Abstract

1. The collection of Biblical and Roman legal texts, usually calledMosaicarum et Romanarum legum Collatio, has been the subject of countless studies and commentaries since 1573 and particularly in the last 170 years. The serious researches of this second period, starting from 1822, have been carried out by prominent authors and deserve careful consideration. Nevertheless some questions are still unsolved and, above all, new ideas, new viewpoints, new ways of study can be suggested. Of course, I do not intend undertaking such an arduous work in this paper: it is a task for younger and more specialized researchers. As for me, I shall confine myself to the attempt of adding some accuracy to a rough suggestion I put forward on the subject two years ago, while trying to outline a general picture of the relationship between Roman law and legal comparison.

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