DADINO ALTESERRA (Antoine) (Dadin de Hauteserre)
    ECCLESIASTICÆ JURISDICTIONIS VINDICIÆ ADVERSUS CAROLI FEVRETI, ET ALIORUM TRACTATUS DE ABUSU
Édition :
    Paris
Date :
    1702
    quarto, full calf, spine with raised bands and decoration, marbled edges, rolls on the edges, (headcaps missing, lower corners worn), XXVIII-330-164 p.
    (Dupin No. 1799). In the 17th century, religious orders attempted to escape the control of their order—and of ecclesiastical jurisdiction—by appealing to civil courts. This resulted in an expansion of the jurisdiction of royal judges, which the government initially supported (see the drafting of the criminal ordinance of 1670). However, realizing the risk, particularly of the Jansenists escaping the sanctions that threatened them, Louis XIV issued an edict in 1695 confirming the jurisdiction of ecclesiastical judges. Fevret's treatise on abuse of power constituted the theorization of the previous state of the law, and the present response, requested by the French clergy to gain the ear of the royal authority, forms one of the doctrinal foundations of this edict. Beyond this general analysis, we should note the important section devoted to ecclesiastical criminal law, which constitutes a clear and well-documented source for this part of criminal law.

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