Ecloga. English. A manual of Roman law: the Ecloga / published by the emperors Leo III and Constantine V of Isauria at Constantinople, A.D. ; rendered into English by Edwin Hanson Freshfield. Format Book HathiTrust Emergency Access Published Cambridge [Cambridgeshire]: University Press, Description. Ecloga, (from Greek eklogē, “selection”), compilation of Byzantine law issued in by Emperor Leo III the Isaurian in his name and that of his son Constantine. It is the most important Byzantine legal work following the 6th-century Code of Justinian. Leo issued the law code in . Ecloga ad Procheiron mutata. English. A manual of later Roman law: the Ecloga ad Procheiron mutata: founded upon the Ecloga of Leo III and Constantine V of Isauria, and on the Procheiros nomos of Basil I, of Macedonia, including the Rhodian Maritime Law edited in A.D. / rendered into English by Edwin Hanson Freshfield.
A manual of later Roman law, the Ecloga ad Procheiron mutata founded upon the Ecloga of Leo III and Constantine V of Isauria, and on the Procheiros nomos of Basil I, of Macedonia, including the Rhodian maritime law edited in A.D., rendered into English by Edwin Hanson Freshfield, M.A. The frontispiece represents the emperors Leo III and Constantine V, from a manuscript in the Bibliothèque nationale, Paris, Gr. A Manual of Roman Law the Ecloga Published by the Emperors Leo III and Constantine V of Isauria at Constantinople A.D. by Freshfield, Edwin Hanson. A manual of Roman law, the Ecloga [electronic resource] Responsibility. published by the Emperors Leo III and Constantinine V of Isauria at Constantinople A.D. , rendered into English by Edwin Hanson Freshfield, M.A. Uniform Title.
"Ecloga", referring to both the civil and criminal law constituted, as was declared in the title, a "rectification (of the Justinian legislation). Mousourakis, Roman Law and the Origins of the Civil Law Tradition, p. ↑ Saltar a: F. Betancourt, Derecho romano clásico, p. "It (the Ecloga) is moreover the first Christian law book, the first, as the emperor explains in his title and preamble, in which an attempt was professedly.
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