词条 | Tribonian |
释义 | Tribonian Byzantine legal scholar Latin Tribonianus born c. AD 475, Pamphylia? died 545 legal authority and public official in the Byzantine Empire (eastern Roman Empire), who was the chief compiler and perhaps the initiator of the Code of Justinian (Justinian, Code of), the comprehensive codification of Roman law sponsored (Justinian, Code of) by and named for the emperor Justinian I (reigned AD 527–565). From 530 to 532, and from 534 until his death, Tribonian served as Justinian's quaestor sacri palatii, a minister comparable to the late medieval English chancellor. Perhaps untruthfully, he was accused of venality in office and of religious unorthodoxy, a charge possibly based on his interest in secular philosophy and in astronomy. A member of the imperial commission that produced the first Codex constitutionum of imperial legislation (529), Tribonian was later president of commissions that prepared the Digesta (“Digest,” also called Pandects or Pandectae; 533) and a second Codex (534). In addition, he supervised the writing of the Institutiones (“Institutes”; 533) by the law teachers Dorotheus and Theophilus. As Justinian's legal adviser, he was doubtless responsible for the earlier Novellae constitutiones post codicum (“Novels”; 534–565), containing enactments from 534 until Justinian's death in 565. |
随便看 |
|
百科全书收录100133条中英文百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容开放、自由的电子版百科全书。