-
Curia (pl.:
curiae) in
ancient Rome
referred to one of the
original groupings of the citizenry,
eventually numbering 30, and
later every Roman citizen...
- An
amicus curiae (lit. 'friend of the court'; pl. amici
curiae) is an
individual or
organization that is not a
party to a
legal case, but that is permitted...
-
German occupation authorities who
applied an
electoral system of
unequal curiae. The
election produced a City
Council in
which neither the
Polish nor Jewish...
- Acta
Curiae (Latin
meaning "acts of court"), are
records of the
proceedings in
ecclesiastical courts and in quasi-ecclesiastical courts,
particularly of...
- The
Curia Hostilia was one of the
original senate houses or "
curiae" of the
Roman Republic. It was
believed to have
begun as a
temple where the warring...
- In the Holy
Roman Empire, the lex
familiae or ius
curiae (German Hofrecht)
during the
Middle Ages (11th to 15th centuries) was the
legislation concerning...
- served. Historically, in
early English law, a
summons was
called an
auxilium curiae,
although this term is now obsolete.[citation needed] In
England and Wales...
- "court-master" or "house-master" in German; Latin: Magister,
Praefectus curiae; Danish: hofmester, hovmester, Swedish: hovmästare, Czech: hofmistr, Polish:...
-
Court as an
Amicus curiae (friend of the court) in
numerous cases. In
April 2022, the
Supreme Court appointed him as
Amicus curiae to ****ist in the finalization...
- Romulus; each was
divided into ten
curiae, or wards,
which were the
voting units of the
comitia curiata.
Although the
curiae continued throughout Roman history...