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The Institutes 535 CE – Under the direction of Tribonian, the Corpus Iurus Civilis [Body of Civil Law] was issued in three parts, in Latin, at the order of the Emperor Justinian.

The Codex Justinianus (529) compiled all of the extant (in Justinian’s time) imperial constitutiones from the time of Hadrian. It used both the Codex Theodosianus and private collections such as the Codex Gregorianus and Codex Hermogenianus.

The Institutes 535 CE – The Digest, or Pandects, was issued in 533, and was a greater achievement: it compiled the writings of the great Roman jurists such as Ulpian along with current edicts. It constituted both the current law of the time, and a turning point in Roman Law: from then on the sometimes contradictory case law of the past was subsumed into an ordered legal system.

The Institutes was intended as sort of legal textbook for law schools and included extracts from the two major works. Later, Justinian issued a number of other laws, mostly in Greek, which were called Novels.
Book I. of Persons
I. Justice and Law.
Justice is the constant and perpetual wish to render every one his due.

The Institutes 535 CE – Jurisprudence is the knowledge of things divine and human; the science of the just and the unjust.

Having explained these general terms, we think we shall commence our exposition of the law of the Roman people most advantageously, if we pursue at first a plain and easy path, and then proceed to explain particular details with the utmost care and exactness.

The Institutes 535 CE part 61

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9. Sometimes there may be a theft of free persons, as if one of our children in our power is carried away.10. A man may even commit a theft of his own property, as,...

The Institutes 535 CE part 60

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6. It is theft, not only when anyone takes away a thing belonging to another, in order to appropriate it, but generally when anyone deals with the property of another contrary to the wishes...

The Institutes 535 CE part 59

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We must also extend manifest theft to the case of a thief seen or seized by the owner or any one else in a public or private place, while still holding the thing he...

The Institutes 535 CE part 58

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The same would hold in the case of any other animal or any other thing, but the seller is in any case bound to make over to the purchaser his right to a real...

The Institutes 535 CE part 57

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2. The price should consist in a sum of money. It has been much doubted whether it can consist in anything else, as in a slave, a piece of land, or a toga. Sabinus...

The Institutes 535 CE part 56

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Thus these contracts may be entered into by those who are at a distance from each other by means of letters, for instance, or of messengers. In these contracts each party is bound to...

The Institutes 535 CE part 55

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5. It is customary to insert a particular place in a stipulatio, as, for instance, “Do you engage to give me at Carthage?” and this stipulatio, although it appears to be made simply, yet...

The Institutes 535 CE part 54

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And it is immaterial whether the stipulatio is in Latin or in Greek, or in any other language, so that the parties understand it; nor is it necessary that the same language should be...

The Institutes 535 CE part 53

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If, however, you take with you on a journey the thing lent you to make use of, and you lose it by the attack of enemies or robbers, or by shipwreck, you are undoubtedly...

The Institutes 535 CE part 52

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XIV. Other Ways of Contracting an Obligatio.An obligatio may be contracted by the thing, as, for example, by giving a mutuum. This always consists of things which may be weighed, numbered, or measured, as...

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