1 6 PUBLICATIONS OF 



AN INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF JUS- 

 TINIAN'S DIGEST. Containing an account of its composition 

 and of the Jurists used or referred to therein, together with a full 

 Commentary on one Title (de usufructu), by HENRY JOHN ROBY, M.A., 

 formerly Prof, of Jurisprudence, University College, London. Demy 

 8vo. 1 8.T. 



. "Not an obscurity, philological, historical, tamed and developed. Roman law, almost 



or legal, has been left unsifted. More inform- more than Roman legions, was the backbone 



ing aid still has been supplied to the student of of the Roman commonwealth. Mr Roby, by 



the Digest at large by a preliminary account, his careful sketch of the sages of Roman law, 



covering nearly 300 pages, of the mode of from Sextus Papirius, under Tarquin the 



composition of the Digest, and of the jurists Proud, to the Byzantine Bar, has contributed to 



whose decisions and arguments constitute its render the tenacity and durability of the most 



substance. Nowhere else can a clearer view enduring polity the world has ever experienced 



be obtained of the personal succession by which somewhat more intelligible." The Times. 

 the tradition of Roman legal science was sus- 



THE COMMENTARIES OF GAIUS AND RULES OF 

 ULPIAN. With a Translation and Notes, by J. T. ABDY, LL.D., 

 Judge of County Courts, late Regius Professor of Laws in the 

 University of Cambridge, and BRYAN WALKER, M.A., LL.D., Law 

 Lecturer of St John's College, Cambridge, formerly Law Student of 

 Trinity Hall and Chancellor's Medallist for Legal Studies. New 

 Edition by BRYAN WALKER. Crown 8vo. i6s. 



" As scholars and as editors Messrs Abdy way of reference or necessary explanation, 



and Walker have done their work well . . . For Thus the Roman jurist is allowed to speak for 



one thing the editors deserve special commen- himself, and the reader feels that he is really 



dation. They have presented Gaius to the studying Roman law in the original, and not a 



reader with few notes and those merely by fanciful representation of it." Athenceum. 



THE INSTITUTES OF JUSTINIAN, translated with 

 Notes by J. T. ABDY, LL.D., and BRYAN WALKER, M.A., LL.D. 

 Crown 8vo. 16.?. 



"We welcome here a valuable contribution the ordinary student, whose attention is dis- 



to the study of jurisprudence. The text of the traded from the subject-matter by the dif- 



Institutes is occasionally perplexing, even to ficulty of struggling through the language in 



practised scholars, whose knowledge of clas- which it is contained, it will be almost indis- 



sical models does not always avail them in pensable." Spectator. 



dealing with the technicalities of legal phrase- "The notes are learned and carefully com- 



ology. Nor can the ordinary dictionaries be piled, and this edition will be found useful to 



expected to furnish all the help that is wanted. students." Law Times. 

 This translation will then be of great use. To 



SELECTED TITLES FROM THE DIGEST, annotated 

 by B. WALKER, M.A., LL.D. Part I. Mandati vel Contra. Digest 

 XVII. i. Crown 8vo. $s. 



"This small volume is published as an ex- Mr Walker deserves credit for the way in which 



periment. The author proposes to publish an he has performed the task undertaken. The 



annotated edition and translation of several translation, as might be expected, is scholarly." 



books of the Digest if this one is received with Law Times. 

 favour. We are pleased to be able to say that 



Part II. De Adquirendo rerum dominio and De Adquirenda vel 

 amittenda possessione. Digest XLI. i and u. Crown 8vo. 6^. 



Part III. De Condictionibus. Digest xii. i and 4 7 and Digest 



xin. i 3. Crown 8vo. 6s. 



GROTIUS DE JURE BELLI ET PACIS, with the Notes 

 of Barbeyrac and others ; accompanied by an abridged Translation 

 of the Text, by W. WHEWELL, D.D. late Master of Trinity College. 

 3 Vols. Demy 8vo. 12s. The translation separate, 6s. 



London : C J. CLA Y &> SON, Cambridge University Press Warehouse, 

 Ave Maria Lane. 



