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3 Μαρ 2021 · In 1230, Pope Gregory IX instructed Raymond Penyafort (d. 1275), a Catalonian Dominican educated at the University of Barcelona, to codify the former collections of Canon law into a single, authoritative texts. This effort became the Decretals of Gregory IX, otherwise known as the Liber extra.
San Marino, Huntington Library, HM 19999. Text(s): Decretals, Innocencius iii in concilio generali, De summa trinitate et fide catholica Rubrica, Gloss on the...
The version of the text presented here is based upon the 1582 printed edition dubbed the Editio Romana, put together by the commission known as the Correctores Romani and published by order of Pope Gregory XIII (1572-85) as part of the authorized text of the Corpus iuris canonici for the post-Tridentine Church.
One of the works Gregory IX is most well known for his collection of papal law, compiled by his chaplain in 1230, to replace the near century of Gratian Decretal primacy. Gregory’s decretals remained the authoritative source of Catholic papal law for seven centuries— until 1917.
Pope Gregory IX (1143-1241) ordered the first complete and authoritative collection of papal decretals, the Corpus Iuris Canonici .
The Decretals of Gregory IX (Latin: Decretales Gregorii IX), also collectively called the Liber extra, are a source of medieval Catholic canon law. In 1230, Pope Gregory IX ordered his chaplain and confessor , Raymond of Penyafort , a Dominican , to form a new canonical collection destined to replace the Decretum Gratiani , which was the chief ...
3 Ιουλ 2019 · This manuscript is an early fourteenth-century copy of the Decretales of Pope Gregory IX, compiled by Raymond of Peñafort in the second quarter of the thirteenth century, glossed with the mid-thirteenth-century commentary of Bernardo da Parma, also known as Bernardo Bottoni.