• 12th-century legal schools in Italy, France and Germany are identified as glossators in a specific sense. They studied Roman law based on the Digesta, the...
    5 KB (568 words) - 21:57, 19 November 2023
  • Aldred the Scribe (also known as Aldred the Glossator) is the name by which scholars identify a tenth-century priest, otherwise known only as Aldred,...
    4 KB (656 words) - 15:48, 11 January 2024
  • Thumbnail for Judiciary
    1263, ending the early scholastics. The successors of the Glossators were the Post-Glossators or Commentators. They looked at a subject in a logical and...
    26 KB (3,160 words) - 08:46, 30 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Air rights
    which appears in medieval Roman law and is credited to 13th-century glossator Accursius; it was notably popularized in common law in Commentaries on...
    18 KB (2,146 words) - 01:21, 23 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Juris Doctor
    four famous legal scholars in the 11th century who were students of the glossator school in that city. This served as the model for other law schools of...
    127 KB (12,824 words) - 00:49, 3 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Hercules
    while the monsters he battles were regarded as moral obstacles. One glossator noted that when Hercules became a constellation, he showed that strength...
    29 KB (3,205 words) - 18:17, 2 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Placentinus
    Placentinus (died 1192) was an Italian jurist and glossator. Originally from Piacenza, he taught at the University of Bologna. From there he founded the...
    895 bytes (61 words) - 22:13, 9 February 2023
  • Thumbnail for Cristina Campo
    Institute. 2020-10-19. Retrieved 2021-02-09. "Glossator 11, Cristina Campo: translation/commentary". Glossator. 2021-07-01. Retrieved 2021-08-06. "The Unforgivable...
    5 KB (504 words) - 19:59, 31 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Franciscus Accursius
    (1225–1293) was an Italian lawyer, the son of the celebrated jurist and glossator Accursius. The two are often confused. Born in Bologna, Franciscus was...
    2 KB (200 words) - 09:59, 31 January 2024
  • Thumbnail for Bologna
    originated as a centre for the study of medieval Roman law under major glossators, including Irnerius. It numbered Dante, Boccaccio and Petrarch among its...
    106 KB (10,948 words) - 01:09, 3 September 2024
  • Nicola Masciandaro (ed.). Hideous Gnosis: Black Metal Theory Symposium. Glossator. pp. 106–108. "An Interview w/ Wolves in the Throne Room's Aaron Weaver"...
    166 KB (16,415 words) - 21:26, 25 August 2024
  • degrees were doctorates. The foundations of the first universities were the glossators of the 11th century, which were also schools of law. The first university...
    45 KB (5,723 words) - 07:55, 30 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Vikings
    to Old English Literature. p. 278 Sauer, Hans (2008). "How Anglo-Saxon Glossators Adapted Latin words and their world". The Journal of Medieval Latin. 18:...
    216 KB (22,885 words) - 13:22, 6 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Irnerius
    ("lantern of the law"), was an Italian jurist, and founder of the School of Glossators and thus of the tradition of medieval Roman Law. He taught the newly recovered...
    7 KB (979 words) - 15:09, 26 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Corporation
    the recovery and annotation of Justinian's Corpus Juris Civilis by the glossators and their successors the commentators in the 11th–14th centuries. Particularly...
    46 KB (5,703 words) - 11:19, 20 August 2024
  • 2015-03-11. Retrieved 2020-03-16. Hideous Gnosis – Transcendental Black Metal. Glossator. 8 March 2010. p. 53. Retrieved 6 June 2011. Castillo, Arielle (3 March...
    13 KB (977 words) - 21:20, 3 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for University of Bologna
    Susa (Hostiensis); Pope Innocent IX Irnerius, founder of the School of Glossators Joaquín Chapaprieta, former Prime Minister of Spain. Juan Fernando López...
    47 KB (4,199 words) - 13:17, 28 July 2024
  • General of the Dominican order Johannes Teutonicus Zemeke (d. 1245) - glossator on the Decretum Gratiani, see Glossa Ordinaria This disambiguation page...
    337 bytes (65 words) - 03:25, 16 March 2013
  • Pollen. Barque Press, 2006. "Tintern Abbey, Once Again," by J. H. Prynne. Glossator 1 (2009). "Difficulties in the Translation of 'Difficult' Poems" by J...
    17 KB (1,860 words) - 21:54, 21 July 2024
  • contradictions. The commentators of the 12th and early 13th centuries, called glossators, such as Azo of Bologna and Accursius, produced large-scale harmonization...
    9 KB (1,113 words) - 00:07, 25 March 2024
  • Thumbnail for Azo of Bologna
    influential Italian jurist and a member of the school of the so-called glossators. Born circa 1150 in Bologna, Azo studied under Joannes Bassianus and became...
    6 KB (741 words) - 05:43, 22 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Ogham
    or less forcefully reinterpreted as epithets of trees by the medieval glossators. McManus (1991, §3.15) discusses possible etymologies of all the letter...
    41 KB (5,275 words) - 14:09, 26 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Printer's devil
    of Handiworks, Applied to the Art of Printing. Cisco, Michael (2013). Glossator: Practice and Theory of the Commentary. Vol. 8. CreateSpace Independent...
    13 KB (1,516 words) - 16:29, 8 August 2024
  • role in the diffusion of a contractual consensualism. First recognize by glossators and postglossators before the ecclesiastic courts, it's only in the 16th...
    110 KB (14,138 words) - 02:58, 2 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Wycliffe's Bible
    of Glossing: The Lord's Prayer (Pater noster) from Lindesfarne Gospels (698) with word-for-word Old English glosses (ca.970) by Aldred the Glossator...
    60 KB (7,412 words) - 19:59, 6 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Gloss (annotation)
    glosses is a glossary. A collection of medieval legal glosses, made by glossators, is called an apparatus. The compilation of glosses into glossaries was...
    9 KB (1,046 words) - 23:32, 30 August 2024
  • scholar and theologian in the Dvaita Vedānta tradition. He is a prolific glossator of the early 17th century. He is the follower of Uttaradi Math and the...
    3 KB (325 words) - 09:06, 27 February 2024
  • attributed to the praetorian prefect Maximinus, who was explicitly blamed in a glossator for Jerome. After Maximinus and his associates were removed from power...
    15 KB (1,692 words) - 22:24, 26 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Auvergnat
    "The Passion of Occitan", in Anna Klosowska and Valerie Wilhite (eds.), Glossator: Practice and Theory of the Commentary, Vol. 4: Occitan Poetry (2011)...
    14 KB (1,754 words) - 06:52, 24 August 2024
  • Lindisfarne, 10th-century Northumbrian bishop Aldred the Scribe, 10th-century glossator Aldred Lumley, 10th Earl of Scarbrough, British peer and soldier Surname:...
    1 KB (202 words) - 20:54, 14 December 2023