Brill’s Encyclopaedia of the Neo-Latin World

Get access Subject: History
Edited by: Philip Ford (†), Jan Bloemendal and Charles Fantazzi

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With its striking range and penetrating depth, Brill’s Encyclopaedia of the Neo-Latin World traces the enduring history and wide-ranging cultural influence of Neo-Latin, the form of Latin that originated in the Italian Renaissance and persists to the modern era. Featuring original contributions by a host of distinguished international scholars, this comprehensive reference work explores every aspect of the civilized world from literature and law to philosophy and the sciences.

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Roman Law and bonae litterae

(2,908 words)

Author(s): Sandy, Gerald
¶ A law school dropout, Francesco Petrarca disliked the study of law and the legal profession. Roman civil law, which he studied for three years (1320–1323) without taking a degree at the University of…