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  • Drei half-linen volumes. Lyon (Lugduni), Unter dem Zeichen des aufgerichteten Löwen mit den Fliegen, 1589. Great-Folio (Original-Folio). (Reprint Vico Verlag, Frankfurt am Main 2016) Titelblätter mit Druckersignet, (80), 3. 100 Seiten zusammen. Drei half-linen volumes. Order-no.: 121 ISBN 978-3-86303-423-8 lieferbar / available First print of the edition with the Glossa Magna of Accursius, edited by Dionysius Gothofredus. Editio rarissima. Digestum Vetus: Ttlbl., (42), 2.222 Spalten (580,- ) Infortiatum: Ttlbl., (14), 2020 Spalten. (550,- ) Digestum Novum: Ttlbl., (20), 1.926 Spalte. (540,- ) Dionysius Gothofredus and the corpus iuris civilis The work and influence of the great French legal scholar Dionysius Gothofredus (1549 - 1622) marked the dawn of a new epoch in European legal history. Gothofredus's work ranks on a par with that of Accursius and the end of the glossator era and that of Mommsen in the pandectist period. Littera Gothofrediana is the version of the corpus iuris civilis that Gothofredus compiled after the epoch of humanist jurisprudence and which from then on remained not only valid but also a yardstick well into the 19th century. Humanist jurisprudence marked the end of mediaeval jurisprudence in that it returned to the text of the law with text-critical woks. This epoch saw the introduction of philological methods in jurisprudence. With his work, Gothofredus summarised this epoch to produce the corpus iuris in the form of and tailored to the needs of modern legal science. From the 16th to the 19th century, the Littera Gothofrediana enjoyed unchallenged authority. Gothofredus produced three different editions, all of which are described in more detail below. 1, the edition with the gloss, 2, the edition with Gothofredus' notes and 3, the pure text edition. Dionysius GOTHOFREDUS (= Denis Godefroy), born on 17 October 1549 in Paris, studied legal science at the Universities of Loewen, Cologne and Heidelberg. As a Calvinist, he saw no option after the terrible events of the Massacre of St. Bartholomew (23 - 24 August 1572) but to flee from France, moving to Geneva where in 1585 he took over the chair for pandectist studies vacated by the Italian Julius PACIUS. In 1589 he stayed briefly in Savoy, but after the loss of his entire library he once again had to flee from France, this time moving to Basle. In 1591 he was called to Strasbourg as professor of law. The University of Altdorf tried to attract Gothofredus as successor to Hugo Donellus, but with the same lack of success as the University of Franecker. In 1600 Gothofredus spent a few months at the then famous law faculty in Heidelberg, which during the confusion of the French War of Religion had also offered Donellus (1573 - 1579) a teaching post. The School of Bourges and the reform of legal teaching (mos gallicus) were a strong traditional in Heidelberg. This also explains the involvement of Francois Baudouin (= Baldumus) for five years (1556 - 1561) and of Julius Pacius (1585 - 1594) in Heidelberg. Gothofredus continued this tradition in a particularly impressive manner. However, Gothofredus first returned to Strasbourg and now rejected a call to Bourges (progressive university since the magnificent teaching success of Andreas ALCIAT between 1529 and 1533), probably owing to the uncertain political situation, nor did he accept a call to return to Geneva. In 1604, Gothofredus finally moved to Heidelberg, where he embarked on an extremely successful teaching and publishing career that was to last 16 years. He became one of the leading legal scholars in the whole of Europe, if not professor primarius jurisprudentiae. The unsuccessful attempts by the Universities of Franecker, Angers and Valence to entice him away from Heidelberg underline this. As a result of the Thirty Years War and the defeat for Prince Elector Friedrich, Heidelberg university experienced a withering decline before having to close its doors in 1625. From 1620 the Calvinists were no longer safe in Heidelberg and so Gothofredus fled back to Strasbourg, where he died two years later on 7 September 1622. The picture of Gothofredus on the book jacket shows the great legal scholar one year before his death. In 1583, when Gothofredus was already in Geneva, the edition with his commentary or notes was published for the first time. Altogether this edition was reprinted five times, 1590, 1602, 1607 and 1624. In 1589, the edition with the glossary of Accursius was printed, albeit no longer in the mediaeval form but tailored by Gothofredus to the needs of his period. Accordingly Gothofredus gave the work the title "cum commentaris Accursii" rather than "cum Glossis Accursii". This edition was reprinted in 1604 and 1612. In 1587 the first edition as pure text appeared containing the entire knowledge about the disputed passages in the corpus iuris civilis. The edition was reprinted in 1598, 1606 and 1625. Subsequently this text edition was reprinted numerous times throughout Europe Order-no.: 121 ISBN 978-3-86303-423-8 lieferbar / available.