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Ordonnance

(516 words)

Author(s): Brauneder, Wilhelm
O. (»Anordnungen«; von lat. ordinatio, »Ordnung«) waren Gesetzgebungs-Akte im Königreich Frankreich, und zwar sowohl der regionalen Gewalten wie z. B. der Herzöge von Burgund oder Guyene, als auch v. a. des franz. Königs; für die Rechtsentwicklung Frankreichs sind Letztere von Bedeutung. Bis einschließlich 1629 ergingen diese O. aufgrund einer Initiative und unter Mitwirkung der Stände ( états, parliaments) durch königliche Sanktion, danach allein als königliche Gesetzgebungsakte im Zeichen des Absolutismus. Seit dem SpätMA, bes. aber seit dem 16. Jh. verfolgte…
Date: 2019-11-19

Landesteilung

(781 words)

Author(s): Brauneder, Wilhelm
L. im weiteren Sinn bedeutet Teilung jeglicher Territorialherrschaft, L. im engeren Sinn Teilung des Herrschafts-Typs Land, der vom Landesherrn (Landesherrschaft) und den Landständen auf der Basis des Landrechts getragen wurde. Beide Arten wurzeln in der im MA ausgebildeten erbrechtlichen Auffassung auch von Herrschaftsrechten, die als Erbschaft mehreren Erben zu gleichen Anteilen zustanden (Erbrecht). Sie bildeten bei Fehlen weiterer Verfügungen eine Erbengemeinschaft, die zum Kondominat führte. In den meisten Fällen kam es jedoch entweder zur L. oder zur …
Date: 2019-11-19

Verfassung

(5,976 words)

Author(s): Brauneder, Wilhelm
1. Terminologie 1.1. VerfassungDas dt. Wort V. als Begriffsbezeichnung in einem spezifischen polit.-rechtlichen Sinn begegnet erst um 1800. Es geht allerdings auf eine ma. Wurzel zurück, die eine allgemein-rechtliche Aussage enthält: V. bezeichnet das Verfasste aufgrund einer Vereinbarung, das demnach einzuhalten ist, und damit auch den so geschaffenen Zustand. Diese Wortbedeutung begegnet noch im 18. Jh. wie etwa bei Christoph Martin Wieland in der synonymen Formel, man habe »sich in V. zu setzen,…
Date: 2019-11-19

Parität

(995 words)

Author(s): Brauneder, Wilhelm
1. AllgemeinP. bezeichnet grundsätzlich die rechtliche Gleichbehandlung von Interessengruppen, im histor. Kontext jene von verschiedenen relig. Bekenntnissen in Staat, Land und Gemeinde. Nach ma. Ansätzen – etwa dem Nebeneinander von Christen, Moslems und Juden in den Kreuzfahrerstaaten (um 1100–um 1300) – wurde P. in besonderem Maße durch die Glaubens Reformationen zu Beginn des 16. Jh.s aktualisiert: Nun ging es um das Nebeneinander christl. Glaubensrichtungen (Konfessionalisierung). Gesamteurop. betrachtet obsiegte allerdings die Dominanz je eines Bekenntnisses: …
Date: 2019-11-19

Constitutional law

(1,854 words)

Author(s): Brauneder, Wilhelm
1. In general Constitutional law emerged as a distinct field of law in the 18th century, when the legal systems of Europe became subdivided into private law or civil law, civil procedure, criminal law, criminal procedure, and administrative law (German  Polizeyrecht and political laws). Like private and criminal law in particular, at least in Continental Europe, constitutional law was swept up in the codification movement; that is, it was regulated in law codes with preemptive force; in particular, in documents called constitutions,…
Date: 2019-10-14

Sede vacante

(907 words)

