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Gratian Slept Here: The Changing Identity of the Father of the Systematic Study of Canon Law

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 July 2017

John T. Noonan Jr.*
Affiliation:
University of California, Berkeley

Extract

Who was Gratian? It is hardly necessary to justify the interest of such a question. The Concordia discordantium canonum is one of the most influential law books of all time — a teacher's case book which became, for over 700 years, the law of the Catholic Church; a book which is at the roots of Western legal thought, ecclesiastical and lay; a vast storehouse of prior legislation and judgments, a set of masterful hypotheticals, and a rich commentary distinguished by its shrewdness and wisdom. In any time, in any land, its author would be honored for his achievement and sought after for his skill. His book was composed in a literate age in a milieu which valued learning, and even more than learning, valued law. Surely the composer has left some traces of himself and not vanished into the mists of myth.

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Copyright © Fordham University Press 

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References

1 Specific references for each of the statements in this and the following paragraph will be given below when the evidence for each of them is considered. The following additional abbreviations will be used: BMCL = Bulletin of Medieval Canon Law; Friedberg, = Decretum Magistri Gratiani, ed. Friedberg, Emil (Leipzig 1879); Kehr, = Italia pontificia , ed. Kehr, Paul F. (Berlin 1961–1975); Mittarelli, = Mittarelli, Giovanni and Costadono, Anselmo, Annates Camaldulenses Ordinis Sancti Benedicti (Venice 1858), 8 vols; Repertorium = Kuttner, Stephan, Repertorium der Kanonistik (Vatican City 1937); RHD = Revue d'histoire de droit; Robertson = Materials for the History of Thomas Becket , edd. Robertson, J. C. and Shephard, J. B. (London 1875–1885); RS = Rolls Series = Public Record Office, Rerum britannicarum medii aevi scriptores (London 1848–); Sarti, = Sarti, Mauro and Fattorini, Mauro, De Claris Archigymnasii bononiensis professoribus a saeculo XI ad saeculum XIV (Bologna, 1888–1896), 2 vols; SG = Studia Gratiana; ZSS = Zeitschrift der Savigny-Stiftung. Google Scholar

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