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Alphabetical [« »] lawful 1 lawgiver 2 lawlessness 2 laws 50 lawyer 2 lawyers 2 lay 22 | Frequency [« »] 50 gregory 50 how 50 ideas 50 laws 50 less 50 marriage 50 mind | A.A. Vasiliev History of the Byzantine empire IntraText - Concordances laws |
Chapter, Paragraph
1 2,3 | marriage and inheritance laws and boldly advances the 2 2,3 | religion, customs, and laws of the forefathers remained 3 2,4 | to issue a collection of laws modeled after the two earlier 4 2,4 | Justinian’s collections of laws maintained their force in 5 2,4 | to Bulgaria “the mundane laws” (leges mundanae). In answer 6 2,4 | sending them the “venerable laws of the Romans” (venerandae 7 3,5 | arms, but also armed with laws, so that alike the time 8 3,5 | to create and interpret laws, and an emperor must be 9 3,5 | imperial constitutions, called laws or statute laws (leges). 10 3,5 | called laws or statute laws (leges). In contrast with 11 3,5 | contrast with these, all laws created by earlier legislation 12 3,5 | sole authoritative code of laws in the Empire, thus repealing 13 3,5 | youth eager to know the laws” (cupidae legum juventuti).[ 14 3,5 | with eager attention these laws of ours and show yourselves 15 3,5 | basic principles for the laws regulating most of modern 16 3,8 | people by their violation of laws and their shameful extortions 17 4,4 | some indications of other laws of Heraclius which have 18 4,4 | prove that some of these laws were accepted and introduced 19 4,4 | proved at least for some laws dealing with forgery of 20 5,3 | An abridged selection of laws, arranged by Leo and Constantine, 21 5,3 | For instance, its marriage laws included the introduction 22 5,3 | dogma and destroyed salutary laws.[30] Still, even the emperors 23 5,3 | other legal documents. Both laws are undated; but on the 24 5,5 | be tried by the secular laws as an adversary of God and 25 5,5 | should be tried by imperial laws, thus placing the iconodules 26 5,5 | Constantine as imperial laws continued to exert a certain 27 6,2 | children, good roads, just laws, and kind treatment; and 28 6,7 | it was against all church laws.[83] In spite of this, the 29 6,7 | restored the monasterial laws of the time of Basil I and 30 6,7 | conditions, and to add to it the laws which had appeared in later 31 6,7 | intended to exclude the old laws annulled by later Novels, 32 6,7 | introduce a number of new laws. The Latin terms and expressions 33 6,7 | as “a purging of ancient laws” (ανακαθαρσις των παλαιων 34 6,7 | with a brief account of the laws by which the Empire was 35 6,7 | Prochiron refers to these laws as laws establishing in 36 6,7 | refers to these laws as laws establishing in the Empire 37 6,7 | subversion of the good laws which was useless for the 38 6,7 | s reign a new volume of laws was compiled and published 39 6,7 | volumes of “purified” older laws[110] collected also in Basil’ 40 6,7 | to destroy the salutary laws.”[114] This part of the 41 6,7 | his time by adding later laws called forth by changed 42 6,7 | title would be “Imperial Laws.”~ The compilation of Leo 43 6,7 | of Justinian by omitting laws which had lost their significance 44 6,7 | officially stated that the older laws were not observed. The restrictions 45 6,8 | officials acquainted with the laws of the Empire.[177]~ The 46 7,4 | is subject neither to the laws nor to the canons.”~ Ecclesiastical 47 7,4 | collectors, despising both divine laws and imperial ordinances,” 48 8,17| thirteenth century law, and “the laws of Jerusalem were based 49 8,17| give a good idea of the laws of this Latin principality 50 9,18| Utopia, “A Treatise on the Laws” (Νομων συγγραφη), which