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See also: Italian jurist
.
This See also: Azo, whose name is sometimes written Azzo and Azzolenus, and who is occasionally described as Azo Soldanus, from the surname of his See also: father, is to be distinguished from two other famous Italians of the same name, viz
.
Azo Lambertaccius, a canonist of the i3th century, professor of See also: canon See also: law at the university of Bologna, author of Questiones in See also: jus canonicum, and Azo de Ramenghis, a canonist of the 14th century, also a professor of canon law at Bologna, and author of Repetitions super libro Decretorum
.
Few particulars are known as to the See also: life of Azo, further than that he was See also: born at Bologna about the See also: middle of the 12th century, and was a pupil of Joannes See also: Bassianus, and afterwards became professor of See also: civil law in the university of his native See also: town
.
He also took an active See also: part in municipal life, Bologna, with the other Lombard republics, having gained its municipal independence
.
Azo occupied a very important position amongst the glossators, and his Readings on the See also: Code, which were collected by his pupil, Alessandro de Santo Aegidio, and completed by the additions of Hugolinus and See also: Odofredus, See also: form a methodical exposition of See also: Roman law, and were of such See also: weight before the tribunals that it used to be said, " Chi non ha Azzo, non vada a palazzo." Azo gained a See also: great reputation as a professor, and numbered amongst his pupils Accursius and Jacobus See also: Balduinus
.
He died about 1230
.
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