(This would all be very pretty on the stage, but I can't get the effect here.) Anyhow, Sylvano enters, accompanied by the rest of the gentlemen of
Gratian's court.
From the "Master of Sentences," he had passed to the "Capitularies of Charlemagne;" and he had devoured in succession, in his appetite for science, decretals upon decretals, those of Theodore, Bishop of Hispalus; those of Bouchard, Bishop of Worms; those of Yves, Bishop of Chartres; next the decretal of
Gratian, which succeeded the capitularies of Charlemagne; then the collection of Gregory IX.; then the Epistle of
Gratian Murray, AFSC Integrated School gymnasium Daanbantayan, Cebu Lamberto R.
Gratian Murray Integrated School head teacher Ariel Sablaon said the first incident happened on Monday afternoon, involving a Grade 8 student, who collapsed at the classroom building located at the back of the school premises.
As Ford and Grisez have rightly pointed out, canon law "functioned in moral formation analogously to the way in which creeds function in the handing on of the essentials of doctrine: as creeds summarize saving truth, canon law from the Middle Ages until 1917 codified moral formation." (60) In Brugger's work he refers to only a few patristic canons, to
Gratian, and to one canonical textbook, failing again to find numerous sources and explain their significance.
Their topics include men on the move: papal judges-delegate in the Province of Reims in the early 12th century, law in service of a community: property and tithing rights in
Gratian's Decretum and Stephen of Tournai's Summa, Hubert Walter's Council of Westminster in 1200 and its use of Alexander III's 1179 Lateran Council, and law and disputation in 11th-century libelli de lite.
Gratian and colleagues [54] reported a large population study using the National Cancer Data Base including 1854 patients with NF-PanNETs [less than or equal to] 2 cm diagnosed between 1998 and 2011.
81-134), examining the interesting fragments of a twelfth-century decretal of
Gratian extant in Rieti (central Italy).
Dante's rationalization is analyzed through the context of the historical philosophical thought of writers such as Augustine,
Gratian, Aquinas and Augustine's pupil, Orosius.
For them, a line runs through canon law and legal theory from
Gratian and the medievals all the way through the modern founders of a secularized natural law, such as Hugo Grotius.
An inquiry into theft in the case of extreme necessity from
Gratian's Concordia (1140) to William of Auxerre (1231)].