| Law - 1832 - 512 pages
...The language of Caius is as follows. " Constitutio Principis est, quod Imperator (hereto vel cdicto, vel epistola, constituit. Nee unquam dubitatum est,...obtineat, cum ipse Imperator per legem imperium accipiat." No language can be more explicit; and as Caius lived under the Emperor Marcus Aurelius, nearly four... | |
| Leopold August Warnkönig - 1836 - 344 pages
...pouvoir impérial reposait lui-même sur la loi : Constitutio principis est , quod imperator decreta , vel edicto, vel epistola constituit, nee unquam dubitatum...obtineat, cum ipse imperator per legem imperium accipiat 1 . Déjà nous avions dans les Pandectes un passage semblable, mais plus expressif et tellement fort,... | |
| David Hoffman - Law - 1836 - 444 pages
...maxim of law. Gaius says, 'Constitutio Principis est, quod Imperator decreto, vel edicto vel epistold, constituit. Nee unquam dubitatum est, quin id legis vicem obtineat, cum ipse Imperator per legem imperiurn accipiat/* " Vide Guii Ins,iitutiummi Commentarii iv. Com. 1, sec. 5, pS, of the Berlin edition... | |
| Edward Gibbon - Byzantine Empire - 1843 - 550 pages
...this legislative power. The newlydiscovered Gaius distinctly states that it was in virtue of a law — Nee unquam dubitatum est, quin id legis vicem obtineat, cum ipse imperator per Icgem imperium accipiat. But it is still uncertain whether this was a general law, passed on the transition... | |
| Ferdinand Mackeldey - Institutiones - 1847 - 754 pages
...«Constitutio principis est, quod «imperator decreto vel edicto vel epístola constituit, nec umquam duhilatum est •quin id legis vicem obtineat, cum ipse imperator per legem imperium acci»piat.«— §. 6. Inst. I. 2.— Sobre la l»y regia V. Heinn. Ant. rom. lib. I. tit. 2. *n donde se encuentra... | |
| Charles Merivale - Rome - 1851 - 604 pages
...third century of the empire, were prone to magnify the 1 Gaius, i. 5. : " Constitutio Principis eat quod Imperator decreto vel edicto vel epistola constituit;...obtineat, cum ipse imperator per legem imperium accipiat." The reason here assigned 13 of course illegitimate, but in the time of Gaius (circa AD 150), the theory... | |
| Edward Gibbon - Byzantine Empire - 1852 - 674 pages
...legislative power. The newly discovered Gaius distiuitly states that it was in virtue of a law — Nee uuquam dubitatum est, quin id legis vicem obtineat, cum ipse imperator per legem imperium accipiat. But it is still uncertain whether this was a general law, passed on the transition of the government... | |
| Cesare Cantù - World history - 1854 - 716 pages
...Conslitutio principes est quod tmperator décreta, vel edicto, vel epistola constitua; nec unquam dubitatwm est, quin id legis vicem obtineat, cum ipse imperator per legem imperium accipiat. Instit. § 6, (, 2. (2) Princeps Icyibus sotuttis est. Fr., 31 ; D. I, 3. la défiance aux empereurs,... | |
| Raymond de Fresquet - Roman law - 1854 - 546 pages
...Regia, et c'est aussi le sens de Gaïusdans son premier commentaire, § 5. «Née unquam dubitalum « est quin id legis vicem obtineat, cum ipse imperator per legem « imperium accipiat. » II ne serait donc pas exact de dire que le peuple romain avait abdiqué son pouvoir une fois pour... | |
| Denis Serrigny - Administrative law (Roman law). - 1862 - 522 pages
...nom générique de constitutùmes, et divisés en trois espèces, décret, édit, rescrit, ajoute : nee unquam dubitatum est quin id legis vicem obtineat, cum ipse imperator per legem imperium accipiat ' ; 2° sur une table de bronze découverte à Latran entre 1342 et 1353, qui se voit encore aujourd'hui... | |
| |