Codex Constitutionum
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books of Justinian code
- In Code of Justinian
…consists of four books: (1) Codex Constitutionum, (2) Digesta, or Pandectae, (3) Institutiones, and (4) Novellae Constitutiones Post Codicem.
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contribution of Dorotheus
- In Dorotheus
…the second edition of the Codex Constitutionum (published in 534). With Tribonian (Tribonianus), head of the Digest’s compilers, and Theophilus, he also prepared the Institutes (533) as an introduction to the Digest. Fragments of his Index (542), a commentary on the Digest, are preserved in the 9th-century law code called…
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significance in Byzantine Empire
- In Byzantine Empire: The years of achievement to 540
Called the Codex Constitutionum and partly founded upon the 5th-century Theodosian Code, it comprised the first of four works compiled between 529 and 565 called the Corpus Juris Civilis (Body of Civil Law), commonly known as the Code of Justinian. That first collection of imperial edicts, however,…
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source of Roman law
- In Roman law: The law of Justinian
The resulting Codex Constitutionum was formally promulgated in 529, and all imperial ordinances not included in it were repealed. This Codex has been lost, but a revised edition of 534 exists as part of the so-called Corpus Juris Civilis.
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