«CAPITIS DIMINUTIO» İLE İLİŞKİLİ LEHÇE KİTAPLAR
capitis diminutio sözcüğünün kullanımını aşağıdaki kaynakça seçkisinde keşfedin.
capitis diminutio ile ilişkili kitaplar ve Lehçe edebiyattaki kullanımı ile ilgili bağlam sağlaması için küçük metinler.
1
The Institutes of Roman Law - Strona 122
Capitis Deminutio. § 24. Capitis deminutio is the destruction of the ' caput ' or legal personality. Capitis deminutio, so to speak, wipes out the former individual and puts a new one in his place, and between the old and the new individual there ...
Rudloph Sohm, James Crawford Ledlie, Bernhard Erwin Grueber, 2002
2
A Systematic and Historical Exposition of Roman Law in the ...
Capitis tleminutio minima. Capitis deminutio is minima (least) when both citizenship and freedom are kept, but the man's status undergoes a change. For instance, when persons sui juris come to be alieni juris, or vice versa; [in the case of ...
William Alexander Hunter, 1803
3
A Text-Book of Roman Law: From Augustus to Justinian - Strona 138
These are provisions to avoid results exactly those of a capitis deminutio. One of them seems to be corrupt, but they testify to a close similarity between the institutions of the colony and those of Rome2 (apart from express adoption of Roman ...
W. W. Buckland, Peter Stein, 2007
4
World Dictionary of Foreign Expressions: A Resource for ... - Strona 57
See capitis diminutio. capitis diminutio or capitis deminutio n. [L. capitis of head, life (2); diminutio forfeiture, loss (1): loss/ forfeiture of life/head.] Loss of civil rights. Roman Law. A citizen's loss of legal status which may include loss of freedom, ...
Gabriel Adeleye, Kofi Acquah-Dadzie, Thomas J. Sienkewicz, 1999
5
The Main Institutions of Roman Private Law - Strona 70
But other evidence exists. Cicero speaks of capitis deminutio, but knows nothing of the three degrees. For him, capitis deminutio means passing out of the civic community, and it seems indifferent whether this is due to slavery or to exile, i.e., ...
6
The Institutes of Justinian - Strona 60
3. Sed adgnationis quidem jus 3. The right of agnation is ordin- ornnibus modis capitis deminutione arily taken away universally by capitis plerumqueperimitur: namadgnatio deminutio, for agnation is a term of juris est nomen. Cognationis vero ...
Thomas Collett Sandars, 1917
7
The Digest of Justinian - Tom 1 - Strona 253
1 V. ON capitis minutio. GAIUS (on the provincial Edict 4) change of status. ULPIANUS (on the Edict 12) This Edict refers to such cases of capitis deminutio as occur without affecting a man's right of citizenship: when a capitis deminutio occurs ...
Charles Henry Monro, 2014
8
Elementary Principles of the Roman Private Law - Strona 44
civil bondage underwent capitis deminutio. It was of course minima, but it was peculiar from certain points of view. It is well known that upon a release he reverted, if it were not a third occasion, to his old position, not to a new position similar to ...
9
Giorgio Agamben: Sovereignty and Life - Strona 60
As we learn from the Institutes, capitis deminutio took three forms — greater, middle, or lesser — depending on which of the three elements of status was primarily affected. Thus, the three elements of full Roman status were not permanent, and ...
Matthew Calarco, Steven DeCaroli, 2007
10
The First Year of Roman Law - Strona 105
however, it may be objected that the filiusfamilias who is given in adoption suffers no lessening, and that nevertheless his change of status is, by the acknowledgment of all the jurisconsults, a capitis deminutio.1 There is another explanation ...