Corpus Iuris Fridericianum
Corpus iuris Fridericianum was the Prussian code of civil procedure promulgated on April 26, 1781 . Made and elaborated by Carl Gottlieb Svarez (1746–1798) and Grand Chancellor Johann Heinrich Casimir Graf von Carmer (1720–1801), who was the chief de justice of Friedrich II . The Corpus iuris Fridericianum was the result of a long-planned reform of civil procedural law.
The law, which ultimately remained unfinished, was largely based on Roman law and was replaced in 1794 by the Prussian General Land Law , which was shaped by natural law . Austria took an almost parallel development with the Codex Theresianus , which was created in 1766 but did not come into force , the contents of which were ultimately incorporated into the ABGB in 1811 .
literature
- Corpus Juris Fridericianum. Book 1: Of the Process Order . 4 parts. Publishing house of the Royal Academy of Sciences, Berlin 1781. Reprint: Keip, Goldbach 1994. ISBN 3-8051-0223-2
- Friedrich Ebel: 200 years of the Prussian civil lawsuit. The Corpus Juris Fridericianum from 1781 . De Gruyter, Berlin 1982. ISBN 3-11-008905-X
Individual evidence
- ↑ on the way of the Josephine code of law
- ^ Jan Dirk Harke : Roman law. From the classical period to the modern codifications . Beck, Munich 2008, ISBN 978-3-406-57405-4 ( floor plans of the law ), § 3 no. 5.
Web links
- Digital copies of the BSB : "Book 1, From the process order:"
- “Part 1, On judicial procedure in ordinary and ordinary processes ” ;
- " Part 2, Of Subjudicial and Summary Trials ".