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BULGARUS , an See also: Italian jurist of the 12th century, See also: born at Bologna, sometimes erroneously called Bulgarinus, which was properly the name of a jurist of the 15th century
.
He was the most celebrated of the famous " Four Doctors " of the See also: law school of that university, and was regarded as the Cnrysostom of the See also: Gloss-writers, being frequently designated by the title of the " See also: Golden Mouth" (os aureum)
.
He died in 1166 A.D., at a very advanced age
.
Popular tradition represents all the Four Doctors (Bulgarus, Martinus Gosia, Hugo de Porta Ravennate and Jacobus de Boragine) as pupils of See also: Irnerius (q.v.), but while there is no insuperable difficulty in point of See also: time in accepting this tradition as far as regards Bulgarus, Savigny considers the general tradition inadmissible as regards the others
.
Martinus Gosia and Bulgarus were the chiefs of two opposite See also: schools at Bologna, corresponding in many respects to the Proculians and Sabinians of Imperial See also: Rome, Martinus being at the See also: head of a school which accommodated the law to what his opponents styled the See also: equity of " the purse " (aequitas bursalis), whilst Bulgarus adhered more closely to the letter of the law
.
The school of Bulgarus ultimately prevailed, and it numbered amongst its adherents Joannes See also: Bassianus, See also: Azo and Accursius, each of whom in his turn exercised a commanding influence over the course of legal studies at Bologna
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Bulgarus took the leading See also: part amongst the Four Doctors at the See also: diet of Roncaglia in 1158, and was one of the most trusted advisers of the emperor See also: Frederick I
.
His most celebrated See also: work is his commentary De Regulis See also: Juris, which was at one time printed amongst the writings of Placentius, but has been properly reassigned to its true author by Cujacius, upon the See also: internal evidence contained in the additions annexed to it, which are undoubtedly from the See also: pen of Placentinus
.
This
Commentary, which is the earliest extant work of its kind emanating from the school of the Gloss-writers, is, according to Savigny, a See also: model specimen of the excellence of the method introduced by Irnerius, and a striking example of the brilliant results which had been obtained in- a See also: short space of time by a See also: constant and exclusive study of the See also: sources of law
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