The Catholic University of America |
Canon Law 701, Law 507
History of Canon Law History of Jurisprudence: The Catholic Tradition
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Ken Pennington
Office Hours - Fall 2012: 326-328 Caldwell Hall: Office Hours: W 1:00-2:30 416 Columbus School of Law: Office Hours: T-Th 11:00-12:30 and by appointment |
Pennington's Home Page: http://faculty.cua.edu/pennington Classroom: Caldwell 111 and Cyberspace |
Offices: 326-328 Caldwell Hall Tel. 319-6264 416 Law School Tel. 319-5150 Home tel.: 202-547-3620 Email: Call me at home or email me. Voicemail at the University is not a good choice. |
Required books:
Gratian, Treatise on Laws, translated by Augustine Thompson and James Gordley (Washington, DC: Catholic University Press, 1993) ISBN 0-8132-0786-x $14.95
F. Donald Logan, The History of the Church in the Middle Ages (London-New York: Routledge, 2002) ISBN 0-415-13289-4 (If you do not have a good background in the history of the Church, this book will provide an excellent context for the legal developments we will be studying).
Recommended Book only for the Wealthy and Committed:
The History of Canon Law in the Classical Period, 1140-1234: From Gratian to the Decretals of Pope Gregory IX, edited by Wilfried Hartmann and Kenneth Pennington (History of Medieval Canon Law; Washington, D.C.: The Catholic University of America Press, 2008). $64.95 This is a very detailed history of a key period that will be covered in the course. Buy this book only if you are passionately interested in the history of canon law or if you think that you might go on for a Ph.D. Or if you are simply addicted to having books on your shelf.
Compare prices! The books can be bought from Amazon.com or from Barnes and Noble for the price quoted after the book.
Ken Pennington, A Short History of Canon Law from Apostolic Times to 1917
Ken Pennington, "Roman and Secular Law in the Middle Ages"
Ken Pennington, "Learned Law, droit savant, gelehrtes Recht: The Tyranny of a Concept"
Ken Pennington, Bishops and their Dioceses
Ken Pennington, Gratian, Causa 19, and the Birth of Canonical Jurisprudence
Ken Pennington, Innocent III and the Divine Authority of the Pope
Ken Pennington, Representation in Medieval Canon Law
Ken Pennington, The Formation of the Jurisprudence of the Feudal Oath of Fealty
Ken Pennington, Politics in Western Jurisprudence
Ken Pennington, Between Naturalistic and Positivistic Concepts of Human Rights
Ken Pennington, Lex naturalis and Ius naturale
Ken Pennington, The “Big Bang”:Roman Law in the Early Twelfth-Century
Ken Pennington, Roman Law at the Papal Curia in the Early Twelfth Century
Ken Pennington, The Growth of Church Law
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Email RequirementI want to hear from you regularly by Email, at least once a week. This is a requirement of the course. In your first message to me, I would like to know something about yourself and why you are interested in law.
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| Aside from the regular CUA holidays, we will not meet in class on Wednesday, October 11th because of the annual Canon Law Society of America meeting at Rosemont, Illinois. I will be at my School in Erice, Sicily during the convention. A "Why Erice and not Rosemont" essay contest this year will have as first (and only) prize a fine bottle of Sicilian wine (limit of 25 words or less. Words may be rhymed). There will be two recorded lectures for Oct. 4th and 11th on the class webpage that you may watch at your convenience while I'm gone. Note that Tuesday, October 9th is an administrative Monday at CUA. | Please email me as soon as possible to
both my email addresses:
We will be using email this semester, and I want to have a listserve for the class at CUA and at home.
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Lecture Topics:
1. The Birth of a Legal System
Readings: Brundage, pp.
1-31; Pennington,
Between Naturalistic and Positivistic Concepts of Human Rights
2. The Gregorian Reform (Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries)
Readings: Pennington, A Short History; Brundage, pp.31-43, Pennington, Bishops and their Dioceses
Midterm Essay Due Monday, October 15, 2012
3. Gratian and the Beginnings of Canonical Jurisprudence
Readings:Pennington, A Short History; Brundage, pp. 44-55, Gratian, The Treatise on Laws (Decretum DD. 1-20), Marriage canons in Gratian and in the Decretales, translated by Noonan and Thompson, Pennington, A Short History; K. Pennington, Natural Law; Pennington, Lex naturalis and Ius naturale; Pennington, Gratian, Causa 19; Pennington, Innocent III and the Ius commune, Decretals and Decretal Collections; Pro ratione voluntas: Canon law establishes the principle of Ius positivum; Pope Innocent III and Marriage Decretals; Decretales of Pope Gregory IX Book 4 title 2; Consilia (Briefs); Pennington, "The Big Bang"; Ken Pennington, Roman Law at the Papal Curia in the Early Twelfth Century
4. Canon Law in the Late Middle Ages
Canonists in the Late Middle Ages Video 2006 Video 2007
Readings: Pennington, A Short History; Pope Innocent IV; Henricus of Susa (Hostiensis); Oldradus de Laude (de Ponte); Baldus de Ubaldis; Nicholaus de Tudeschis (Panormitanus); Brundage, pp. 55-69
5. Canonical Jurisprudence and the Emergence of the Idea of Rights
Readings: Pennington, A Short History; Brundage, 70-189; Pennington, "The History of Rights in Western Thought"; K. Pennington, Due Process, Community, and the Prince in the Evolution of the Ordo iudiciarius; K. Pennington, "Innocent Until Proven Guilty: The Origins of a Legal Maxim" and "Sovereignty and Rights in Medieval and Early Modern Jurisprudence: Law and Norms without a State", and "Representation in Medieval Canon Law," and "The Formation of the Jurisprudence of the Feudal Oath of Fealty"
6. The Road to Modern Canon Law
Readings: Pennington, A Short History
Course Requirements and Grading
Each student will be required to write two essays. The first will be due during the week of October 17th and will be on the material covered by Lecture Topics 1-2. The second will be due by Friday, December 14th and will cover the second half of the semester. All essays will be submitted to me electronically in Word or WordPerfect format. Each essay will be 50% of the final grade. The quality and number of the emails during the semester can also affect the final grade by one grade level (i.e. A- to A). However, the grade can only rise, never fall. Since the classes are online and archived, I have no attendance policy. CUA's policy on plagiarism will be enforced. For good definitions of unacceptable writing practices click here.
Topics of Lectures and Video and Audio Stream of Class and Archived Lectures 2011
| Lecture Topics | No class Orientation |
Introduction | Legal Positivism and Justice | Law in the Early Church and Early Church Councils | Early Church Councils | ||||
| Video and Audio Stream |
August 29
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Video is in 2 parts |
Download Video(No audio for first 14 minutes) |
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| Lecture Topics |
Justinian's Codification and Carolingian Canonical Collections |
Carolingian Canonical Collections | Gregorian Reform Movement | The Revival of Roman Law and Introduction to Gratian | Introduction to Gratian | Introduction to Gratian | Introduction to Gratian | Introduction to Gratian andGratian De legibus | Gratian De legibus |
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Oct. 19 FLV | Oct. 26 FLV | Nov. 2 WMV | ||||
| Lecture Topics | Gratian De legibus | Gratian De legibus | Gratian De legibus | Gratian De legibus |
Papal Decretals and Jurisprudence of Papal Decretals |
Jurisprudence of Papal Decretals and Canonical Jurisprudence |
Canonical Jurisprudence | Canonical Jurisprudence | |
| Video and Audio Stream | Nov. 16 FLV |