000 02146nam a22003137a 4500
008 160407b -en||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a978-0-19-825861-5
084 _2other
_a67.404(4)
_bW-66
_q67
100 _aWieacker F.
240 _a67.404(4) W-66
245 _aA History of Private Law in Europe.-
_cTrans. T.Weir
260 _aGreat Britain.:
_bClarendon press,
_c1995.-
300 _a509 p.
500 _aДансны дугаар: ХЗС-3281
505 _aIn this book, Wieacker tells us the story of European Legal Thought. He begins in the high middle ages and describes how the Glossators started to apply methodical criticism and exegesis to the digest of Justinian, thus creating European jurisprudence. In telling the history of European legal thinking from its origins in Medieval Bologna down to the present day, Wieacker's is a quite stunning achievement. It thus eluciates the intellectual conditions for the development of law within Europe. Another great strength of the book lies in the elucidation of the constant interaction between legal thinking and the general philosophical ideas of the time: Scholasticism and Medieval Legal Science, Enlightenment and the Law of Reason, of Classicism (as well as Romanticism), and Savigny's Historical School. It is hardly surprising therefore that a work of such ambition and erudition should have becomes a classic though it is surprising that it has never before been translated into English. Now, thanks to Mr Weir's brilliant translation, the book will become accessible to English-speaking scholars the world over.
520 _aGerman
653 _alaw
653 _acivil law
653 _aeurope history
653 _agermany history
653 _alaw philosophy
740 _aThe medieval foundations of modern private law
740 _aThe reception of Roman law in Germany
740 _aThe usus modernus and the conclusion of the reception
740 _aThe age of the law of reason
740 _aThe historical school of law, pandectism and positivism in the nation-state
740 _aPrivate law and positivism in crisis
942 _cBK
999 _c113121
_d113121