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The Rise of Canonical Collections Before and in the Time of Gratian

The Rise of Canonical Collections Before and in the Time of Gratian

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Current price: $21.99
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The Rise of Canonical Collections Before and in the Time of Gratian

By None

The Rise of Canonical Collections Before and in the Time of Gratian

Current price: $21.99
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Size: Paperback

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The history of canon law begins long before anyone called it "canon law." It begins in the lived experience of Christian communities struggling to articulate norms, resolve disputes, and preserve unity across vast distances and diverse cultures. From the earliest centuries, the Church possessed rules, customs, and authoritative voices, yet it lacked a single, coherent legal system. Instead, it inherited a mosaic of texts-conciliar decrees, papal letters, penitential prescriptions, monastic rules, and local traditions-each carrying its own authority, each shaped by the needs of its particular context. The emergence of canonical collections was not an abstract intellectual exercise but a practical response to the Church's need to organize, interpret, and apply this growing body of normative material. The story of these collections is therefore the story of how the Church learned to think legally, to arrange its sources, and ultimately to conceive of itself as governed by a rational and unified legal order. This book explores that story from its earliest beginnings to the decisive moment represented by Gratian in the twelfth century. Gratian's Decretum is often treated as the birth of canon law as a discipline, and in many ways this is justified. His work introduced a new method, a new structure, and a new intellectual ambition. Yet Gratian did not emerge from a vacuum. His achievement presupposed centuries of experimentation, compilation, and reflection. Before Gratian, there were countless attempts to gather, arrange, and reconcile the Church's normative texts. Some were modest and local; others were ambitious and wide-ranging. Some sought to preserve tradition; others sought to reshape it. All contributed to the gradual emergence of a legal consciousness within the Church. To understand Gratian, one must understand the world that produced him, and to understand that world, one must trace the rise of canonical collections.
The history of canon law begins long before anyone called it "canon law." It begins in the lived experience of Christian communities struggling to articulate norms, resolve disputes, and preserve unity across vast distances and diverse cultures. From the earliest centuries, the Church possessed rules, customs, and authoritative voices, yet it lacked a single, coherent legal system. Instead, it inherited a mosaic of texts-conciliar decrees, papal letters, penitential prescriptions, monastic rules, and local traditions-each carrying its own authority, each shaped by the needs of its particular context. The emergence of canonical collections was not an abstract intellectual exercise but a practical response to the Church's need to organize, interpret, and apply this growing body of normative material. The story of these collections is therefore the story of how the Church learned to think legally, to arrange its sources, and ultimately to conceive of itself as governed by a rational and unified legal order. This book explores that story from its earliest beginnings to the decisive moment represented by Gratian in the twelfth century. Gratian's Decretum is often treated as the birth of canon law as a discipline, and in many ways this is justified. His work introduced a new method, a new structure, and a new intellectual ambition. Yet Gratian did not emerge from a vacuum. His achievement presupposed centuries of experimentation, compilation, and reflection. Before Gratian, there were countless attempts to gather, arrange, and reconcile the Church's normative texts. Some were modest and local; others were ambitious and wide-ranging. Some sought to preserve tradition; others sought to reshape it. All contributed to the gradual emergence of a legal consciousness within the Church. To understand Gratian, one must understand the world that produced him, and to understand that world, one must trace the rise of canonical collections.

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