- The
Visigothic Code (Latin:
Forum Iudi****,
Liber Iudiciorum, or Book of the Judgements; Spanish:
Fuero Juzgo), also
called Lex
Visigothorum (English: Law...
- in 1241 by
Fernando III. It is
essentially a
translation of the
Liber Iudiciorum that was
formulated in 654 by the Visigoths. The
Fuero Juzgo was first...
-
chosen by
primitive Castilians to
avoid the
implementation of
liber iudiciorum by
Leonese court. It was
based on
local customary law or fazaƱas. "Los...
- The
Visigothic Code of Law (Latin:
Forum Iudi****), also
called Liber Iudiciorum (English: Book of the Judges) and Lex
Visigothorum (English: Law of the...
-
Recceswinth was
responsible for the
promulgation of a law code,
Liber Iudiciorum, to
replace the
Breviary of Alaric; he
placed a
Visigothic common law...
-
Ferdinand III
granted the city a
fuero in 1241; it was
based on the
Liber Iudiciorum and in the
customs of Toledo, yet
formulated in an
original way. Unlike...
-
legal code
known in
Western Europe as the
Visigothic Code (Latin:
Liber Iudiciorum),
which would become the
basis for
Spanish law
throughout the
Middle Ages...
-
compulsares vel executores. In the
later Visigothic laws, like the
Liber Iudiciorum, they go by
various titles:
compulsor exercitus,
servus dominicus, or...
-
compilers are the
canons of the
Visigothic Councils of Toledo, the
Liber Iudiciorum, the
decrees of some
early popes and
other patristic writings, historical...
- encyclopaedist. Nevertheless, it was the
Gothic basis of the
later Liber Iudiciorum, an
Hispanian law code
which united it with the law code of the Hispano-Roman...