Lexicon Juris Civilis et Canonici

Lexicon Juris Civilis et Canonici: sive potius, commentarius de verborum quae ad utrumquae jus pertinent significatione

Details of the Dictionary: Lexicon Juris Civilis et Canonici: sive potius, commentarius de verborum quae ad utrumquae jus pertinent significatione

  • Publisher: Lyon (France): Apud G. Rovillium
  • Year of Publication: 1567

About the Author: Pardoux Duprat (1520-1569)

In the words of the Tarlton Law Library (University of Texas School of Law):

“Pardoux Duprat was a celebrated humanist in his own time, but has now fallen into relative obscurity.Title page, Lexicon, 1580 Born in 1520 in Aubusson into family of merchants, he also reputedly brought Calvinism to the town. Duprat appears to have been the student of Jean Coras, counselor to the Parlement de Toulouse. He became a Doctor of Laws in 1567 and became the official annotator of the laws of Charles IX of France the same year. Although the details of his life are sparse, he is better known for his scholarship. He edited works by Andrea Alciati (1492-1550), Azo of Bologna (fl. c. 1150-c. 1230), Everardi Hadrianus Marius (1509-1568), and Jean Faber (d. 1340). Duprat also wrote books on ancient Greek law and French notarial practice, and made the first translation of the Meditations of Marcus Aurelius into French.

The Lexicon juris civilis was Duprat’s most successful work, and was published six times during a 15-year period. The terms cover civil and canon law, with brief attention to Greek law. The work draws heavily on the earlier works of Ulrich Zasius (1461-1536), as preserved by his student Jacob Spiegel (author of the legal Dictionary “Lexicon juris civilis”), and Francois Hotman (1524-1590). The list of authorities Duprat cites includes the legal lexicographers Albericus de Rosate, Barnabé Brisson, Jacob Spiegel, and Johann Oldendorp (c. 1487-1567). He also drew on the work of a wide range of legal commentators, scholars of medicine, and literati, both ancient and contemporary. The definitions give considerable attention to lexicographical and philological issues.”

Resources

See Also

  • Pardoux Duprat
  • Lexicon Juris Civilis
  • Vocabularium Utriusque Juris
  • Lexicon juridicum Romano-Teutonicum
  • Allgemeines Teutsches Juristisches Lexicon
  • Nomo-Lexicon: a Law Dictionary
  • Corpus Juris Secundum
  • Modus Legendi Abbreviaturas
  • Vocabularius Utriusque Iuris
  • Glossaire du Droit Francais: contenant l’explication des mots difficiles qui se trouvent dans les ordonnances de nos Roys

Further Reading

  • Louis Duval. Esquisses marchoises, superstitions et légende: histoire et critique. Paris: H. Champion, 1879.

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