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DENIS GODEFROY (Dionysius Gothofredus...

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Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 171 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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DENIS GODEFROY (Dionysius Gothofredus) (1549–1622)  , jurist, son of Leon Godefroy, lord of Guignecourt, was born in Paris on the 17th of
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October 1549 . He was educated at the College de Navarre, and studied law at Louvain, Cologne and
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Heidelberg, returning to Paris in 1573 . He embraced the reformed religion, and in 1579
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left Paris, where his abilities and connexions promised a brilliant career, to establish himself at Geneva . He became professor of law there, received the freedom of the city in 158o; and in 1587 became a member of the Council of the Two
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Hundred . Henry IV. induced him to return to France by making him
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grand bailli of
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Gex,but no sooner had he installed himself than the
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town was sacked and his library burnt by the troops of the duke of Savoy: In 1591 he became professor of
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Roman law at Strassburg, where he remained until
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April 1600, when in response to an invitation' from Frederick IV., elector palatine, he removed to Heidelberg . The difficulties of his position led to his return to Strassburg for a short time, but in November 16(4 he definitely settled at Heidelberg . He was. made head of the faculty of law in the university, and was from time to time employed on missions to the French court . His repeated refusal of offers of
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advancement in his own country was due to his Calvinism . He died at Strassburg on the 7th of September 1622, having left Heidelberg before the. city was sacked by the imperial troops in 1621 . His most important
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work was the Corpus
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juris civilis, originally published at Geneva in 1583, which went through some twenty
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editions, the most valuable of them being that printed by the Elzevirs at Amster-
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dam in 1633 and the
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Leipzig edition of 1740 . Lists of his other learned
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works may be found in Senebier's list. lift. de Geneve, vol. ii., and in Niceron's Memoires, vol. xvii . Some of his correspondence with his learned friends, with his kinsman President de Thou, Isaac Casaubon,
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Jean Jacues Grynaeus and others, is preserved in the
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libraries of the
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British .

Museum, of

Basel and Paris . His eldest son, THEODORE GODEFROY (1580–1649), was born at Geneva on the 14th of
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July 1580 . He abjured Calvinism, and was called to the bar in Paris . He became historiographer of France in 1613, and was employed from time to time on
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diplomatic missions . He was employed at the congress of Munster, where he remained after the
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signing of peace in 1648 as charge d'affaires until his
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death on the 5th of October of the next
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year . His most important work is Le Ceremonial de France ... (1619), a work which became a classic on the subject of royal ceremonial, and was re-edited by his son in an enlarged edition in 1649 . Besides his printed works he made vast collections of
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historical material which remains in MS. and fills the greater
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part of the Godefroy collection of over five hundred portfolios in the Library of the Institute in Paris . These were catalogued by Ludovic Lalanne in the Annuaire Bulletin (1865–1866 and 1892) of the Societe de l'histoire de France . The second son of Denis, JACQUES GODEFROY (1587-1652), jurist, was born at Geneva on the 13th of September 1587 . He was sent to France in 1611, and studied law and
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history at
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Bourges and Paris . He remained faithful to the Calvinist persuasion, and soon returned to Geneva, where he became active in public affairs .

He was secretary of

state from 1632 to 1636, and syndic or chief magistrate in 1637, 1641, 1645 and 1649 . He died on the 23rd of
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June 1652 . In addition to his civic and
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political work he lectured on law, and produced, after
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thirty years of labour, his edition of the Codex Theodosianus . This code formed the
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principal, though not the only, source of the legal systems of the countries formed from the Western
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Empire . Godefroy's edition was enriched with a multitude of important notes and historical comments, and became a standard authority on the decadent period of the Western Empire . It was only printed thirteen years after his death under the care of his friend Antoine Marville at Lyons (4 vols.1665), and was reprinted at Leipzig (6 vols.) in 1736–1745 . Of his numerous other works the most important was the reconstruction of the twelve tables of early Roman law . See also the
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dictionary of Moreri, Niceron's Memoires (vol . 17) and a
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notice in the Bibliotheque universelle de Geneve (Dec . 1837) .

End of Article: DENIS GODEFROY (Dionysius Gothofredus) (1549–1622)
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