Justinian's Digest 9.2.51 in the Western Legal Canon

Justinian's Digest 9.2.51 in the Western Legal Canon

EnglishPaperback / softback
Ernst Wolfgang
Intersentia Ltd
EAN: 9781780688329
On order
Delivery on Friday, 24. of January 2025
€54.74
Common price €60.82
Discount 10%
pc
Do you want this product today?
Oxford Bookshop Banská Bystrica
not available
Oxford Bookshop Bratislava
not available
Oxford Bookshop Košice
not available

Detailed information

Justinian 's Digest, enacted 533 CE, collects excerpts of high-calibre writings from Roman legal intellectuals, produced in the first and second centuries CE. Since the High Middle Ages it has been used as a quarry of legal concepts and doctrines. Concerning the liabilities of two consecutive attackers, the first of whom mortally wounds the victim, while the second finishes the job and leaves the victim dead, the Digest preserves two conflicting texts: Celsus (67130 CE) held that the second attacker is liable, under the relevant statute (the lex Aquilia), for killing, whereas the first attacker should be liable for wounding only. Julian (ca 110ca 175 CE), in contrast, advocated holding both attackers liable as killers.To the present day, commentators on Justinian's Digest have been challenged to make sense of the conflict between these two statements. Ever more elaborate interpretations have been advanced, unlocking a range of diverse issues of causality and evidence, deterrence and statutory interpretation. Like few other texts from Roman lawyers, Julians essay (D. 9.2.51), mirrored in a colourful spectrum of intellectual responses, emerged as a signature piece of the western legal canon.Focussed on the history of one case, this book provides an exhaustive review of past and present interpretations and makes for a historiography of Roman law scholarship, from its medieval beginnings to our contemporary research activities.
EAN 9781780688329
ISBN 1780688326
Binding Paperback / softback
Publisher Intersentia Ltd
Publication date July 5, 2019
Pages 180
Language English
Dimensions 229 x 152 x 10
Country United Kingdom
Readership General
Authors ERNST WOLFGANG