[Civil & Criminal Law] Claro, Opera Omnia 1666
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SWISS EDITION OF CLARO'S PROCEDURE ON CIVIL AND CRIMINAL LAW
THE FOUNDATION OF COMMON CRIMINAL LAW IN EUROPE
Claro, Giulio (and others). Ivlii Clari Alexandrini Ivris-Consvlti, Longe Clarissimi, Philippi II. Hispan. Regis Supremi Consiliarij, ac Regentis dignissimi Opera Omnia, Sive Practica Civilis Atqve Criminalis : Cum doctissimis Additionibus Perillustrium Iurisconsultorum DD. Ioan. Baptistae Baiardi Parmensis ... Hisque nouißimè accesserunt Notae, & Animaduersiones ... DD. Ioan. Harprecti, Et Manfredi Goveani. Genevae: Chouët, 1666.
Folio, contemporary stiff vellum with handwritten title at five raised bands spine, pp. [24], 904, [92].
Title page in red and black.
The collected works by Giulio Claro, as to say the most important procedure of both civil and criminal law of his age.
With the additions of then jurists Giovanni Battista Baiardi, Antonio Droghi, Hieronymus Giacharius, Manfredus Goveanus, Jean Guyot, Johann Harpprecht, Bernardino Rossignoli.
Giulio Claro (or Clarus) (1525–1575) was an Italian jurist. He was born in Alessandria and took up the study of law in Pavia as early as 1536. After receiving a doctorate in 1550, Claro was appointed a Milanese Senator by Philip II in 1536, a royal pretor in Cremona in 1560/61, president of the Milanese Magistrato straordinario delle entrate in 1563 and regens of the Consejo d'Italia in Madrid in 1565.
Claro's work, together with that of Deciani and Farinacci, provided the theoretical foundation for the common criminal law of Europe. That common law held sway until it was attacked by Enlightenment legal critics such as Feuerbach and replaced by national penal codes in the 19th century.
References: OCLC 64758707 locates two copies in US libraries, at Cornell University Library (Ithaca, NY) and Harvard Law School Library.
THE FOUNDATION OF COMMON CRIMINAL LAW IN EUROPE
Claro, Giulio (and others). Ivlii Clari Alexandrini Ivris-Consvlti, Longe Clarissimi, Philippi II. Hispan. Regis Supremi Consiliarij, ac Regentis dignissimi Opera Omnia, Sive Practica Civilis Atqve Criminalis : Cum doctissimis Additionibus Perillustrium Iurisconsultorum DD. Ioan. Baptistae Baiardi Parmensis ... Hisque nouißimè accesserunt Notae, & Animaduersiones ... DD. Ioan. Harprecti, Et Manfredi Goveani. Genevae: Chouët, 1666.
Folio, contemporary stiff vellum with handwritten title at five raised bands spine, pp. [24], 904, [92].
Title page in red and black.
The collected works by Giulio Claro, as to say the most important procedure of both civil and criminal law of his age.
With the additions of then jurists Giovanni Battista Baiardi, Antonio Droghi, Hieronymus Giacharius, Manfredus Goveanus, Jean Guyot, Johann Harpprecht, Bernardino Rossignoli.
Giulio Claro (or Clarus) (1525–1575) was an Italian jurist. He was born in Alessandria and took up the study of law in Pavia as early as 1536. After receiving a doctorate in 1550, Claro was appointed a Milanese Senator by Philip II in 1536, a royal pretor in Cremona in 1560/61, president of the Milanese Magistrato straordinario delle entrate in 1563 and regens of the Consejo d'Italia in Madrid in 1565.
Claro's work, together with that of Deciani and Farinacci, provided the theoretical foundation for the common criminal law of Europe. That common law held sway until it was attacked by Enlightenment legal critics such as Feuerbach and replaced by national penal codes in the 19th century.
References: OCLC 64758707 locates two copies in US libraries, at Cornell University Library (Ithaca, NY) and Harvard Law School Library.
Condition
Usual brownings, but a good copy.
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[Civil & Criminal Law] Claro, Opera Omnia 1666
Estimate €600 - €800
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