Charles Annibal Fabrot (September 15, 1580 - January 16, 1659), was a French jurisconsult. Events 668 - Eastern Roman Emperor Constans II is assassinated in his bath at Syracuse Italy. Events 27 BC - The title Augustus is bestowed upon Gaius Julius Caesar Octavian by the Roman Senate. This article is about the country For a topic outline on this subject see List of basic France topics. A lawyer, according to Black's Law Dictionary, is "a person learned in the law as an attorney, Counsel or Solicitor; a person
He was born in Aix-en-Provence. Aix (ɛks or Aix-en-Provence ( Provençal Occitan: Ais de Provença in classical norm or Ais de Prouvènço in Mistralian norm to distinguish At an early age he made great progress in the ancient languages and in the civil and the Canon law, and in 1602 he received the degree of doctor of law, and was made avocat to the parlement of Aix. Civil law or Romano-Germanic law or Continental law is the predominant system of law in the world. Canon Law, the Ecclesiastical law of the Catholic Church, is a fully developed legal system with all the necessary elements courts lawyers judges a fully articulated This article is for the Ancien Régime institution For the post-Revolutionary and present-day institution see French Parliament. In 1609 he obtained a professorship in the university of his native town. He is best known by his translation of the Basilica, which may be said to have formed the code of the Eastern empire till its destruction. The Latin word basilica (derived from Greek, Basiliké Stoà, Royal Stoa) was originally used to describe a Roman
This work was published at Paris in 1647 in 7 vols. Paris (ˈpærɨs in English; in French) is the Capital of France and the country's largest city fol. , and obtained for its author a considerable pension from the chancellor, Pierre Seguier, to whom it was dedicated. Pierre Séguier ( May 28, 1588 - January 28, 1672) was a French statesman chancellor of France from 1635 Fabrot rendered great service to the science of jurisprudence by his edition of Cujas, which comprised several treatises of that great jurist previously unpublished. Jacques Cujas or Cujacius (or as he called himself Jacques de Cujas) (1520 &ndash October 4 1590) was a French legal expert He also edited the works of several Byzantine historians, and was besides the author of various antiquarian and legal treatises. He died in Paris on 16 January 1659.