- 12th-century
legal schools in Italy,
France and
Germany are
identified as
glossators in a
specific sense. They
studied Roman law
based on the Digesta, the...
- Institute. 2020-10-19.
Retrieved 2021-02-09. "
Glossator 11,
Cristina Campo: translation/commentary".
Glossator. 2021-07-01.
Retrieved 2021-08-06. "The Unforgivable...
- four
famous legal scholars in the 11th
century who were
students of the
glossator school in that city. This
served as the
model for
other law
schools of...
-
Aldred the
Scribe (also
known as
Aldred the
Glossator) is the name by
which scholars identify a tenth-century priest,
otherwise known only as Aldred,...
- (1225–1293) was an
Italian lawyer, the son of the
celebrated jurist and
glossator Accursius. The two are
often confused. Born in Bologna,
Franciscus was...
-
while the
monsters he
battles were
regarded as
moral obstacles. One
glossator noted that when
Hercules became a constellation, he
showed that strength...
- ("lantern of the law"), was an
Italian jurist, and
founder of the
School of
Glossators and thus of the
tradition of
medieval Roman Law. He
taught the
newly recovered...
- 1263,
ending the
early scholastics. The
successors of the
Glossators were the Post-
Glossators or Commentators. They
looked at a
subject in a
logical and...
- Pollen.
Barque Press, 2006. "Tintern Abbey, Once Again," by J. H. Prynne.
Glossator 1 (2009). "Difficulties in the
Translation of 'Difficult' Poems" by J...
-
degrees were doctorates. The
foundations of the
first universities were the
glossators of the 11th century,
which were also
schools of law. The
first university...