The Unity of Civilization by Various
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the same society. The one society of mankind an ecclesiastical scheme
uniting a great variety of personal groupings. IV. The influence of law on the development of the kingdom into the state--a process begun early in England and France, but only generally achieved about 1500. The new conditions--geographical, economic, linguistic--which prepare the way for the new world of the sixteenth century. The gulf between that world and the old mediaeval world. The hope of unity to-day. CHAPTER V. UNITY AND DIVERSITY IN LAW The Problem in the Ancient World. Law universal and supreme over mankind (Sophocles, Antigone). Law arbitrary and varying from place to place (Herodotus). Nature and convention. The 'rightlessness' of the stranger in antiquity. The law was a 'law of citizens'. Admission of the foreigner to legal protection. Rome develops a law of the men of all nations (_ius gentium_), which reacts upon the law of citizens (_ius civile_), and ultimately coalesces with it. The law of nature. The break-up of the Ancient World; the Middle Ages. The invaders bring their own law with them. In the kingdoms which they founded each man had his 'personal law'. Local Law. Feudal Law. The beginnings of National Law: England, France, Germany. Roman Law in the Middle Ages. The Canon Law. The Modern World. The reception of Roman Law. State Sovereignty. The Modern Codes. Unity and diversity of law within the political unit. The world divided into territories of the English Common Law and lands where |
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