To the uttermost parts of the earth: legal imagination and international power, 1300-1870
Legal imagination in a Christian world : ruling France c. 1300 -- The political theology of jus gentium : the expansion of Spain 1524-1559 -- Italian lessons : ius gentium & reason of state -- The rule of law : Grotius -- Governing sovereignty : negotiating French "absolutism" in Europ...
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Cambridge ; New York ; Port Melbourne ; New Delhi ; Singapore
Cambridge University Press
2021
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Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Zusammenfassung: | Legal imagination in a Christian world : ruling France c. 1300 -- The political theology of jus gentium : the expansion of Spain 1524-1559 -- Italian lessons : ius gentium & reason of state -- The rule of law : Grotius -- Governing sovereignty : negotiating French "absolutism" in Europe 1625-1715 -- Reason, revolution, restoration : European public law 1715-1804 -- Colonies, companies, slaves. French dominium in the world 1627-1804 -- The law and economics of state-building : England c. 1450-c. 1650 -- "Giving law to the world" : England c. 1635-c.1830 -- Global law : ruling the British empire -- A science of state-machines. Ius naturae et gentium as a German discipline c. 1500-1758 -- The end of natural law. German freedom, 1734-1821 "To the Uttermost Parts of the Earth addresses the uses of law by successive generations of lawyers, theologians, philosophers and political writers to deal with the exercises of power beyond the single polity. From the novel understanding of royal authority as analogous to that of a Roman emperor in the 13th century to the treatment of an expanding bourgeois civil society in the early 19th century, the book traces the use of the notions of sovereignty and property across more than five centuries of reflection on the international exercise of European power. The book not only transcends the conventional limits between private and public law, domestic and international law, but shows how such limits were constituted in the first place. Its thesis is that European power is neither the power of state nor that of capital. Instead it has always been and continues to exist as a locally specific, legally constituted combination of the two"-- |
Beschreibung: | Includes bibliographical references and index |
Beschreibung: | xviii, 1107 Seiten |
ISBN: | 9780521768597 9780521745345 |
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520 | 3 | |a Legal imagination in a Christian world : ruling France c. 1300 -- The political theology of jus gentium : the expansion of Spain 1524-1559 -- Italian lessons : ius gentium & reason of state -- The rule of law : Grotius -- Governing sovereignty : negotiating French "absolutism" in Europe 1625-1715 -- Reason, revolution, restoration : European public law 1715-1804 -- Colonies, companies, slaves. French dominium in the world 1627-1804 -- The law and economics of state-building : England c. 1450-c. 1650 -- "Giving law to the world" : England c. 1635-c.1830 -- Global law : ruling the British empire -- A science of state-machines. Ius naturae et gentium as a German discipline c. 1500-1758 -- The end of natural law. German freedom, 1734-1821 | |
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Contents Acknowledgements page xiv Introduction The Legal Imagination Legal Imagination in Action Imagining Starts at Home A World of White Men A Note on Textual Conventions PART I TOWARDS THE RULE OF LAW 1 Legal Imagination in a Christian World: Ruling France c. 1300 Cleńcos laicos and Unam sandam “Ecclesia habet universale dominium .” Roi très Chrétien Rex Franciáé in regno suo princeps est Philip in Context 1: “Feudalism” Philip in Context 2: The Economy Ruling Humans and Owning Land lus gentium As Christian Authority 1: Systemic Aspects Example: lus gentium in Aquinas lus gentium As Christian Authority 2: Universal History lus gentium and Christian Authority 3: Property Towards Economic Justice? Common Good As the “Higher Law” Reconciling Jurisdiction and Property vii 1 1 4 8 12 14 17 19 25 31 35 40 52 59 66 72 78 83 88 94 98 107
