The Short-Lived Influence of the Napoleonic Civil Code in 19th Century Greece

Author: Hatzis A.N.

Source: European Journal of Law and Economics, Volume 14, Number 3, November 2002 , pp. 253-263(11)

Publisher: Springer

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Abstract:

During the Greek War of Independence (1821–1827) from the Ottomans—which had a nationalistic and liberal character—and for the first decades after the liberation, a number of liberal French-educated politicians and scholars attempted unsuccessfully to introduce the Napoleonic Civil Code (or some clone of it) as the Greek Civil Code. Despite the fertile political and intellectual ground for such an introduction, they failed to achieve their goal due to the “temporary” introduction of Justinian's Roman law as the Greek civil law. This led the Greek academic community to Pandektenrecht and the predominance of the 19th century German legal theory (boosted by its organized propagation on the part of a number of German-educated legal scholars).

Keywords: history of modern Greek civil law; Napoleonic Civil Code; Pandektenrecht

Language: English

Document Type: Research article

Affiliations: 1: Department of History and Philosophy of Science, University of Athens, University Campus, Ano Ilisia, 15771 Athens, Greece. ahatzis@phs.uoa.gr

Publication date: 2002-11-01

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