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Corpus Juris Civilis
Fifth Collection




Title I. Concerning the Alienation of Ecclesiastical Lands, and Their Release When Pledged.
Title II. The Name of the Emperor Shall Be Placed at the Head of All Public Documents, and the Date Shall Be Written Plainly in Latin Characters.
Title III. Concerning the Oath Taken by a Dying Person As to What His Estate Consists of.
Title IV. Concerning Those Who Appeal; and When a Comparison of the Handwriting of Persons Can Be Made, and Concerning the Oath to Be Taken to Obtain Delay, As Well As the Oath of Calumny.
Title V. Constitution Addressed to Bonus, Quaestor of the Army, Prescribing by Whom Appeals Taken From Five Provinces, Namely Caria, Cyprus, the Cyclades Islands, Mysia, and Scythia, Shall Be Heard and Determined.
Title VI. Where Prostitutes Furnish Sureties, Or Take an Oath to Continue to Pursue Their Evil Life, They Can Violate Their Contracts without any Risk to Themselves.
Title VII. Pledges Shall Not Be Made for the Benefit of Third Persons Donations Made by Princes to Private Persons Do Not Require to Be Recorded, any More Than Donations by Private Persons to the Emperors.
Title VIII. Concerning Defendants Summoned and Brought Into Court; and ...
Title IX. The Constitution Which Declares the Issue of a Serf and a Free Woman to Be Free Shall Be of No Advantage to Children Born before the Promulgation of This Constitution, but Only to Those Who Are Born Subsequently.
Title X. Concerning the Prohibition of Fraudulently Exchanging Ecclesiastical Property for That of the Emperor, in Order by So Doing to Transfer It to Other Persons, for Such Exchanges Shall Only be Made with the Imperial House. Also...
Title XI. The Contributions Ordinarily Made By Members Of The Clergy At Their Ordination Shall Continue To Be Paid In The Principal Church, But Not In Other Churches.
Title XII. The Salaries of Ecclesiastics Who Abandon Their Charges Shall Be Given oo Those Who Are Subro-Gated oo Them.
Title XIII. Sacred Mysteries Shall Not Be Celebrated in Private Houses.
Title XIV. Concerning the Funeral Expenses of Deceased Persons.
Title XV. Neither the Body of the Deceased Nor His Funeral Ceremonies Shall Suffer Injury at the Hands of His Creditors. Councillors Shall Not Take Cognizance of Cases in the Absence of Judges.
Title XVI. Immovable Property of Which Ante-Nuptial Donations Are Composed Shall Neither Be Hypothecated Nor Alienated in Any Way by the Husband Even with the Consent of His Wife, Unless He Has Sufficient Property to Afterwards Satisfy Her Claim; and the Same Rule Shall Also Apply to Dowries.
Title XVII. Concerning Consultations.
Title XVIII. Concerning Notice of a New Work Which Obstructs the View of the Sea.
Title XIX. Concerning the Gardeners of the City of Constantinople.
Title XX. Lands, Houses, Or Vineyards Which Have Been Left to the Most Holy Church Of Mysia for the Redemption of Captives Or the Maintenance of the Poor May Be Alienated in Accordance with the Distinction Set Forth in This Law.
Title XXI. New Constitutions Shall Become Operative Two Months after They Have Been Recorded.
Title XXII. No One Shall Build Houses of Worship without the Consent of the Bishop.Anyone Who Does So Must First Provide Sufficient Revenue for the Maintenance and Repair of the Church Which He Builds. Bishops Shall Not Abandon Their Churches. Concerning the Alienation of Immovable...
Title XXIII. The Constitution of the Most Holy Emperor Concerning the Succession to Property Obtained by Marriage, Which Treats of What Are Called Apaedies, That Is to Say, the Estates of Deceased Children. It Shall Become Operative in Cases Which May Arise after Its Promulgation, but the ...
Title XXIV. All Persons Shall Obey the Provincial Judges in Both Criminal and Pecuniary Cases, and Proceedings Shall Be Conducted before Them without Any Exception Based upon Privilege, and Provincials Shall Not Be Sued Here Unless This Is Authorized by an Imperial Pragmatic Sanction.
Title XXV. The Ordinary Urban Prefectures and the Two Prætorian Prefectures At Present in Existence Shall Have Authority to Grant Releases from Curial Requirements, but Honorary Prefectures Shall Not Possess This Power.
Title XXVI. Illustrious Persons and Those Who Are of High Rank Must Under All Circumstances Be Represented by Attorneys in Pecuniary Cases, and in Those Relating to Criminal Injury. Those Who Are Known As Clarissimi Shall Be Permitted to Appear in Pecuniary Cases Either in Their Own Proper Person...
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