145-172. The problem is even more acute after the discovery ofthe first recension. 1 gratian and theDECRETUM 1 2 heresy and excommunication: CAUSA 24 34 3 obedience or contempt: CAUSA 11, QUESTIO 377 4 the two recensions of the DECRETUM 122 5 gratian and roman law 146 6 the men behind the DECRETUM 175 conclusion: medieval law and the DECRETUM 193 Appendix: The contents of the first recension of Gratian’s Decretum 197 Bibliography 228 Index of cited passages … Editio Lipsiensis secunda…, Leipzig, 1879. Decretum magistri Gratiani. Decretum, while others preferred to think that his work was supplemented by others. It was about 1150 that Gratian, teacher of theology at the monastery of Saints Nabor and Felix and sometimes believed to have been a Camaldolese monk, composed the work entitled by himself, Concordia discordantium canonum, but called by others Nova collectio, Decreta, Corpus juris canonici, also Decretum Gratiani, the latter being now the commonly accepted name. [epist. It forms the first part of the collection of six legal texts, which together became known as the Corpus Juris Canonici. 6. 1. The Decretum Gratiani, also known as the Concordantia Discordantium Canonum, is a collection of canon law completed around 1140 by Gratian, a Benedictine monk from Italy who taught at the Monastery of Saints Felix and Nabor in Bologna, and who is known as the father of the study of canon law. Weigand, R. Die Glossen zum Dekret Gratians: Studien zu den frühen Glossen und Glossenkompositionen, 2 vols., Rome, 1991. Gratianus de Clusio - Concordantiam Discordantium Canonum seu Decretum Gratiani [1139-1150] Sancto Alberto Magno Patrono Plorante ac Beata Semper Virgine Maria Intercedente, Spiritus Sancte, Veritatis Deus, Hunc Locum a Malo Defendere Digneris. Decretum Gratiani, First recension, edition in progress. Gratian’s Decretum, Latin Decretum Gratiani, or Concordia Discordantium Canonum, collection of nearly 3,800 texts touching on all areas of church discipline and regulation compiled by the Benedictine monk Gratian about 1140. Noonan, J. T. “Gratian slept here: the changing identity of the father of systematic study of canon law,” in Traditio 35 (1979), pp. © Anders Winroth, gratian.org 10/5/2019 Decretum Gratiani, Friedberg [1879], vol. Decretum Gratiani.pdf Adobe Acrobat document [4.2 MB] Abbreviatio Treverensis This is a sample edition of C. 2 in the Trier Abbreviation, found in Trier, Bischöffliche Priesterseminar 91. (work in progress). Encyclopedia Britannica . The Decretum Gratiani, the Liber extra, Liber sextus, and the Constitutiones Clementinae, with the addition of two private collections, the Extravagantes of John XXII and the Extravagantes communes ("Decretals Commonly Circulating"), were printed and published together for the first time in Paris in 1500. Friedberg, E., ed.
© Anders Winroth, gratian.org 10/5/2019 SEP. 7. Winroth, A. Septem ebdomadibus a carne et deliciis ante pascha clerici abstineant.
Little is known about him beyond the fact that he compiled and wrote this collection of legal texts, which became the code of canon law used in the Roman Catholic Church until 1918. Corpus iuris canonici Decretum Gratiani 9 www.internetsv.info C. IV. Gratian was a 12th-century Benedictine monk and canon lawyer from Bologna.
In conclusion, I shall discuss the broader implications ofthis study. In chapter , I shall study the arguments for and against Gratian’s authorship ofboth recensions. This site is like a library, Use search box in the widget to get ebook that you want. 411.3 MB 18189.pdf Gratian’s “Decretum” Description.