Instructional goals
By the examination of the transformations undergone by law in history, the course aims to foster an awareness of the development and also the relativity and development of ant legal phenomenon. This kind of approach to legal history, which isn't focused just only on notions and dates, aims to train to independence of judgment and offer the right critical eye under which observe the developing and relativity of law. Considerations about hyper moral in the 21st century society.
Prerequisites
None.
Intended learning outcomes
The course aims to reach the following educational goals: 1) Knowledge and understanding: the course is meant to provide the student with an array of knowledge aimed at fostering a correct approach to the legal phenomenon, providing also a comprehensive overview of the evolution and transformation which law underwent through the centuries. The objective is to underline the quintessentially historic dimension of law and to stress the importance of a well-focused historical interpretation of the present legal framework. 2) Applying knowledge and understanding: the knowledge so acquired allow to develop a significant ability to critically analyze and to thoroughly understand legal text, improving the application of legal rules and the reasonable solution of controversies; moreover, they foster independence of mind and, through a sound critical thinking, they allow to represent the complexity of the legal phenomenon. 3) Making judgments: acquisition of an high standard of independent analysis and judgement on legal problems and of methodologies and tools useful to gather, interpret and apply legal sources, so as to apply them independently and in an original way in order to scrutinize the issues which the student will be called to handle along the subsequent path of legal studies and in the working environment. In particular, competences of critical thinking, problem solving, self-management, team work, relational and communicative skills will all be adequately developed; these skills will reinforce curricular competences and make them more spendable on the market. Through the collection and the interpretation of all information on the historical evolution of legal concepts and an European comparative vision, using the methodological approach proper of a philosophical and historical approach, the student will master reasoning and put it to its best use towards innovative and original solutions. 4) Communication skills: acquisition of legal vocabulary, of an high level of terminological accuracy and of an appropriate rhetorical and debating skill in both, oral and written communication. 5) Learning skills: ability to point out and interpret any regulatory innovation and new judicial or academic approaches, through the lenses of historical evolution. Acquisition – also through case-studies – of a degree of knowledge apt to develop autonomous learning skills, which will allow the student to continue updating his competences, even independently.
Course Contents
The subject concerns the analysis of legal experiences (private and public law; international and criminal law) from the ancient world to the contemporary age, with specific reference to both the sources of law (judicial and legislative) as to the doctrine. Particular attention will be paid also to the evolution of the system of legal sources between state law and supranational law in the XXI century. The knowledge that will emerge from the course will not be enclosed in yesterday, but reconciled with the dynamics of contemporary society, filtered through special glasses, those of the historian.
Reference Books
Students continuously attending the lectures are required to study the following textbooks:
1) AA.VV. (a cura di A. CASSI), Le danze di Clio e Astrea. Fondamenti storici del diritto europeo, 2nd ed., 2026, Giappichelli.
As regards this textbook, the study of the following chapters is required: Parte Prima, Cap. I, pp. 1-117; Parte Prima, Cap. II, pp. 119-178 (paragrafi 1, 2, 3, 4 e 5); Parte Seconda, Capp. I e II, pp. 303-416.
2)R. FERRARI ZUMBINI, Il grande giudice, 3rd ed., 2025, Paracelsus ed..
As regards this textbook, the study of the following chapters is required: Introduzioni, Suggerimenti, 0,1, 2, 9, 10, 11.
In addition to these paragraphs, students will also choose between one of the following options:
OPTION A) chapters 3, 4 and 7; OPTION B) chapters 5, 6, 7 and 8.
For students who aren't attending lectures, the study of the following textbook is also required: - L. LACCHE’, “La costituzione nel Novecento. Percorsi storici e vicissitudini dello Stato di diritto”, Giappichelli, 2023.
The teacher may check students’ attendance at lectures at any time.
Teaching Methods
Lectures, tutorials, seminars.