Author(s): Brauneder, Wilhelm
Sede vacante (Italian, from the Latin  sedis vacantia, “vacancy of the throne/office”), in relation to a high office, in general refers to the span of time during which that office is vacant, dating from the death, abdication, or dismissal of the incumbent to the successor’s installation. The term comes from canon law, where it refers particularly to the vacancy of an episcopal see and the papacy [4]. The macaronic German-Latin term  Sedisvakanz began to be used in reference to the Holy Roman Empire in the 18th century.The exercise of the office pending the new appointme…
Date: 2021-08-02

Constitution

(6,856 words)

Author(s): Brauneder, Wilhelm
1. Terminology 1.1. VerfassungThe German word Verfassung (the modern German term for “constitution”) first appears with a specific political-legal sense around 1800. It is derived from a medieval root that had general legal implications: a  Verfassung is something that has been composed ( verfasst) on account of an agreement that the parties are thereafter obliged to keep; the term then came to indicate the resulting state of affairs. This usage still appears in the 18th century, for example when Christoph Martin Wieland uses  Verfassung as a synonym for the word “agreement” ( A…
Date: 2019-10-14

Partition, territorial

(889 words)

Author(s): Brauneder, Wilhelm
Territorial partition in the broad sense means partition of all territorial sovereignty; in the narrow sense, it means partition of the territorial sovereignty (Authority) of the type that was shared by the territorial sovereign (Territorial sovereignty [Holy Roman Empire]) and the territorial estates on the basis of territorial law. Both types are rooted in the view of sovereign rights inherited equally by multiple heirs, derived from medieval inheritance law. Absent other provisions, they cons…
Date: 2020-10-06

Cinq codes

(973 words)

Author(s): Brauneder, Wilhelm
The Cinq Codes are five codifications that were hastily issued between 1804 and 1810, not only during the reign of Napoleon I, but to some extent under his influence. They encompassed judicial law, that is, the law applied by the courts. The Napoleonic Code, or  Code Civil of 1804, regulated civil law (Private law), the  Code de Commerce of 1807 dealt specifically with Commercial law, the  Code de la Procédure Civil of 1806 law of civil procedure. Finally, the  Code Pénal contained Criminal law (1810) and the  Code d'Instruction Criminelle the law of criminal procedure (1…
Date: 2019-10-14

Feudal law

(1,796 words)

Author(s): Brauneder, Wilhelm
1. Definition and originsThe basis for the state of feudal law in the early modern period was laid in the Middle Ages; its development was virtually complete by 1500 and it remained in force until the 19th century. Together with territorial law, municipal law, and manorial law (see Weistum), feudal law was one of the areas of law that constituted the general legal order of European states. The relationship between local, territorial law and feudal law in particular was complementary: where the former dominated, feudal law retreated, and vice versa.The complex of feudal law encomp…
Date: 2019-10-14

Weistum

(1,037 words)

Author(s): Brauneder, Wilhelm
1. Introduction; medieval originsJacob Grimm (see below, 2.) founded the concept of the Weistum  (compare “wisdom,” meaning “customary law”) as a specific type of legal source. Those subject to a particular local or material jurisdiction would periodically verbally assert the customary law in force there. From the early Middle Ages onwards, they did so in a procedure akin to court proceedings, with answers to questions concerning hypothetical legal cases. The question-and-answer mode disappeared ove…
Date: 2023-11-14

Civil procedure, code of

(1,188 words)

Author(s): Brauneder, Wilhelm
1. Basic principles and development Codes of civil procedure are law codes (Law [statute]) that treat civil procedure comprehensively and normally with the preemptive force of a codification. They are the result of the differentiation of the legal order into distinct codes (see also civil codes) and presume two things: on the one hand, the separation of civil and criminal proceedings and, on the other hand, the separation of civil procedure as procedural law from the basis of its decisions, namely, c…
Date: 2019-10-14

Statutes

(742 words)

Author(s): Brauneder, Wilhelm
Statutes (Latin  statuta) are legal regulations with a narrow range of (territorial or material) applicability, that is, relating to groups of persons or organs. They presuppose the existence of farther-reaching, superordinate regulations, which they are issued to supplement, resolve, or implement.The concept of the statute originates in the  ius commune, in contrast to which, as general law, it encompasses local legal systems. As the ius commune became more widely established, particularly after 1500 with the reception of ius commune, the concept of the statute came …
Date: 2022-08-17

