| George Lathom Browne - 1856 - 258 páginas
...his fulsome and interested adulation. COIN OF JUSTINIAN. CHAPTER III. JUSTINIAN, THE LEGISLATOR. " THE vain titles of the victories of Justinian are...was digested in the immortal works of the Code, the Pandects, and the Institutes; thepuhlicreasonof theRomanshas been silently or studiously transfused... | |
| David Paul Brown - 1856 - 604 páginas
...Christians,—and that Justinian, ' the vain titles of whose victories are crumbled into dust, while the name of the Legislator is inscribed on a fair and everlasting monument,' obtains, with this praise from the Historian of the Decline and Fall, the more enviable sneer, of being... | |
| Marcius Willson - 1856 - 624 páginas
..." The vain titles of the victories of Justin' ian," says Gibbon, " are crumbled into dust : but tho name of the legislator is inscribed on a fair and everlasting monument." To a commission of ten emiment lawyers, at the head of which was Trib6nian, Just in' ian assigned the... | |
| 1857 - 916 páginas
..."The vain titles of the victories of Justlninn arc crumbled into dust, but the name of the le^i-latwr is inscribed on a fair and everlasting monument. Under his reign, and by his cure, the. civil jurisprudence was digested in the immortal works of the Code, the Pandecta, and the... | |
| Literary and Philosophical Society of Liverpool - 1858 - 658 páginas
...regulation of the family, h've still, and will live as long as the world abhors the maxims of communism. " The vain titles of the victories of Justinian are...is inscribed on a fair and everlasting monument," says Gibbon. The Romans were no deep philosophers. Their ideas about the nature of the Deity and her... | |
| 1863 - 832 páginas
...as of the leading principles of the Roman jurisprudence. He opens it with the eloquent passage : " The vain titles of the victories of Justinian are...was digested in the immortal works of the Code, the Pandects, and the Institute ; the public reason of the Romans has been silently or studiously transferred... | |
| 1863 - 830 páginas
...as of the leading principles of the Roman jurisprudence. He opens it with the eloquent passage : " The vain titles of the victories of Justinian are...everlasting monument. Under his reign and by his care, th^ civil jurisprudence was digested in the immortal works of the Code, the Pandects, and the Institute... | |
| 1866 - 382 páginas
..."Novelise." Such are the constituent parts of the legislation of the Emperor Justinian. Gibbon says, " The vain titles of the victories of Justinian are...is inscribed on a fair and everlasting monument."* The same great writer correctly adds : — " The public reason of the Eomans has been silently or studiously... | |
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