Assessment Method
The oral examination can be preceded by an optional written exam. The student will be required to show that he/she knows and understands the major issues underlying the historical trajectory of law in Western civilization from the Middle Ages to the present day, as they were expounded during the course and the seminars, if the student has been attending, with a specific focus on the legal systems which, over time, have been characterizing the juridical experience in the Italian peninsula. The student will be required to show that he/she is able to handle the categories regarding the themes of (i) sources, (ii) institutions, (iii) legal thought, using the appropriate technical and legal vocabulary and thus proving that he/she has acquired an adequate ability to contextualize, and an adequate study method and learning ability, in order to carry on, also independently, a basic orientation on the diachronic perspective of evolution of contemporary legal systems, being able to grasp a fundamental aspect of the legal phenomenon, that is historicity. The following evaluation criteria will be taken into account to assign the final grade, expressed in thirtieths: - knowledge and understanding of the evolution of sources, institutions, legal thought (50%); appropriate use of the technical and legal vocabulary, ability to focus on relevant information (acquisition of the study method) (30%), ability to contextualize historically and to evaluate law as an historical phenomenon (20%). Learning gaps concerning one or more notions or principles will lead to an insufficient evaluation.
Thesis assignment criteria
For the current academic year thesis involving Italian and European constitutional history issues, and topics about how hyper moral is changing law categories, are preferred.
Week 1
WHAT IS LAW NOWADAYS? Between an aspiration towards certainty and the strive for balance. Between post-democracy and post-politics. Personal/territorial application of the law; role of Medieval Notaries (vis-à-vis modern notaries).
Week 2
Early Middle Ages and feudalism: a society without State. A multi-level constitutionalism. On medieval legal pluralism: Papacy and Empire; the investitures controversy; the self-governance of the Comuni.
Week 3
The foundation of university and the birth of the Studium and the Commune: Irnerius and the European significance of the so-called "re-discovery of the Corpus Juris". The University: from a private to a public institution; the role of jurists towards politics and the degree awarding power. The Legal Science of Glossators and Commentators.
Week 4
The breach of medieval legal unity. The Birth of Modern State. Legal humanism and the "Schola culta". Hotman and the anti-jurisprudential ideology.
Week 5
The Birth of International Law. Grotius, Vettel, Selden, the School of Salamanca and the Peace of Westphalia. The concept of natural law between Pufendorf and Locke. Rejection of War as a Means of Resolving international conflicts.
Week 6
German natural law theories in early modernity and criminal law. Pufendorf and Thomasius. Thomasius and the origin of secularism. The evolution of English constitutionalism from the Middle ages through modernity.
Week 7
The American Revolution (or American Resistance): from colonialism to Independence. A single constitutional text with many external sources: from the executive orders to judicial review. The age of Enlightenment in law and a long, slow path towards the Codes. Domat and Pothier; commons and property. French and Italian experiences.
Week 8
The onset of modern constitutionalism in Italy at the end of the 18th century, between French imposition and variable geometry. The Code Napoleon of 1804 and the ABGB of 1811. Savigny, the German Historical School and the refusal of the Code.
Week 9
The onset of modern constitutionalism in Italy at the end of the 18th century, between French imposition and variable geometry. The Code Napoleon of 1804 and the ABGB of 1811. Savigny, the German Historical School and the refusal of the Code.
Week 10
Constitutionalism in Europe in the first half of the 19th century between Spain and Belgium. The year 1848: a misleading date. Legal theories between the 19th and 20th century, on both shores of the Atlantic.
Week 11
The "constitutional mosaic" in Italy and Spontaneity as a qualifying factor. The albertine charter as an example of "mobile" constitution. Realism, Formalism, Positivism in Germany from the BGB (1900) to the Penal Code (1935): the "Radbruch Dilemma".
Week 12
A common path to the new binomial of the XXI century: law, equity and moral. Which is the role of the jurist today? Towards the overcoming of the concept of generality and abstractness of law? What is the role of the nation-state in the XXI century? Artificial intelligence, the Rule and the rules.