Interpreting and Using Law in the Middle Ages II
Sponsoring Organization(s)
Iuris Canonici Medii Aevi Consociatio (ICMAC), the International Society of Medieval Canon Law
Organizer Name
Melodie H. Eichbauer
Organizer Affiliation
Florida Gulf Coast Univ.
Presider Name
Melodie H. Eichbauer
Paper Title 1
Defining Spaces of Authority through Juridical Discussions on Tithes
Presenter 1 Name
Carolina Gual Silva
Presenter 1 Affiliation
Univ. Estadual de Campinas/São Paulo Research Foundation
Paper Title 2
Law and Legal Conflict in the Libre dels fets
Presenter 2 Name
Jennifer Speed
Presenter 2 Affiliation
Univ. of Dayton
Paper Title 3
Fiscal Rights and Fiscal Duties in a Unknown Treatise (around 1270) of Albert de Lavania, Judge and Advisor of James I the Conqueror, King of Aragon
Presenter 3 Name
Paola Maffei
Presenter 3 Affiliation
Univ. degli Studi di Siena
Paper Title 4
Standing Your Ground in Late Medieval Law and Literature: Fictional Usages of the Legal Maxim "Vim vi repellere omnes leges et omnia iura permittunt" in Light of the Canonistic Commentary on It
Presenter 4 Name
Arvind Thomas
Presenter 4 Affiliation
Univ. of California-Los Angeles
Start Date
11-5-2019 3:30 PM
Session Location
Fetzer 2040
Description
Scholarship on legal sources has made important advances on two fronts. First, careful manuscript work has gone far in explaining the development of particular texts and how texts relate to each other. Such work is necessary to understand the evolution and spread of legal thinking. Second, scholars have made important inroads laying bare the application of law in the Middle Ages. Collectively, the papers in the two proposed sessions "Interpreting and Using Law in the Middle Ages" seek to bring these two different, but not mutually exclusive, fronts together.
The sessions, "Interpreting and Using Law in the Middle Ages," begin with the premise that law has frequently underpinned analyses of the Middle Ages and scholars have been drawn to legal documents and maxims to explain events and to reflect change. After all, the questions attached to studying legal sources provide a framework around which broader narratives form. For example, scholars have focused on questions of the transmission of texts, the nature and timing of the professionalization of law, and the relationship with normative law. These sessions explore the integration and use of law throughout the Middle Ages. They embrace the common theme that medieval law was a living object, and thus they are interested in how contemporaries turned to and used law within their socio-political and intellectual environment. We want presenters to integrate the textual analysis necessary to understand the evolution and transmission of the legal tradition into the broader study of medieval life, government, and practice. Presenters will be encouraged to place legal sources within the context of other sources such as letters, charters, chronicles, and governmental records. We want to demonstrate the wide applicability that the study of law offers and encourage others to think about the different ways in which legal texts can shed light on facets of medieval life and thought. Melodie H. Eichbauer
Interpreting and Using Law in the Middle Ages II
Fetzer 2040
Scholarship on legal sources has made important advances on two fronts. First, careful manuscript work has gone far in explaining the development of particular texts and how texts relate to each other. Such work is necessary to understand the evolution and spread of legal thinking. Second, scholars have made important inroads laying bare the application of law in the Middle Ages. Collectively, the papers in the two proposed sessions "Interpreting and Using Law in the Middle Ages" seek to bring these two different, but not mutually exclusive, fronts together.
The sessions, "Interpreting and Using Law in the Middle Ages," begin with the premise that law has frequently underpinned analyses of the Middle Ages and scholars have been drawn to legal documents and maxims to explain events and to reflect change. After all, the questions attached to studying legal sources provide a framework around which broader narratives form. For example, scholars have focused on questions of the transmission of texts, the nature and timing of the professionalization of law, and the relationship with normative law. These sessions explore the integration and use of law throughout the Middle Ages. They embrace the common theme that medieval law was a living object, and thus they are interested in how contemporaries turned to and used law within their socio-political and intellectual environment. We want presenters to integrate the textual analysis necessary to understand the evolution and transmission of the legal tradition into the broader study of medieval life, government, and practice. Presenters will be encouraged to place legal sources within the context of other sources such as letters, charters, chronicles, and governmental records. We want to demonstrate the wide applicability that the study of law offers and encourage others to think about the different ways in which legal texts can shed light on facets of medieval life and thought. Melodie H. Eichbauer