A Companion to Justinian's "Institutes"

Ernest Metzger editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Cornell University Press

Published:12th Jan '99

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

A Companion to Justinian's "Institutes" cover

The Corpus Iuris Civilis, a distillation of the entire body of Roman law, was directed by the Emperor Justinian and published in a.d. 533. The Institutes, the briefest of the four works that make up the Corpus, is considered to be the cradle of Roman law and remains the best and clearest introduction to the subject. A Companion to Justinian's "Institutes" will assist the modern-day reader of the Institutes, and is specifically intended to accompany the translation by Peter Birks and Grant McLeod, published by Cornell in 1987.

The book offers an intelligent and lucid guide to the legal concepts in the Institutes. The essays follow its structure and take up its principal subjects—for example, slavery, marriage, property, and capital and noncapital crimes—and give a thorough account of the law relating to each of them. Throughout, the authors explain technical Latin vocabulary and legal terms.

"The various essays address principle subjects discussed in the Institutes and give a description of the passage relating to each subject."—Manuscripta, Vol.42, No.2, July 1998

ISBN: 9780801485848

Dimensions: 241mm x 159mm x 21mm

Weight: 907g

224 pages