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Alphabetical    [«  »]
legible 1
legions 5
legislation 23
legislative 31
legislator 3
legislators 1
legitimate 5
Frequency    [«  »]
31 invasion
31 late
31 leading
31 legislative
31 live
31 papacy
31 poem
A.A. Vasiliev
History of the Byzantine empire

IntraText - Concordances

legislative

   Chapter, Paragraph
1 3,5 | The legislative work of Justinian and Tribonian.~ 2 3,5 | universally famous because of his legislative work, remarkable for its 3 3,5 | pagan Roman Empire, when the legislative power was entirely in the 4 3,5 | before Justinian. In his own legislative work he was greatly aided 5 3,5 | last part of Justinian’s legislative work and serve as one of 6 3,5 | Europe, all of Justinian’s legislative works became known as the 7 3,5 | bulkiness of Justinian’s legislative work and the fact that it 8 3,5 | conformity with the new legislative works the teaching of legal 9 3,5 | in method, the stupendous legislative work of the sixth century 10 3,5 | viewpoint in the study of the legislative work of Justinian has occurred 11 3,5 | eastern character of the legislative work of Justinian. The problem 12 4,4 | were not the result of one legislative act meant that each theme 13 5,3 | parallel with the official legislative works of Justinian. When 14 5,3 | favor of Justinian law, the legislative deeds of the Isaurian emperors 15 5,3 | condemned lawbook for their own legislative works, and even in their 16 5,3 | scholars discuss three other legislative documents: the Rural Code 17 5,3 | Code was a product of the legislative activity of the Emperors 18 5,3 | private hands but a work of legislative authority.[42]~ The theory 19 6 | the Empire. The intensive legislative work, expressed in the publication 20 6,7 | was a period of stirring legislative activity. Basil I desired 21 6,7 | chronological arrangement of legislative acts, both old and new. 22 6,7 | he planned to revive the legislative work of Justinian by adapting 23 6,7 | the language of Basil’s legislative work. The Emperor himself 24 6,7 | incorrectly considered this legislative work as merely a revised 25 6,7 | it strove to revive the legislative work of Justinian by omitting 26 6,7 | powerful” and the “poor”. — The legislative works of Basil I and Leo 27 6,7 | interesting tendency in the legislative work of the Byzantine emperors, 28 8,17| of Byzantium; at least in legislative texts from the eleventh 29 8,17| revenues.”[217]~ In Roman legislative documents the Latin terms 30 9,18| author used the earlier legislative works, the Prochiron, the 31 9,18| alterations that were made by the legislative commission of Justinian


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