LC control no. | n 85202784 |
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Uniform title heading | Novellae constitutiones |
Variant(s) | Corpus juris civilis. Novellae constitutiones Novels (Corpus juris civilis) Corpus juris civilis. Novels Justinian I, Emperor of the East, 483?-565. Novellae constitutiones Novellae Iustiniani Novellae Justiniani |
Found in | Bonini, R. Richerche sulla legislazione giustinianea dell'anno 535, 1976: t.p. (Nov. Iustiniani) Colliers, c1984: v. 14, p. 387 (Novels (Novellae constitutiones)) Encic. ital.: v. 17, p. 390 (Novellae constitutiones; mostly in Greek) Enc. Brit., 15th ed.: Micro., v. 5, p. 645 (Novels; 1 of 4 books of Justinian code; almost all in Greek, issued 535-564) LC in RLIN, 3-13-85 (hdg.: Corpus juris civilis. Novellae constitutiones) Bartoletti Colombo, A.M. Lessico delle Novellae di Giustiniano nella versione dell'Authenticum, c1986: v. 2, t.p. (Novellae di Giustiniano) Berger, A. Encyclopedic dict. of Roman law (Novellae Iustiniani (sc. constitutiones); Justinian's constitutions (=Novels) promulgated after the 2nd ed. of his code (Codex Iustinianus) in the period between 534 and 556 A.D.; they were never actually issued as a suppl. to the code; they are known only from 3 collections: the epitome Iuliani, containing 122 novels dating to 555, the Authenticum (Liber authenticorum, containing 134 novels, the ones promulgated by Justinian in Latin being in the original, those promulgated in Greek being in Latin translation, dating 535-556, and, third, a collection of 168 novels compiled under Tiberius II (578-582), containing also 4 constitutions by Justin II and 3 by Tiberius II)) Oxford companion to law (Novellae (leges novellae: supplementary laws); there are 3 known, unofficial or semi-official, collections: the Epitome Juliani (in Latin), the Authenticum (in Latin), and the Greek collection from the reign of Tiberius II or later) Corpus juris civilis. Corpus juris civilis (Krueger-Mommsen ed.), 1954: v. 3, p. xviii, xi (the aim of this ed. has been to restore the text of the Greek Novellae and of the Authenticum to its original form; the collection of 168 Novellae and the Authenticum, with its appendix of 13 edicts and constitutions, were the two texts used in this ed.) |