Definition of Postglossator. Meaning of Postglossator. Synonyms of Postglossator

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Postglossator. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Postglossator and, of course, Postglossator synonyms and on the right images related to the word Postglossator.

Definition of Postglossator

No result for Postglossator. Showing similar results...

Meaning of Postglossator from wikipedia

- The postglossators or commentators formed a European legal school which arose in Italy and France in the fourteenth century. They form the highest point...
- Commentator or commentators may refer to: Commentator (historical) or Postglossator, a member of a European legal school that arose in France in the fourteenth...
- jurist, and a leading figure in Medieval Roman Law and the school of Postglossators. A member of the noble family of the Ubaldi (Baldeschi), Baldus was...
- B****i**** Tancred of Bologna Bernard of Botone Decretalist Decretist Postglossator Max-Planck-Institut für europäische Rechtsgeschichte, Frankfurt am Main...
- diffusion of a contractual consensualism. First recognize by glossators and postglossators before the ecclesiastic courts, it's only in the 16th century that civil...
- Medieval Roman Law. He belonged to the school known as the commentators or postglossators. The admiration of later generations of civil lawyers is shown by the...
- with medieval Roman law and incorporated many of its concepts. The postglossators of the 14th century, such as Bartolus de Saxoferato and Baldus de Ubaldis...
- naturalism Political sociology Polycentric law Positive law Positivism Postglossator Prediction theory of law Principles of Islamic jurisprudence Prohibitionism...
- term are contested. In the commentaries of the medieval glossators and postglossators, which took Justinian's Corpus Juris Civilis as their starting point...
- in 1519. Giasone del Maino belonged to the so-called school of the postglossators, who applied Scholastic methodology to both civil and canon law in order...