In Chapter 2 it appeared that different ways of referring to the applicable law can be distinguished.
The overview in table form allows for the immediate observation that these different ways are not co-existent, but appear subsequently. This suggests that there was a change from one way of referring to the applicable law to the other, a change that can possibly be related to the Roman conquest. Rather than grouping papyri according to language (Aramaic versus Greek) and linking these language-based groups to law or jurisdiction as has usually been done before, the different ways of referring to the applicable law in the period under Nabataean and under Roman rule should guide us to understand more about the relationship between laws.
More on the topic In Chapter 2 it appeared that different ways of referring to the applicable law can be distinguished.:
- This chapter investigates in what way papyri refer to the applicable law and whether the manner of referring to law changes after the Roman conquest.
- There are different ways or organising a law of contract. That is as much as to say that there are different ways of responding to the central tasks which contract has to perform.
- Besides these internal distinctions, principles must also be distinguished, so to speak, externally, from other standards of behaviour that can be part of a legal system.
- An obligation could be terminated in a number of ways.
- Growing out of feudalism and harking back to Roman imperial times, the system of government that appeared in Europe during the years 1337-1648 was still, in most respects, entirely personal.
- There are a number of ways that the private and nonprofit sectors can boost carbon farming and help reduce net agricultural emissions.
- In the spirit of ‘thinking through the international' and reflecting on the ways of (historical and juridical) seeing that might enliven (or temper) such thinking, I want to ask a question and make a small plea.
- CHAPTER III THE MACHINERY OF THE LAW
- CHAPTER II THE LAW OF STATUS
- CHAPTER FOUR LAW OF SUCCESSION
- Chapter 4 The Law of Obligations
- Chapter IV Values in the Law
- Chapter 3 The Private Law