Online Encyclopedia

ULPIAN (DoMrrIus ULPIANUS)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V27, Page 567 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ULPIAN (DoMrrIus ULPIANUS)  ,
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Roman jurist, was of Tyrian ancestry . The time and place of his birth are unknown, but the period of his
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literary activity was between A.D . 211 and 222 . He made his first appearance in public
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life as assessor in the auditorium of Papinian and member of the council of Septimius Severus; under Caracalla he was master of the requests (magi: ter libellorum) . Heliogabalus banished him from Rome, but on the accession of Alexander (222) he was reinstated, and finally became the emperor's chief adviser and praefectus praetorio . His curtailment of the privileges granted to the praetorian guard by Heliogabalus provoked their enmity, and he narrowly escaped their vengeance; ultimately, in 228, he was murdered in the palace, in the course of a riot between the soldiers and the
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mob . His
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works include Ad Sabinum, a commentary on the
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jus civile, in over 50 books; Ad edictum, a commentary on the Edict, in 83 books; collections of opinions, responses and disputations; books of rules and institutions;
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treatises on the functions of the different magistrates—one of them, the De officio proconsulis libri x., being a comprehensive exposition of the criminal law ; monographs on various statutes, on testamentary
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trusts, and a variety of other works . His writings altogether have supplied to Justinian's
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Digest about a third of its contents, and his commentary on the Edict alone about a fifth . As an author he is characterized by doctrinal exposition of a high order, judiciousness of criticism, and lucidity of arrangement, style and language . Domitii Ulpiani fragmenta, consisting of 29 titles, were first edited by Tilius (Paris, 1549) . Other
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editions are by Hugo (Berlin, 1834), Bocking (
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Bonn, 1836), containing fragments of the first
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book of the Institutiones discovered by Endlicher at Vienna in 1835, and in Girard's Textes de droit romain (Paris, 189o) .

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