, Brepols - Harvey Miller, 1994 softcover . 130 pages ., 160 x 240 mm, Languages: English, Fine copy. Including an index. ISBN 9782503360638.
Traetises describing judicial procedure appeared for the first time in the twelfth century, and the expressions De iudiciis, Libellus de ordine iudiciorum and Ordines iudiciarii were among the first titles used to designate them. An ordo iudiciarius or an ordo iudiciorum is devoted exclusively to the procedural law found in Roman and/or canon law. Although the author of an ordo may have had a certain forum in mind, his description of procedure has general validity. An ordo differs in this sense from a stylus, which is the description of the procedure appropriate to a specific court. This volume draws from Ordo iudiciorum vel ordo iudiciarius (1984) by the same author, which describes the procedural texts written before 1234, but encompasses the complete lifecycle of the ordines, from the middle of the twelfth to the end of the fifteenth century.<br>Ce fascicule emprunte largement a l'ouvrage Ordo iudiciorum vel ordo iudiciarius (1984), du meme auteur, qui decrit les textes de procedure judiciaire bases sur le droit romain et le droit canon ecrits avant 1234: les ordines (incluant les ouvrages concernant la procedure criminelle et ceux destines a l'usage des avocats), les formulaires, les traites sur les actions, les exceptions, les temoins et les preuves, les procedures d'appel, la contumace et l'arbitrage. Les traites destines aux notaires, qui font moins de place aux questions de procedure, ne sont pas repris dans la presente etude.