-
Leges (plural of
Latin lex: law) may
refer to: Laws (dialogue) Plato's last and
longest dialogue Leges regiae,
early Roman laws
introduced by the Kings...
- A
leg is a weight-bearing and
locomotive anatomical structure,
usually having a
columnar shape.
During locomotion,
legs function as "extensible struts"...
-
constitutions for
provinces became more
common after the
advent of the
leges provinciae,
having a
leges provinciae was not a
necessary condition for the
Romans exercising...
-
commonalities between the
various law
codes (the
Leges Barbarorum, 'laws of the barbarians', also
called Leges) of the
early Germanic peoples.
These were compared...
- administrators.
Besides the
Leges,
other works of this type
produced at this time were the Quadripartitus,
parts of the
Leges Edwardi Regis, the Instituta...
- (plural:
leges Juliae) was an
ancient Roman law that was
introduced by any
member of the gens Julia. Most often, "Julian laws", lex
Julia or
leges Juliae...
-
Palma on 9 May 1337. The
Leges were
probably conceived to lend
weight to James's
position as an
independent king. The
Leges are
preserved in an illuminated...
-
others are the
Willelmi articuli decem, Leis Willelme, and
Leges Henrici Primi. The
Leges Edwardi is not
directly based upon any
known sources of preconquest...
- The
Leges Antoniae (lit. 'Antonine's laws') were an
ensemble of
Roman laws p****ed by Mark
Antony in the
aftermath of the ********ination of
Julius Caesar...
-
Inter arma enim
silent leges is a
Latin phrase that
literally means "For
among arms, the laws are silent" but is more po****rly
rendered as "In times...