Notitia

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As Notitia designating Diplomatik the early medieval documents that written in the third person and in the past, serve as evidence of a fully coated transaction. The legal validity of the Notitia arises in particular through the reference to the publicity of the legal transaction (notum sit omnibus) and the list of witnesses (testes huius rei sunt:…) . The majority of such documents are not in the original, but as a copy in a traditional book. It was particularly in use between the 8th and 13th centuries.

The diplomats argue about whether such a note can only be viewed as a reminder ( Oswald Redlich ) or as a separate document ( Heinrich Brunner , Heinrich Fichtenau , Joachim Wild ).

literature

  • Heinrich Brunner : Carta and Notitia . In: Heinrich Brunner: Treatises on legal history . Volume 1. Böhlau, Weimar 1931, (also reprinted by Central Antiquarian Book Shop of the German Democratic Republic, Leipzig 1965), p. 458ff.
  • Heinrich Brunner: On the legal history of the Roman and Germanic documents . Weidmann, Berlin 1880, (also reprint: Scientia, Aalen 1961).
  • Heinrich Fichtenau : "Carta" et "Notitia" en Bavière du VIIIe au Xe siècle . In: Le Moyen Âge 69, 1963, ISSN  0027-2841 , pp. 105-120.
  • Joachim Wild: "Carta" and "Notitia" in the Duchy of Bavaria . In: Theo Kölzer and others (eds.): De litteris, manuscriptis, inscriptionibus ... . Festschrift for Walter Koch's 65th birthday . Böhlau, Vienna et al. 2007, ISBN 978-3-205-77615-4 , pp. 27-38.
  • Oswald Redlich : Business document and document of evidence . In: Communications from the Institute for Austrian Historical Research , Supplementary Volume 6, 1901, ZDB -ID 206069-3 , pp. 1–16.
  • Herbert Zielinski : Notitia . In: Lexicon of the Middle Ages Volume VI, Sp. 1286.

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