GAUDEMET Eugène – L’INTERPRÉTATION DU CODE CIVIL EN FRANCE DEPUIS 1804, Présentation de Philippe JESTAZ et Christophe JAMIN, Bibliographie critique par Frédéric ROLIN (réimp. de l’éd. de 1911), suivi de « L’œuvre de Saleilles et l’œuvre de Gény en méthodo
GAUDEMET Eugène – L’INTERPRÉTATION DU CODE CIVIL EN FRANCE DEPUIS 1804, Présentation de Philippe JESTAZ et Christophe JAMIN, Bibliographie critique par Frédéric ROLIN (réimp. de l’éd. de 1911), suivi de « L’œuvre de Saleilles et l’œuvre de Gény en méthodo
    Eugène Gaudemet
    THE INTERPRETATION OF THE CIVIL CODE IN FRANCE SINCE 1804, Introduction by Philippe JESTAZ and Christophe JAMIN, Critical Bibliography by Frédéric ROLIN (reprint of the 1911 edition), followed by "The work of Saleilles and the work of Gény in legal methodology and philosophy of law" (originally published in the Mélanges Gény)
Édition :
    Paris
Date :
    2002
    PDF, BOOK IN PDF FORMAT (eBook) - This is not a printed book, 208 p.
    • PDF (eBook) - This is not a printed book • Eugène Gaudemet, a friend of Saleilles and Gény, was one of the major proponents of the Scientific School of Law, which, at the turn of the 20th century, renewed the methods of interpreting the Civil Code that had been in use in the 19th century, often relegated to the simplistic label of the School of Exegesis. In this seminal work, he offers a historical and ideological reading of the history of 19th-century French civil law, employing a genre too rarely explored in France: the history of legal doctrine. Originally published in 1935 and now out of print, this text remains captivating, both for its biases and for its way of bringing to life the teaching and study of law in the 19th century. To mark its place in the history of legal thought, it is preceded by an important preface by Christophe Jamin and Philippe Jestaz. It is followed by a methodical and critical bibliography of all the major treatises on civil law published in the 19th century.

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