How many sections made up the Justinian Code?
Answers
The Justinian code, which is now referred to as the Corpus Juris, refers to a collection of landmark works in jurisprudence, issued from 529 to 534 by Justinian I, a prominent Eastern Roman Emperor.
The Justinian Code has three fundamental parts: the Code or Codex, which is a compilation, through selection and extraction, of imperial enactments; the Digest of Pandects, which is a resource, similar to an encyclopedia, that is composed of extracts from the writings of Roman jurists; and the Institutes, which is a student textbook, and introduces the Code through conceptual elements that are less developed than the Digest.
All three parts of the Justinian code were awarded the force of law in ancient Rome; the parts of the Justinian code were intended to be, when agglomerated, the sole source of law in the region. Justinian, after the creation of the code, stated that any reference to any other legal source, including the original texts which the Digest and Code were based off, was forbidden.
The Justinian Code has three fundamental parts: the Code or Codex, which is a compilation, through selection and extraction, of imperial enactments; the Digest of Pandects, which is a resource, similar to an encyclopedia, that is composed of extracts from the writings of Roman jurists; and the Institutes.
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