scholarly journals Einverständlich versus uneinverständlich. Scheidungsoptionen katholischer Ehepaare 1783-1868

Author(s):  
Andrea Griesebner ◽  
Isabella Planer ◽  
Birgit Dober

Uncontested versus Contested. Divorce Options for Catholic couples 1783–1868. This chapter considers divorce records of Catholic couples living in Lower Austria during the long 19th century, contrasting the legal situation with court practice. With regard to the development of marriage law between the poles of ecclesiastical and secular responsibilities, we outline the divorce options and analyze the strategies employed by wives and husbands. An excursus on the possibilities of divorce in other European territories contextualizes the four subsequent micro-studies. Doctors and craftspeople from sovereign cities and markets as well as farmers from ecclesiastical or aristocratic domains come into view. Finally, in two micro-studies we analyze the consequences of the transfer of the jurisdiction back to ecclesiastical courts from 1856 onwards. A look at the further legal development and a short summary completes the article.

Author(s):  
Katrin Kello ◽  
Hesi Siimets-Gross

This paper analyses court cases, a hitherto little acknowledged source in Estonian history of early modern law. Specifically, we analyse six cases where a person’s status – that of a free man or of a serf – was at stake. We ask how different sources of law were used in the claims of the parties and the judgments of the courts, and which arguments and interpretations were drawn upon. The cases took place about two to three decades before the abolishment of serfdom in the province. They are of interest from the perspective of the history of early modern serfdom, modern reception of Roman law and the hierarchy of legal sources, as well as with regard to the history of the Enlightenment and human rights. The court cases illustrate how legal practice participates in discourses of its time. They shed light on the legal situation during the Regency Era, when Estland’s local system of justice was altered with the aim of harmonising the administrative system in the Russian Empire. The scarcity of such cases is explained by the fact that they affected only a small portion of the population of the province of Estland. Of the approximately 200,000 people living in the countryside, only 3.5 per cent were of free status – mainly people such as craftsmen, millers, sextons, innkeepers, and manor servants. It is not surprising that there were even fewer persons of borderline status who could go to court to claim their freedom. Peasant families of foreign origin, families descending from sextons, and a manor servant figure in the trials. The court cases were shaped by the scarcity of local law and the uncertainty of court practice under Regency. There was no provision in Estland’s written law concerning the two central questions in the trials – the expiry and the relinquishment of a person’s freedom. The most relevant stipulation was a 30-year limit, after which the affiliation of runaway peasants expired. Whether a court considered it possible to carry this limitation over to the expiry of a person’s freedom as well depended on the court’s interpretation of both local custom and the current legal situation. Local custom and earlier Russian ordinances permitted the enserfment of free persons, whereas more recent ordinances prohibited it. The question arose in the courts concerning the extent to which the more recent provisions should be implemented retroactively, and how to relate the ‘spirit of the age’ manifested in them to local custom. Moreover, if a court considered it appropriate to apply the provisions concerning Roman slaves or coloni to local serfs, it had to consider the prohibition in Roman law against enserfing free persons and negating the possibility of expiry of freedom. In fact, the judgments depended on the court’s understanding of the applicability of favor libertatis in Roman law – the principle that court judgments were to be pronounced in favour of freedom in cases where there was evidence of equal weight in favour of a person’s serfdom and freedom. Deriving from favor libertatis, the principle of praesumptio libertatis stated that what had to be proven was a person’s slave or serf status, not their freedom. Therefore, applying Roman slave law to local serfs was beneficial for claimants of freedom, whereas for landlords it was useful to state a difference between Roman slavery and local serfdom. Estate owners also claimed that in provinces like Estland, presumption of serfdom was to be applied in cases concerning peasants. The question of whether or not someone appeared like a ‘normal peasant’ hence became one of the issues discussed in court. We can see a certain consolidation of court practice over time. The courts applied Roman law in the event that they wished to take the ‘spirit of the age’ into account: when they needed to ground the position that a free man could not have been enserfed even prior to Catherine’s ordinances that prohibited enserfment. In the two earliest cases in the 1780s, the court of first instance applied Roman law almost exclusively in justifying its positions. In the three subsequent cases, living like a serf for 30 years, or having been registered among the serfs of an estate during land audits was seen either as evidence of the expiry of freedom, or as evidence of the acceptance of serf status, yet without referring to any specific legal provision. Thus, over time the courts’ emphasis shifted from applying “foreign law” towards local practice and Russian regulations. The sixth court case was exceptional in that the person in question was a manor servant rather than a peasant. In his case, the central questions were whether a soldier had the right to grant freedom to his servant, who was given to him by his parents to accompany him in war, and whether or not returning to the manor to serve as a valet entailed becoming a serf once again.


