[NetGold] HISTORY: ANCIENT: ROMAN : LAW: HISTORY: Roman Law Resources

From: David P. Dillard (jwne@astro.ocis.temple.edu)
Date: Sun May 16 2004 - 07:37:50 PDT


Date: Sun, 16 May 2004 10:33:22 -0400 (EDT)
From: David P. Dillard <jwne@temple.edu>
Reply-To: NetGold@yahoogroups.com
To: NetGold <NetGold@yahoogroups.com>
Subject: [NetGold] HISTORY: ANCIENT: ROMAN : LAW: HISTORY: Roman Law
    Resources

HISTORY: ANCIENT: ROMAN : LAW: HISTORY: Roman Law Resources

Roman Law Resources
Edited by Ernest Metzger, University of Aberdeen
<http://www.iuscivile.com/>

Website Table of Contents

*Notices

*Materials

Literature
Sources
Reviews
Bibliographies
Teaching Materials
Electronic Reprints
Justinian's Digest: corrections to the English translation
Errata in Roman law books
Palingenesia of Latin Private Rescripts
    193-305 AD. From the accession of Pertinax to the
    abdication of Diocletian. By Professor Tony Honor.
    Prepared to accompany Emperors and Lawyers, 2nd ed.
    (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994).
    A fully searchable database.
Palingenesia of Latin Laws
    Laws of Eastern Emperors 379-450 AD and of
    Western Emperors 383-455 AD.
    By Professor Tony Honor. Prepared to accompany
    Law in the Crisis of Empire, 379-455 AD
    (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998).
    A fully searchable database.

*Information

Historians of ancient law
Antiquarian booksellers
Portals
    An index of internet portals for Roman, civil, and ancient law,
    as well as a small number of internal portals for classical antiquity
    and the middle ages.
Projects
Forthcoming events
Past events
Journals
IusCivile Forum
Discussion
CD-ROMs on Antiquity
Sepulchra Vinculorum
    Your help in restoring these broken links will be appreciated.

*University of Aberdeen

The Civil Law Centre
Books from the Civil Law Centre
Course: 'Foundations of Private Law'
An Account of Antiquarian Legal Literature at Aberdeen
    This enormous bibliography was prepared for the Centre
    by Gero Dolezalek with great care and effort.

*About this site
Updates
Contributions
Credits
Visitor statistics
Search
    A search engine for this site.

---------------------------------------------------

*About Sources
<http://www.iuscivile.com/materials/sources.shtml>

BELOW is a listing of sources on Roman and Civil law and
related subjects available in full over the Internet.

At present there is not a great amount of pertinent material
available electronically. The selection below is therefore
necessarily small and eclectic.

Legal Collections
Papyrology and Epigraphy
Individual Sources
CD-ROMs on Antiquity
        (on another page)

Content Sample:

Fontes et iurisconsultorum vitae
(By Thomas Rfner, Universitt des Saarlandes, Saarbrcken).
A selection of ancient, medieval, and modern texts.

Internet Ancient History Sourcebook
(Edited by Paul Halsall, Fordham University, USA).
A large collection of essays, texts, and links on ancient history.
Contains a page devoted to Ancient Legal Texts which covers
the ancient world in both the east and the west.
Most of the Roman material comprises literary sources.

Internet Medieval Sourcebook
(Edited by Paul Halsall, Fordham University, USA).
A large collection of essays, texts, and links on medieval history.
Contains a page devoted to Medieval Legal History, with the texts
of sources on Roman law, Canon law, Germanic laws, European
laws and law codes, English law, Jewish law, and Islamic law.
The texts include selections from the Corpus Iuris Civilis,
including Marriage Laws from the Digest and Codex (37K).

Legal Status of Women in the Roman World
(By Mary R. Lefkowitz and Maureen B. Fant,
University of Kentucky, USA).
A collection of classical and pre-classical texts on women's status.

Palingenesia of Latin Laws
(By Tony Honor). 379-450 AD (East) and 383-455 (West).
Prepared to accompany Law in the Crisis of Empire, 379-455 AD
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998).

Palingenesia of Latin Private Rescripts
(By Tony Honor). 193-305 AD: from the accession of
Pertinax to the abdication of Diocletian.
Prepared to accompany Emperors and Lawyers, 2nd ed.
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994).

The Roman Law Library [Receuil des lois romaines]
(By Alexandr Koptev). This is perhaps the largest collection of
Roman laws on the internet. It includes a large collection of
senatusconsulta and republican laws, most of the Corpus Iuris
Civilis, the Codex Theodosiani, Ulpiani Regulae, Pauli Sententiae,
and several sources from late antiquity. Also: mirror site.

Roman Law Texts
(By Robert G. Natelson, University of Montana School of Law).
This collection contains Gaius' Institutes, Justinian's Institutes, and
Justinian's Digest. The texts can be downloaded in Word or
WordPerfect.

Sincerely,
David Dillard
Temple University
(215) 204 - 4584
jwne@astro.temple.edu
<http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NetGold/>
<http://www.edu-cyberpg.com/ringleaders/davidd.html>
<http://www.kovacs.com/medref-l/medref-l.html>



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