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The Early records of medieval Coventry
In: Records of social and economic history N.s., 11
Medieval English conveyances
In: Cambridge studies in English legal history
An analysis of the documents by which land was transferred from one person to another in medieval England
Medieval metropolises: proceedings of the congress of the Atlas Working Group, International Commission for the History of Towns, Bologna 8 - 10 maggio 1997
In: Attraverso le città italiane 6
Città e ospedali nella Lombardia medievale
In: Biblioteca di storia urbana medievale 8
The laws of the medieval kingdom of Hungary, Vol. 3, 1458 - 1490
In: The laws of Hungary
In: Ser. 1, 1000 - 1526 Vol. 3
The laws of the medieval kingdom of Hungary, Vol. 2, 1301 - 1457
In: The laws of Hungary
In: Ser. 1, 1000 - 1526 Vol. 2
Popiežiaus Aleksandro III doktrina dėl santuokos sudarymo viduramžių Vakarų Europoje ; Marriage formation doctrine by the Pope Alexander III in the medieval Western Europe
Secret marriages and cases that reached the Church courts show that there was a social tension in the society, as marriage was also a social fact affected by family, financial and feudal aspects. Therefore, in reality, the choice by people, especially by women, was not free. In real life, marriages were still formed for economic, social, even military reasons. Marriage consent rules developed into an entire section of the contract law, they were not only the foundation of the contemporary matrimonial law, but also produced certain fundamental elements of the contract law, namely the notion of free will and related notions of an error, coercion and deceit. The Christian matrimonial law that was formed in the Middle Ages existed in the Western Europe until the Reformation in the 16th century, in England even longer.
BASE
Popiežiaus Aleksandro III doktrina dėl santuokos sudarymo viduramžių Vakarų Europoje ; Marriage formation doctrine by the Pope Alexander III in the medieval Western Europe
Secret marriages and cases that reached the Church courts show that there was a social tension in the society, as marriage was also a social fact affected by family, financial and feudal aspects. Therefore, in reality, the choice by people, especially by women, was not free. In real life, marriages were still formed for economic, social, even military reasons. Marriage consent rules developed into an entire section of the contract law, they were not only the foundation of the contemporary matrimonial law, but also produced certain fundamental elements of the contract law, namely the notion of free will and related notions of an error, coercion and deceit. The Christian matrimonial law that was formed in the Middle Ages existed in the Western Europe until the Reformation in the 16th century, in England even longer.
BASE
Popiežiaus Aleksandro III doktrina dėl santuokos sudarymo viduramžių Vakarų Europoje ; Marriage formation doctrine by the Pope Alexander III in the medieval Western Europe
Secret marriages and cases that reached the Church courts show that there was a social tension in the society, as marriage was also a social fact affected by family, financial and feudal aspects. Therefore, in reality, the choice by people, especially by women, was not free. In real life, marriages were still formed for economic, social, even military reasons. Marriage consent rules developed into an entire section of the contract law, they were not only the foundation of the contemporary matrimonial law, but also produced certain fundamental elements of the contract law, namely the notion of free will and related notions of an error, coercion and deceit. The Christian matrimonial law that was formed in the Middle Ages existed in the Western Europe until the Reformation in the 16th century, in England even longer.
BASE
Popiežiaus Aleksandro III doktrina dėl santuokos sudarymo viduramžių Vakarų Europoje ; Marriage formation doctrine by the Pope Alexander III in the medieval Western Europe
Secret marriages and cases that reached the Church courts show that there was a social tension in the society, as marriage was also a social fact affected by family, financial and feudal aspects. Therefore, in reality, the choice by people, especially by women, was not free. In real life, marriages were still formed for economic, social, even military reasons. Marriage consent rules developed into an entire section of the contract law, they were not only the foundation of the contemporary matrimonial law, but also produced certain fundamental elements of the contract law, namely the notion of free will and related notions of an error, coercion and deceit. The Christian matrimonial law that was formed in the Middle Ages existed in the Western Europe until the Reformation in the 16th century, in England even longer.
BASE
Actas das II Jornadas Luso-Espanholas de História Medieval Vol. 2
In: Actas das II Jornadas Luso-Espanholas de História Medieval Vol. 2