The Napoleonic Code, which was a civil law code, was based on the Corpus Juris Civilis (Body of Civil Law) also budded Justinian Code.
The Napoleonic Code, which was a civil law code, was based on the Corpus Juris Civilis (Body of Civil Law) also budded Justinian Code.
It is a short name of the code of Roman Law issued by (the East Roman) Emperor Justinian I in stages from AD 529 onwards.
it preserved Roman ideas.
Roman.
The revolutionary reforms were changed under Napoleon by changing the code of Laws. He was able to change the code of Laws and aligned them with the Justinian Code of Laws.
The Justinian code was the result of Emperor Justinian's desire to consolidate existing Roman law. Justinian's legislation or "Corpus juris civilis" formed the basis of later Byzantine law.
Justinian was the Emperor of the Byzantine Empire and he was known for making a code called "Justinians code" and it was to give everybody certain rights.
The laws of the Byzantine legal system were rewritten under the Emperor Justinian I and the reformed code was called the "Codex Justinianus." It was one of the four parts of the Corpus Juris Civilis, a comprehensive compilation of Roman laws.
Justinian code :)
laws of the Roman Empire
laws of the Roman Empire
Emperor Justinian of the Byzantine empire. This is because it commissioned a compendium of centuries of Roman civil law going essays on jurisprudence and a textbook for students called Corpus Iuris Civilis also nicknamed the Justinian Code