[Journal du Palais - Ledru-Rollin]
    PALACE JOURNAL
Édition :
    Paris
Date :
    1839 and following.
    140 volumes, half black morocco, raised bands on the spine, in fine condition.
    We present here, in remarkable condition, the complete collection of legal journals published under the title “Journal du Palais” by Ledru-Rollin and a number of other authors, including Labbé, Demante, Rodière, and Pont. This collection was the most modern of its generation. Charmont and Chausse, in their study of major legal journals published in the Centenary Book of the Civil Code, emphasize that it particularly launched the trend of polemical articles that sparked passionate debates and thus constituted one of the freest forums for legal scholarship. It was also the first to have case notes signed by their authors, and is therefore the origin of the practice of case law commentary in French legal doctrine. Our collection contains: - The chronological index for the years 1791 to 1892. This index is considerably more complete than the Sirey index, especially concerning the period 1791-1815, since a new collation of the judgments was established in the 1830s from the original registers. - The alphabetical index in 13 volumes, compiled entirely under the direction of Ledru-Rollin, which constitutes an expression of the very liberal, even republican, legal doctrine that was beginning to emerge at that time and thus represented a new generation compared to the authors of the Sirey collection; - Administrative case law for the period Year VIII - 1889 (volume 1875-1881 is missing); This section is probably the least known, yet the most important, of this compendium: here again, the authors have reworked the original sources and rediscovered a large number of opinions from the Napoleonic and Restoration Councils of State that had completely escaped the Sirey collection (particularly for the period prior to 1818, which appears neither in the Macarel collection, which begins in 1821, nor in the Roche and Lebon collection, which relied primarily on the publications of Sirey and Macarel). It is therefore the most complete collection of the early jurisprudence of the Council of State; - The laws and decrees of 1845-1900. A comparison of this last section with the annotated laws of Sirey reveals that, while not more complete, it includes annotations that do not necessarily appear in the other collection (and vice versa). The Journal du Palais collection was acquired in 1866 by the Sirey collection and from that date onward contained the same texts as the latter, but in a different format. In 1892, the Sirey collection's format was also adopted, and from that date onward, the Journal du Palais lost all independent existence apart from the title page. Our copy is therefore complete with all the original texts of the collection. The only omission, as mentioned, concerns volume 1875-1881 of administrative jurisprudence, which is a copy from the Sirey collection. Also included are the volumes of the annual collection from 1892 to 1908, which have the merit of containing Hauriou's notes from their inception until that date.

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Mots-clés : Journals

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