2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 25
Author(s):  
Teti Hadiati

The problems examined in this study is wast are interfaith marriages in accordance with the philosophical values of Indonesian marriage law? and why is the validity of interfaith marriages still being disputed in Indonesian marriage law? Related to the principle of continuing legal conditions and public order, the implementation of registration marriage by registration is a form of acceptance of interfaith marriages and the community has accepted the phenomenon of interfaith marriages as a natural reality and is considered to be true. This research is normative legal research and quantitative sociological legal research. The study methodology is analyzed based on the principle of public order, law smuggling, and continuation of the legal situation or rights that have been obtained. From this research, it was concluded that interfaith marriages were considered incompatible with the philosophical values of Indonesian Marriage law which were based on religious law, and could injure the long struggle history of Indonesian marriage law legislation under the principle of public order. Therefore, the registrations carried out by the civil registry office are not authoritative, but merely administrative.


2016 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 97
Author(s):  
Sławomir Godek

A FEW OBSERVATIONS ON LITHUANIAN LAW AT THE TURN OF THE 18TH-19TH CENTURY FROM THE PERSPECTIVE OF THE SZAWLE (ŠIAULIAI) LEDGERSSummaryResearch on the legal, and especially forensic, practice in Lithuania after the dismemberment of Poland-Lithuania (1795) – an area of study embarked on only recently – should make up an important aspect of enquiry on the state of the law of Lithuania following the Partitions. In particular the aim should be to show the relationship between the former Lithuanian law and the new provisions introduced by the Partitioning Power. The specific nature of this relationship is shown by the example of the land court register (księgi ziemskie) for Szawle (Lith. Šiauliai) for 1794-1803. These records clearly show evidence of the efforts of the Russian Generals Sergei F. Golitsyn and Alexander P. Tormasov to restore the Lithuanian courts after the intermission caused by the Kościuszko Insurrection of 1794. The Russians introduced new instruments to jurisprudence including the duty to submit reports on the activities of the courts to the Russian military authorities, the use of the Julian calendar, and the issue of decisions and judgements on behalf of the Empress Catherine II. Details of these new requirements were defined in the ordinances issued by Nikolai V. Repnin, and frequently invoked. A Russian provinces act and new regulations on legal representation were also resorted to in court practice. In addition to these “foreign” elements, Šiauliai court practice shows that the old law and the 16th-century Lithuanian Statute and statutory acts passed by the Parliament of pre-partitional Poland-Lithuania still continued to be used.


1983 ◽  
Vol 10 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 63-76
Author(s):  
Barbara Kaltz

Summary In view of the reception of Wilhelm von Humboldt’s linguistic writings in 19th-century France, it seems appropriate to draw attention to Alfred Tonnelle (1831–58), who translated Humboldt’s Über das Entstehen der grammatischen Formen (1822) into French, and prepared what he called an analyse of Humboldt’s Über die Verschiedenheit des menschlichen Sprachbaues (1836). Both texts were published posthumously in 1859 and appear to be little known among historiographers of linguistics. In spite of its tentative character (it was not originally intended for publication), Tonnellé’s Entstehen translation can be said to meet the major requirement for translations as it was set by Humboldt himself (einfache Treue). Unlike Schasler (1847), Gaudefroy-Demombynes (1931) and Valverde (1955), Tonnellé’s analyse of Über die Verschiedenheit is not a critical study of the text, but rather a short summary of the most important ideas put forward by Humboldt; it consists in fact of occasional commentaries, literal translations of selected paragraphs, and summarizing passages.


2014 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 49
Author(s):  
Abd. Salam

<p>This paper is aimed at describing the history and the social dynamics of the reformist and traditionalist fiqh in Indonesia. It first tries to show that since the 13<sup>th</sup> century Islam in Indonesia has largely been Sufi-oriented. It was only fairly recently that Islam in this country came into contact with figh especially after the return of Indonesian students from the Middle East toward the end of the 19th century. The puritan and reformist movements that prevailed in the Middle East at the time especially those under the patronage of Muhammad Abdul Wahhab and Jamaluddin al-Afghani inspired Muslims of this country to launch a similar reform in Indonesia. This reform movement received a somewhat strong opposition from the traditionalists since the beginning of the 20<sup>th</sup> century, hence the tension between the two currents of thought. This paper pays particular attention to this dynamic tension in the context of the contemporary historical and legal development in Indonesia.</p>


