Roman law is a related research field in modern society. Introduction of Roman law Today, in the 21st century, two major legal systems were born in Europe; the civil law system was derived mainly from the Roman law and the common law system in the UK. The Civil Code has laid the foundation for establishing a legal system in Western countries. What is the difference between civil law and common law? Common law is a special development of English.
The main mode of my attention and research is the law "Inheritance, trust and infrastructure related almost complete chain and other related matters can go back to Roman law", but the law is cultural illegal I will adopt a meaning. It was found in an almost universal moral program that is embodied in what we call "golden rule". The trajectory I saw was the process of unifying the power of Roman religion and military integration from the Nicene Committee until Magna Carta, which had become relatively short due to Rakaran Church, Baptist and Unification Reform, restricted the power of the king I followed. Catholic limits the powers of the Pope, and the Constitution of the United States limits the power of the state
Legal research developed in the 12th century. Secular, church law or church law was studied in the Middle Ages. The secular law or the Roman law discovered the "citizen court" in the 11th century and taught 1100 Roman law in Bologna. As a result, legal and regulatory records and standardization were done throughout Western Europe. About 1140, Bologna's teacher, a monk named Gratian, who studied Canon's law wrote what became the standard text of the norm - Decretum
During the Middle Ages (beginning in the 11th century), there was new interest in Roman law. Originally, Roman law was studied only by scholars, taught at university, and Bologna was the first place to teach Roman law. Roman law will soon be applied to law practices - especially in the field of civil law. (Civil Code, Compton's 96) This process (re-use) (re-use) Roman law occurs at different times in Europe, with varying degrees (UK is the most important exception). Therefore, from around the 16th century the Roman law came into force in most parts of Europe. However, in the recruitment / approval process, many Roman rules have been merged or modified into European legal standards to accommodate these rules. Therefore, Roman rules applied in Europe during this period are not the same as those of ancient Roman law. (Civil Code, Compton 96)