Tribonian was born in 500.
Tribonian died in 547.
cause they were gay ;)
Tribonian
he leaded the group of scholars to reform the law code
tribonian
Tribonian
tribonian
Tribonian was an influential Roman jurist who played a key role in organizing and revising the Roman legal code. He was instrumental in the creation of the Digest, a compilation of the legal writings of prominent Roman jurists that laid the foundation for Roman law. Tribonian's work helped to create a more coherent and accessible legal system in the Byzantine Empire.
it is not known who rediscovered the Corpus Juris Civilis, also dubbed as Justinian Code. It is known that it was rediscovered in a library in Pisa in 1070.
George Mason Robert Joseph Pothier Jean Baptiste Colbert Edward I Alfonso X Pope Gregory IX Louis IX of France Justinian I Tribonian Lycurgus of Sparta Hammurabi Moses Solon Papinian Gaius of Rome Maimonides Suleiman the Magnificent Pope Innocent III Simon de Montfort Hugo Grotius Sir William Blackstone Napoleon Thomas Jefferson Source: http://www.ilovephilosophy.com/phpbb/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=156274
Justinian's Code, also known as the Corpus Juris Civilis, was a comprehensive codification of Roman law commissioned by Byzantine Emperor Justinian I in the 6th century. It aimed to consolidate and simplify the vast body of legal texts and interpretations that had accumulated over centuries. Justinian established a commission of legal scholars, led by Tribonian, who systematically reviewed, organized, and revised existing laws, producing a coherent legal framework that influenced many modern legal systems. The Code consists of four main parts: the Codex, the Digest, the Institutes, and the Novellae.
Based on "The Institutes" Corupus Iurus Civilis or the Justinian Code, was the result of Emperor Justinian's desire that existing Roman law be collected into a simple and clear system of laws, or "code." Tribonian, a legal minister under Justinian, lead a group of scholars in a 14-month effort to codify existing Roman law. The result was the first Justinian Code, completed in 529. This code was later expanded to include Justinian's own laws, as well as two additional books on areas of the law. In 534, the Justinian Code, made up of the Code, the Digest, and the Institutes, was completed. http://orias.berkeley.edu/summer2004/summer2004JustinianCode.htm