all of your answers sucks
The Justinian Code was very important because it was used as a fundamental law basis even in the U.S.
no animal crulety murder is punished by banishment(Justinians code) murder is punished by death or prison(american law) woman and men do not have equal rights (Justinians code) mean and woman are equal (american code
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.
It states many things about the laws and codes of the Roman times and the Byzantine Empire. It helped the people renew their beliefs in the Roman law. It also helped the people obey the law of the Byzantine Empire.
It made Roman civil law the civil law of, or the foundation of civil law in most western countries. It was not a code of laws and was not called Justinian code either. It was called Corpus Iuris Civilis (body of civil laws) and a collection of books (codex meant book, not code) with a massive compendium of Roman laws since tie times of Hadrian, a collection of assays and a student textbook.
The Justinian Code was very important because it was used as a fundamental law basis even in the U.S.
no animal crulety murder is punished by banishment(Justinians code) murder is punished by death or prison(american law) woman and men do not have equal rights (Justinians code) mean and woman are equal (american code
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 goal of the Napoleonic code of law was to create a uniform law for the whole country of France. The code was established under Napoleon I.
It states many things about the laws and codes of the Roman times and the Byzantine Empire. It helped the people renew their beliefs in the Roman law. It also helped the people obey the law of the Byzantine Empire.
It made Roman civil law the civil law of, or the foundation of civil law in most western countries. It was not a code of laws and was not called Justinian code either. It was called Corpus Iuris Civilis (body of civil laws) and a collection of books (codex meant book, not code) with a massive compendium of Roman laws since tie times of Hadrian, a collection of assays and a student textbook.
It was a code of laws that served as the foundation of international law that is still used today. The Justinian Code was very important because it was used as a fundamental law basis even in the U.S. today. It provided the laws on marriage, property, slaves, and other important issues.It was a code of laws that served as the foundation of international law that is still used today.
Yes. Civil law is based on any code or laws passed by the legislature or law creating body for the country or political unit in question. The interpretation and any gaps in that law will be based on prior cases or case law.
A uniform law accross all of France, that was published and available, that contained no secret exceptions, that applied to everyone and that was simple and secular. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ That does not answer the question.
A uniform law accross all of France, that was published and available, that contained no secret exceptions, that applied to everyone and that was simple and secular. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ That does not answer the question.
A uniform law accross all of France, that was published and available, that contained no secret exceptions, that applied to everyone and that was simple and secular. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ That does not answer the question.
The name Justinian Code was coined in the Middle Ages. Its actual name was the Corpus Juris Civilis (Body of Civil Law). This work was commissioned by Emperor Justinian I and comprised a digest of centuries of Roman civil law, a collection of essays on law and a textbook for students. It made Roman civil law more uniform and helped with the study of law. When it was rediscovered in a library in Pisa 1070 it became very influential. Roman civil law was so well developed that it is still the basis for the civil law of many modern countries thanks to its systematisation in this work.