminar. -
The Establishment of a Rule Against Hearsay in Romano-Canonical Procedure Frank R
Boston College Law School Digital Commons @ Boston College Law School Boston College Law School Faculty Papers January 1995 The Establishment of a Rule Against Hearsay in Romano-Canonical Procedure Frank R. Herrmann Boston College Law School, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://lawdigitalcommons.bc.edu/lsfp Part of the Criminal Law Commons, Criminal Procedure Commons, and the Evidence Commons Recommended Citation Frank R. Herrmann. "The Establishment of a Rule Against Hearsay in Romano-Canonical Procedure." Virginia Journal of International Law 36, (1995): 1-51. This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Commons @ Boston College Law School. It has been accepted for inclusion in Boston College Law School Faculty Papers by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Boston College Law School. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The Establishment of a Rule Against Hearsay in Romano Canonical Procedure FRANK R. HERRMANN, S.J.::: I. INTRODUcrIONl Anglo-American evaluations of the hearsay rule manifest a cer tain schizophrenia. On the one hand, hearsay is praised as the "greatest contribution" of Anglo-American law to the world's jurisprudence? According to proponents of the rule, the hearsay bar provides a salutary mechanism to judges who are distrustful of the abilities and fairness of the jury.3 By barring hearsay. the judge, as gatekeeper of the evidence, can prevent the jury. an "untrained tribunal,"4 from overestimating the value of hearsay statements that may be unreliable.s * Assistant Professor of Law, Boston College Law School. For their helpful re.. iews of earlier drafts of this Article, the author is grateful to Aviam Soifer, Dean and Professor at Boston College Law School; Professors Ingrid M. -
Sacramental Woes and Theological Anxiety in Medieval Representations of Marriage
University of Pennsylvania ScholarlyCommons Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations 2016 When Two Become One: Sacramental Woes And Theological Anxiety In Medieval Representations Of Marriage Elizabeth Churchill University of Pennsylvania, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations Part of the English Language and Literature Commons, and the Religion Commons Recommended Citation Churchill, Elizabeth, "When Two Become One: Sacramental Woes And Theological Anxiety In Medieval Representations Of Marriage" (2016). Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations. 2229. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/2229 This paper is posted at ScholarlyCommons. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/2229 For more information, please contact [email protected]. When Two Become One: Sacramental Woes And Theological Anxiety In Medieval Representations Of Marriage Abstract This dissertation traces the long, winding, and problematic road along which marriage became a sacrament of the Church. In so doing, it identifies several key problems with marriage’s ability to fulfill the sacramental criteria laid out in Peter Lombard’s Sentences: that a sacrament must signify a specific form of divine grace, and that it must directly bring about the grace that it signifies. While, on the basis of Ephesians 5, theologians had no problem identifying the symbolic power of marriage with the spiritual union of Christ and the Church, they never fully succeeded in locating a form of effective grace, placing immense stress upon marriage’s status as a signifier. As a result, theologians and canonists found themselves unable to deal with several social aspects of marriage that threatened this symbolic capacity, namely concubinage and the remarriage of widows and widowers.