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  #2  
20th September 2014, 11:50 AM
Super Moderator
 
Join Date: Apr 2013
Re: Gaius Institutes Online

Gaius, Institutes of Roman Law [160] is a Book written by the Gaius its available online at online library of Liberty that is a unit of Liberty Fund, Inc.

The Institutes of Roman Law is Gaius’ best known book which is legal text during the late Roman Empire. It was the systematic collection and analysis of Roman law.



Liberty Fund, Inc. is a private, educational organization founded in the year 1960 to encourage the study of the ideal of a society of free and responsible people .

Liberty Fund, Inc. organization develops, supervises, and finances its educational activities to develop thought and encourage discourse on enduring intellectual issues pertaining to liberty.
  #3  
25th December 2015, 03:31 PM
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Re: Gaius Institutes Online

hii sir, will you please give me information about the Gai Institutions : or, Institutes of Roman law book ?
  #4  
25th December 2015, 03:33 PM
Super Moderator
 
Join Date: Apr 2013
Re: Gaius Institutes Online

As you asking for the Gai Institutions: or, Institutes of Roman law / the details of the book is as follow:

Title: Gai Institutiones : or, Institutes of Roman law /
Author: Gaius
Author: Zulueta, Francis de, 1878-
Author: Greenidge, A. H. J. (Abel Hendy Jones), 1865-1906
Author: Whittuck, Edward Arthur
Author: Poste, Edward, 1823-1902
Note: Oxford, The Clarendon press, 1904


Subject: Roman law


CONTENTS
EXPLANATION OF ABBREVIATIONS
HISTORICAL INTRODUCTION
§ 1.: The Unification and Extension of Roman Law.
§ 2.: The Epochs in this process of Unification and Extension.
§ 3.: Stages of Roman Legal History—The Clan and the Family—Evolution of individual rights.
§ 4.: Early Religious Law (Fas)—The Leges Regiae—The Secularization of Law.
§ 5.: Jus—Its different forms as exhibited in Procedure.
§ 6.: The ultimate sources of Jus—The Monarchy and the Early Republic.
§ 7.: Patricians and Plebeians.
§ 8.: Acquisition of voting rights by Plebeians—Assemblies of the Populus and of the Plebs.
§ 9.: Unification of the Law by means of the Twelve Tables.
§ 10.: Future Progress of Law. Legislation and Interpretation; the Legislative Assemblies.
§ 11.: Law as the result of Interpretation.—Interpretation by the Magistrate.
§ 12.: The debts which this development of law owed to the Italian and provincial world.
§ 13.: The idea of the Law of Nature; its influence on Slavery.
§ 14.: Interpretation by the jurisconsults.
§ 15.: Reforms in Procedure effected during the later period of the Republic


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