Law and Liberty: Roman Law, Canon Law, and Modern Italian Jurisprudence
MTA
A legal-historical study showing how ancient and ecclesiastical legal systems influenced modern Italian law and European legal thought.
2nd Edition
"Law and Liberty: Roman Law, Canon Law, and Modern Italian Jurisprudence" is a comprehensive legal-historical study that traces the profound influence of Roman and Canon law on the development of modern Italian jurisprudence and broader European legal thought. The book begins by detailing the foundational principles of Roman law, from its archaic customs and the Twelve Tables to the sophisticated legal science of the Classical period, and its monumental codification under Justinian in the *Corpus Juris Civilis*. This early foundation established categories of persons, property, and obligations, as well as procedural mechanisms like the *legis actiones* and the *formula* system, which laid the groundwork for future legal systems.
The narrative then shifts to the medieval era, highlighting the parallel rise of Canon Law, systematized by Gratian's *Decretum*, and the re-discovery of Roman law. This convergence, fostered by Italian universities like Bologna, led to the creation of the *ius commune* – a common legal culture that blended Roman conceptual rigor with Canon Law's emphasis on equity and good faith. The book explores how this learned law interacted with the burgeoning statutory law of Italian city-states, creating a dynamic legal landscape driven by the needs of commerce, the notarial profession, and evolving forms of governance. The contributions of Glossators and Commentators like Bartolus and Baldus are emphasized as crucial to adapting ancient texts to contemporary issues.
The later chapters examine the transformations of the early modern period, including the assertion of princely sovereignty, Enlightenment reforms, and the dramatic impact of the Napoleonic Codes, which introduced a centralized, rational, and secular legal order to much of Italy. The book then traces the process of national unification in 1861 and the subsequent creation of the 1865 Civil Code, a synthesis of existing traditions aiming for national legal unity. It details the development of public law and the administrative state, and the evolution of criminal law from liberal principles to the more authoritarian corporatist ideology reflected in the 1942 Civil Code.
Finally, the book analyzes the profound changes brought by the post-WWII Republican Constitution of 1948, particularly the introduction of judicial review through the Constitutional Court, and the subsequent "de-Fascistization" and "constitutionalization" of private law. It concludes by exploring contemporary challenges such as migration, globalized markets, and digital governance, demonstrating how Italian courts continue to navigate these complex issues by drawing on their deep historical legal heritage, adapting Roman-canonical categories, and integrating European Union law and human rights norms. The overarching argument is that the vitality of modern Italian jurisprudence lies in its disciplined memory, constantly engaging with its past to guide future legal development.
This book is intended for legal historians and students of comparative law who seek to understand how legal systems evolve across centuries while maintaining conceptual continuity. Historians will appreciate its narrative tying institutional development to intellectual method, while comparatists will find it a valuable case study of how a national legal system can be distinctly Italian yet unmistakably European—shaped at the intersection of Roman rationality, Canon law equity, and modern constitutionalism. The work is particularly suited for those interested in the deep historical roots of contemporary legal structures and the dynamic interplay between tradition and reform in European legal thought.
January 20, 2026
67,374 words
4 hours 43 minutes
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