Inheritance law

(1,083 words)

Author(s): Brauneder, Wilhelm
Inheritance law comprises the legal norms regulating the fate of the property (estate) of a person (the decedent) after his or her death (inheritance). In the early modern period, inheritance and police ordinances and ultimately codifications (e.g. the  Allgemeines Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch [ABGB] of 1812, the  Allgemeines Landrecht für die preußischen Staaten [ALR] of 1794) supplanted customary law. Inheritance law now primarily served a distributory function, since rising life expectancy meant that the provision of adult children with propert…
Date: 2019-10-14

Condominium

(679 words)

Author(s): Brauneder, Wilhelm
Condominium is the exercise of authority (Latin  dominium) by several rulers in a manner that recalls joint ownership (cf. Property). Like joint ownership, condominium may be based on the rulers' shares, so that when a property is administrated jointly, the income and burdens are divided proportionally between them. More frequently, however, condominium is based on a real division between rulers or on preexisting subdivisions (cf. Landowner) under relatively loose joint administration (Government).The equivalent of condominium on the lower levels of city, villa…
Date: 2019-10-14

Parity (denominational)

(1,124 words)

Author(s): Brauneder, Wilhelm
1. IntroductionParity indicates the equal treatment of interest groups under the law, in a historical context, specifically the treatment of different religious confessions in the states, countries, and communities. After beginnings in the Middle Ages – such as the coexistence of Christians, Muslims, and Jews in the Crusader States (ca. 1100 – ca. 1300) – parity became a current issue especially after the religious Reformation in the early 16th century: now it was about the co-existence of differ…
Date: 2020-10-06

Constitutionalism

(1,819 words)

Author(s): Brauneder, Wilhelm
1. Definition and overviewThe term constitutionalism is scarcely contemporary, but is used ambiguously and often carelessly in the secondary literature for a form of constitution with respect to the corresponding idea and theory, for the efforts to realize this constitution, and finally for the result, a specific type of constitution. At the heart of all these definitions is a form of state and system of government that are legitimated and organized by a formal constitution that limits state power to ensure citizens' freedom (Citizenship).Constitutionalism predominantly ai…
Date: 2019-10-14

Ministerial responsibility

(844 words)

Author(s): Brauneder, Wilhelm
Ministerial responsibility means the responsibility of ministers for their special function as both an organ of government (council of ministers) and heads of functional departments (ministry), over and above their general responsibility under criminal and private law. Ministerial responsibility is one of the essential features of constitutional (Constitutionalism) and parliamentary polity (Constitution). It is rooted in the fundamental idea of the exercise of state authority in a specific way s…
Date: 2020-04-06

Holy Roman Empire (of the German Nation)

(2,236 words)

Author(s): Brauneder, Wilhelm
1. Terminology and compositionUntil the end of the Old Empire in 1806, its official German name was  Heiliges Römisches Reich Deutscher Nation (“Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation”; Latin  Sacrum Imperium Romano-Germanicum). The addition of the adjective  Holy probably goes back to 12th-century Staufian ideas, but it was not challenged in the early modern period; similar epithets like  Regnum Apostolicum (“Apostolic Kingdom”) for Hungary and Rex Christianissimus (“Most Christian King”) for the king of France were common. The qualification  Roman was more important, s…
Date: 2019-10-14

Constitution, breach of

(1,252 words)

Author(s): Brauneder, Wilhelm
1. General characteristicsBreach of constitution is the change or removal of a constitution in a way that is not prescribed by the constitution affected; in other words, unconstitutionally. It normally entails a comprehensive change of the form of state and/or government. Since formal constitutions specify the way in which they may be modified, a breach of constitution can be easily distinguished from a constitutional change according to the rules of set out in the constitution itself. Such a dist…
Date: 2019-10-14
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