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tengku Erwinsyahbana

It is likely that interreligion marriage often takes place due to plurality adhered by the Indonesian people. Many couples have not had their interreligion marriage registered due to refusal by the Civil Registry Office to register their marriage on grounds that the interreligion marriage is not permitted in religious teachings, and further, it is not regulated in Law No. 1 of 1974. This fact obviously raised the feeling of injustice and legal uncertainty in the interreligion marriage so that it is interesting to investigate the aims of which were: to discover the law on interreligion marriage in the politics on marriage law based on Five Basics Principles of the Republic of Indonesia (Pancasila) when associated with function of the marriage registry institution, to discover the legal certainty of the interreligion marriage conducted overseas when associated with function of the marriage registry under the Indonesian legal system, as well as the interreligion marriage law in the political perspective on equitable marriage law based on Pancasila as an effort for legal system development of national family. To analyze the research findings, the following theories are adopted, which are, the Pancasila based legal state, Pancasilabased justice as well as legal development and legal certainty theories.The research was a legal research natured by adopting approaches on legal history and comparative as well as laws and regulations. The research was descriptive nature and in view of the costruction, it was a prescriptive research.The main data required for the research consisted secondary and primary data.Data collection that have been adopted was document study and interview methods the analysis of the data collecting was conducted on a qualitative juridical method focusing on the analysis on the legal certainty and legal aspect which live and grow among the public, as well as legal synchronization.The research indicated that the interreligionmarriage in Indonesia has taken place due to a legal uncertainty in the context of Law No. 1 of 1974 which did not regulate whether or not the interreligion marriage practice was permitted. On the contrary, however, the relevant law has opened the possibility of such marriage to took place. It was also possible that the uncertainty on the interreligion marriage was due to the provisions regarding marriage as set forth in Law No. 1 of 1974 and Law No. 23 of 2006 which conflict with each other. The state should therefore guarantee that the public legal certainty is to be realized as one characteristic indicated in a Pancasila based legal state is the existence of legal certainty. Viewed from the theories on Pancasila based justice as well as legal development and legal certainty approache. Thus, to realize public orderliness and harmony, it shall be necessary to only register the marriage at one institution. This has to be conducted as an effort to keep orderliness of population administration and legal certainty when it comes to interreligion marriage.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 39-46
Author(s):  
Natalia N. Ageeva

The article is devoted to the study of the scientific and publicistic heritage of the little-studied Russian historian-novist Stepan Fedorovich Fortunatov (1850–1918). According of his political views, the historian was a consistent supporter of liberalism, which largely determined the scope of his scientific interests. History of France in the 19th century. S.F. Fortunatov considered in a special lecture course, which he read at Moscow University, at the Higher Courses for Women and at the University. A.L. Shanyavsky, and also addressed it’s in his articles and numerous reviews. The lithographed edition of his lecture course allows us to identify both the structure of the course itself and to determine the range of issues that the historian considered the most significant for the study of this period. An analysis of the lecture materials shows that, he strove to convey to his students the peculiarities of the political and legal development of France in different periods. At the same time, S.F. Fortunatov skillfully combined the eventful presentation of French history of the 19th century, so rich in political upheavals, a fairly detailed study of the development of political thought and an analysis of constitutional and legal legislation. In the lecture course, the author repeatedly turned to the analysis of the latest domestic and foreign researches on the history of France. In articles and reviews concerning the history of France in the 19th century, the historian also mainly dealt with issues related to the change of political regimes, the peculiarities of the country’s constitutional structure and the struggle for the establishment of fundamental human rights and freedoms. He repeatedly emphasized the importance of highlighting the main forms and methods of resistance to the despotism of power, undoubtedly keeping in mind the relevance of this issue for Russia. Thus, lectures and articles by S.F. Fortunatov on the history of France in the 19th century were aimed primarily at studying the struggle for the triumph of republican ideas and substantiating the inevitability of the country’s development along this path.


Author(s):  
Stephan Balthasar

AbstractComparing the legal development in France, Germany and England from 1500–1800, this article analyses the protection of those interests which are covered today by the law of privacy. Continental law, influenced by the Roman actio iniuriarum, protected personal secrets, and it also restrained, to a certain extent, the divulgation of embarrassing truths. The English law of defamation however, afforded no comparable protection, the proof of truth ("justification") being a perfect defence against any claim for damages under the head of defamation. The conclusion that the civil law has a long tradition of preserving sensitive information against unwanted publicity is underlined by the fact that the ancient ideas of protecting secrets and restricting publication of the truth helped 19th century lawyers in France and in Germany to approach the modern concept of privacy ("vie privée", "Privatleben").


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document