Chapter, Constitution, §
1 Intro | approved some strictly legal constitutions and others on usury, the
2 Intro | transmission of the text of the constitutions is involved and still partly
3 Intro | definitive drawing up of the constitutions, and their promulgation,
4 Intro | collection consists of 22 constitutions, all of which are of a legal
5 Intro | is not identical with the constitutions of the council. For in it
6 Intro | the council, nor the five constitutions pertaining to the important
7 Intro | Kuttner has shown that the constitutions have been transmitted to
8 Intro | Coll. I), containing two constitutions (18 and 22) which are absent
9 Intro | versions, but lacking the constitutions not directly concerned with
10 Intro | Indeed, the origins of the constitutions must be placed before the
11 Intro | by an earlier version of constitutions M 13, 15 and 19, antedating
12 Intro | somewhat later that the constitutions acquired their more accurate
13 Intro | definite legal form. ~The constitutions taken from Matthew Paris
14 Intro | W). ~Our edition of the constitutions tries to give all the documents
15 Intro | moreover, that the last five constitutions in R (13-17, 17 is also
16 Intro | also be included among the constitutions of the council, even though
17 Intro | printed the text of these five constitutions from the register of Innocent
18 Intro | place this in front of the constitutions. The transmission of the
19 Const | CONSTITUTIONS~
20 Const, 1, 15| apostolic see, saving the other constitutions which assign and inflict
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