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Roman Law and the Idea of Europe
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List of Figures List of Contributors Acknowledgements Introduction: Roman Law and the Idea of Europe Kaius Tuori, University of Helsinki, Finland 1.The Impact of Exile on Law and Legal Science 1934–1964 Magdalena Kmak, University of Helsinki, Finland 2.Exiled Romanists between Traditions: Pringsheim, Schulz and Daube Kaius Tuori, University of Helsinki, Finland 3.Francis de Zulueta (1878?1958): An Oxford Roman Lawyer between Totalitarianisms Lorena Atzeri, Università degli Studi Milano, Italy 4.Autonomy and Authority: The image of the Roman Jurists in Schulz and Wieacker Jacob Giltaij, University of Helsinki, Finland 5.Roman Law after 1917: A Stateless Lawyer in Search of Byzantium Dina Gusejnova, The University of Sheffield, UK 6.The Denaturalization of Nordic Law: Germanic Law and the Reception of ‘Roman Law’ Johann Chapoutot, Institut d'Histoire du Temps Présent, France 7.The Idea of Rome: Political Fascism and Fascist (Roman) Law Cosimo Cascione, University of Naples, Italy 8.‘Byzantium!’ – Bona Fides between Rome and 20th-Century Germany Hans-Peter Haferkamp, University of Munster, Germany 9.The Arduous Path to Recover a Common European Legal Culture: Paul Koschaker, 1937?1951 Tommaso Beggio, University of Trento, Finland 10.The Weakening of Judgment: Johan Huizinga (1872?1945) and the Crisis of the Western Legal Tradition Diego Quaglioni, University of Trento, Finland 11.Roman Law as Wisdom: Justice and Truth, Honour and Disappointment in Franz Wieacker’s Ideas on Roman Law Ville Erkkilä, University of Helsinki, Finland 12.Conceptions of Roman Law in Scots Law: 1900–1960 Paul Du Plessis, University of Edinburgh, UK 13.The Search for Authenticity and Singularity in European National History Writing, 1800 to the Present Stefan Berger, Ruhr University Bochum, Germany 14.A Genealogy of Crisis: Europe’s Legal Legacy and Ordoliberalism Bo Stråth, University of Helsinki, Finland Index

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A revealing, multi-contributor study of Roman law's rise to prominence as a shared heritage ideal and unifying force in postwar Europe.

About the Author

Kaius Tuori is University Lecturer in European Studies at the University of Helsinki, Finland. He is the author of The Emperor of Law: The Emergence of Roman Imperial Adjudication (2016) and Lawyers and Savages: Ancient History and Legal Realism in the Making of Legal Anthropology (2014). He is also the co-editor, with Paul J du Plessis and Clifford Ando, The Oxford Handbook of Roman Law and Society (2016). Heta Björklund has a PhD in Classics from the University of Helsinki, Finland. She has previously worked as an editor at the Classical journal Arctos.

Reviews

This lively and learned collection of essays on Roman law in the twentieth century deserves a wide readership. The authors bring home the profound ideological significance of Roman law in modern European history, in essays of fundamental importance for students of fascism and liberalism alike.
*James Q. Whitman, Ford Foundation Professor of Comparative and Foreign Law, Yale University, USA*

This excellent book explores the impact of politics and history on a generation of scholars’ interpretations of Roman law and reinterprets these scholars’ personal histories in the light of this crisis. It throws considerable light on an important episode of cultural transmission and exchange, and will be of great importance to political, intellectual, and legal historians.
*John W. Cairns, Professor of Civil Law, University of Edinburgh, UK*

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