Abstract
This book is a study of an important revolution in the history of thought, a break-through on the twin fronts of law and history in which the outstanding campaigner, on both fronts, was Jean Bodin. Roman law was, from its revival in the eleventh down to the beginning of the sixteenth century, studied and interpreted in a very literal and textual fashion; it was assumed that the Codification of Justinian included all the legal wisdom there was and that the function of the glossator was simply to show it forth. The sixteenth century philologists, led by Budé, raised serious doubts. And by the middle of the same century there was not merely a demand for a proper philological study of the texts but for a systematization of the vast mass of legal disposition that constituted the Corpus Iuris Civilis—jus in artem redigere. The result was an undermining of the authority of Roman law and a realisation that, while it might be an incomparable store of legal wisdom, there was no good reason for thinking that it was the only, or the best, system for actual conditions in sixteenth-century France. French customary law, which by now had been written down, was clearly adapted to the needs of the time in a way that Roman law never could be. This may seem obvious; but the realization of the obvious took time. And Bodin’s importance lies in his working out of a three-pronged comparative approach in his exposition of jus gentium, his comparative jurisprudence and his sociological theory of legal history. The stages in this revolution are fully documented by Professor Franklin in the first part of his book.