Justinian I (or the Great) did not rewrite anything. You should also be more specific in your question. He rewrote Roman what? I will assume that you are referring to Roman law, which he did not rewrite.
Justinian I commissioned a panel of law experts to compile a collection of books called Corpus Juris Civilis (Body of Civil Law), which was also dubbed Justinian Code in the 16th century. A first edition was published in 529 and a second one in 534. It was a very comprehensive digest of centuries of Roman civil law. It also included collections of essays by famous jurists in two student textbooks. It has provided the basis of the civil law of many modern countries.
The Corpus Juris Civilis came in four parts:
:
1) The Codex (book) or Codex Justinianus, which was a review of imperial laws going back 400 years (to the time of Hadrian). It scrapped obsolete or unnecessary laws, made changes when necessary and clarified obscure passages. Its aim was to put the laws in a single book (previously they were written on many different scrolls), harmonise conflicting views among jurists which arose from centuries of poorly organised development of Roman law and have a uniform and coherent body of law. It consists of 12 books, 1 book covers ecclesiastical law, the duties of high officers and sources of law, 7 cover private law, 1 criminal law and 3 administrative laws.
2) The Digesta is a collection of fragments taken from essays on laws written by jurists (mostly from the 2nd and 3rd centuries) which express the private opinions of legal experts. Most were from Ulpian (40%) and Paulus (17%). It was a large amount of writing which was condensed in 50 books. It was used as an advanced law student textbook.
3) The Institutiones is a textbook for first year law students written by two professors. It was a series of extracts from statements on the basic institutions of Roman law from the teaching books by 'writers of authority.' In was largely based on the texts of Gaius, a jurist of the 2nd century AD.
4) The Novellae Constitutiones, which contained laws recently issued by Justinian.
The baby boomer generation changed the demand in the US by shear volume. They're the largest population group in the US, and it is moving through our system like a turd thru a bowel. The boomers are a "We want what we want when we want it!" generation, so if they see something they "need" they buy it, causing an increased demand for that product or service.
Cause they wanted there freedom from them came to America for freedom of religion but they were taxed of stamps and tea and almost everything else, then a group of lawyers and farmers the ones with the most money decided to have the declaration of independence and they knew they were going to get killed but they did it for out freedom that we have today
To protest the lack of grain, the high price of bread and to demand that the King move his court to Paris so that he would be able to see for himself the plight of his subjects. He complied with their wishes.
a religious group is a group of people that have the same religion.
What a group of warriors is called generally depends on the size of the group. A small group is a squad. A somewhat larger group is a platoon or company. At the far end of the spectrum is an army.
A group of lawyers is called an argument.
if I'm not mistaking its Rev Runs wife Justine Simmons
Yes; she was in a group called the Fly Five.
Yes, there are dog bite lawyers in Denton, Texas. Lawyers Group is one of them.
the judicial group
Maybe the people that the lawyers are defending but sometimes lawyers dont tell the truth
Please rewrite. We don't know " who" you ask about.
yes
Lawyers
lawyers
Lawyers.
Lawyers.