of nature and that the praetor in framing an Edictal jurisprudence on the principles of the Jus Gentium was gradually restoring a type from which law had only departed to deteriorate. Roman Law in the Modern World - Page 59by Charles Phineas Sherman - 1922Full view - About this book
| Henry Sumner Maine - Anthropology - 1861 - 432 pages
...Roman lawyers that the old Jus Gentium was in M fact the lost code of Nature, and that the Prrctor in framing an Edictal jurisprudence on the principles...type from which law had only departed to deteriorate. The inference from this belief was immediate that it v was the Praetor's duty to supersede the Civil... | |
| Henry Sumner Maine - Anthropology - 1861 - 432 pages
...jRoman lawyers that the old Jus Gentium was in Ifact the lost code of Nature, and that the Prastor i jin framing an Edictal jurisprudence on the principles...;type from which law had only departed to deteriorate. jThe inference from this belief was immediate that it •was the Praetor's duty to supersede the Civil... | |
| Henry Sumner Maine - Comparative law - 1863 - 460 pages
...belief gradually prevailed among the Roman lawyers that the old Jus Gentium was in fact the lost code of Nature, and that the Praetor in framing an Edictal...type from which law had only departed to deteriorate. The inference from this belief was immediate that it was the Praetor's duty to supersede the Civil... | |
| Henry Sumner Maine - Anthropology - 1864 - 480 pages
...belief gradually prevailed among the Roman lawyers that the old Jus Gentium was in fact the lost code of Nature, and that the Praetor in framing an Edictal...type from which law had only departed to deteriorate. The inference from this belief was immediate that it was the Praetor's duty to supersede the Civil... | |
| Henry Sumner Maine - Anthropology - 1866 - 438 pages
...the Roman lawyers that the old Jus Gentium was in fact the lost code of Nature, and that the Prtetor in framing an Edictal jurisprudence on the principles...type from which law had only departed to deteriorate. The inference from this belief was immediate that it was the Prater's duty to supersede the Civil Law... | |
| John Stuart Mill - History - 1867 - 392 pages
...belief gradually prevailed among the Roman lawyers that the old jus gentium was in fact the lost code of Nature, and that the praetor, in framing an Edictal...from which law had only departed to deteriorate.'! Being observed or recognised universally, these principles were supposed to have a higher origin than... | |
| Henry Sumner Maine - Anthropology - 1867 - 494 pages
....belief grad,iaUy prj^dhjdjmiong 'the Roman lawyers that the old Jua Gentium was in fact the lost code of Nature, and that the Praetor in framing an Edictal jurisprudence on the prin. ciples of the Jus Gentium was gradually restoring a type from which law had only departed to... | |
| Thomas Whitcombe Greene - Roman law - 1872 - 258 pages
...among the Roman lawyers that the jus gentium was, in fact, the lost code of Nature, and that the Prater in framing an Edictal jurisprudence on the principles...type from which law had only departed to deteriorate. . . . The ideas of simplification and DIVISIONS OF ROMAN LAW. 21> 3. Jus civile is the municipal law... | |
| John Francis Arundell Baron Arundell of Wardour - International law - 1872 - 478 pages
...and that the praetors, in framing an edictal jurisprudence on the principles of the jut gentium, were gradually restoring a type from which law had only departed to deteriorate " (p. 56). " But then, while the jus gentium had little or no antecedent credit at Rome, the theory... | |
| John Francis Arundell Baron Arundell of Wardour - Natural law - 1872 - 504 pages
...Roman lawyers, 9 that the old jus gentium was in fact the lost code of nature, and that the praetors, in framing an edictal jurisprudence on the principles of the jus gentium, were gradually restoring a type from which law had only departed to deteriorate " (p. 56). " But then,... | |
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