Contents A Human Dominium: John of Paris Conclusion: Legal Imagination in the King’s Service 2 The Political Theology of lus gentium: The Expansion of Spain 1526—1559 The Court of Conscience The View from Salamanca The Salamanca Concept of “Law” lus gentium As Justice Justice As Dominium Dominium in the Indies The Salamanca Reaction No Universal Dominium Dominium Iurisdictionis An Empire of Private Rights War and Dominium Conclusion 3 Italian Lessons: lus Gentium and Reason of States An Italian Lesson The Lawyer As Humanist Warrior A New Jurisprudence Sovereignty as the Virtue of Moral Ignorance Domestic Sovereignty: Absolute and Legally Confined Law between History and Philosophy The Work of lus gentium: Equity, Utility, Necessity The Trouble with Theology Imperial Statecraft Expanding Civilisation and Protecting the Oppressed Imperial Ambivalence The Limits of Gentili’s Jurisprudence Another Italian Lesson ֊ Botero and CounterReformation Statehood 4 The Rule of Law: Grotius Interpretative Perspectives A Political Theology of Moderation The Search for Obedience: From Religious to Legal Obligation viii 111 114 117 118 130 138 143 148 155 163 170 174 181 198 210 212 215 221 228 234 236 239 244 248 254 258 264 267 271 280 284 287 294
Contents Natural Law As Frame A World of Rights Law As a Moral Science Sovereigns and Subjects: De iure praedae “[F] he Law (especially that of Nations), is in a State, like the Soul in the Human Body” Public Power and Rights of Commerce: Celebrating the Dutch Experience The Primacy of Civil Society: Property and Contract A World Seen through Law PARTII FRANCE: LAW, SOVEREIGNTY AND REVOLUTION 5 Governing Sovereignty: Negotiating French “Absolutism” in Europe 1625—1715 Statehood Reasons of Statehood Jean Bodin 1: Towards Universal Jurisprudence Jean Bodin 2: Not Tyranny, Sovereignty Jean Bodin 3: From Sovereignty to “Government” States in the World Ordering Public and Private: Loyseau The State As a “Participatory Enterprise” Thinking about Commerce Europe: Between Security and Dynastic Rights Law for a Broken Humanity: Domat Law of Nations and Moral Regeneration; Fénelon and D’Aguesseau Utrecht A Profession in Dire Straits A First Diplomatic School 6 Reason, Revolution, Restoration: European Public Law 1715-1804 Peace, Rule of Law and Political Science: Saint-Pierre Peace and Commerce: Melon States and War: Rousseau The Link between Statehood and Property Montesquieu: The Natural Laws of Commerce Towards the Brilliant Future ix 299 306 311 317 326 332 334 343 347 349 351 357 362 365 369 372 374 377 384 391 400 404 409 412 414 417 421 428 431 434 436 441
Contents Commercial Statecraft The Natural Laws of the Economy: The Physiocrats Natural Rights and the Legal Order: Sieyès Revolutions 1: Europe Exporting the Revolution? From Rights to Science European Public Law Restored: Rayneval 444 447 455 457 463 475 480 7 Colonies, Companies, Slaves: French Dominium in the World 1627—1804 Slavery and the Philosophes Colonisation As Struggle of Proprietary Rights: Early Developments Rule by Company 1 : Nouvelle Frame Rule by Company 2: Caribbean The Return of the State: Colbert Sugar, Slavery and Feudal Rights: Crozat An Empire of Commerce? “Pearl of the Antilles” Revolutions 2: Saint-Domingue Slavery or Independence? Ending . and Starting Again Epilogue: A Legal Anomaly 500 508 512 515 520 526 530 534 547 552 556 PART III 559 BRITAIN: LAWS AND MARKETS 8 The Law and Economics of State-Building: England c. 1450-c. 1650 Corpus mysticum economicum The Economics of Law and Government: Thomas Smith Two Concepts of the Law of Nations Common Law Views The Structure of Commercial Power: Companies and State Commercial State: Mercantile Law Monopolies As Law of Nations: The East India Company and Sandys Case Prerogative vs. Property Rights Ship Money; Quis judicabit? From “Opinion” to Authority: Hobbes Natural Law As the Science of Government x 488 491 561 564 569 574 579 585 592 599 603 608 611 616
Contents 9 “Giving Law to the World”: England c. 1635-c. 1830 Mare Clausum The Dutch Problem 1688: Towards a Mercantile State Rule by Property: John Locke Giving Law to the World The “Blue Water Strategy” The Laws of a Commercial World Imagining Commercial Society: David Hume The Benefits of Commerce “Foundation of the Laws of All Nations”: Adam Smith The Unity of Morality, Law and Commerce Diplomacy, War, Empire The Laws of “Utility” “International Law”: Jeremy Bentham “Universal Jurisprudence” As Political Economy “Omission and Neglect of. International Law, As a Science” Governing a Commercial World 10 Global Law: Ruling the British Empire The Laws of Improvement The Game ofJustifications: From Conquest to Settlement Locke: Government by Improvement Colonialism As Feudalism: Transformations of Proprietary Rule Thinking about Native Inhabitants Asserting Sovereignty 1609—1763 Sovereignty from Property Rights 1763—1776 Into a New Commercial Order: Pownall Another Kind of Property: Slaves Fighting Property: The East India Company 1600-1757 The EIC after 1765: “Farmers to the Public” “The Merchant Is Become the Sovereign” Paramountcy The Move to Protection: China A Global Rule of Law xi 622 623 627 630 633 640 643 648 656 660 664 667 671 674 679 682 687 695 699 700 712 723 726 7 36 744 751 754 757 764 768 772 775 777 783
Contents PART IV GERMANY: LAW, GOVERNMENT, FREEDOM 11 A Science of State-Machines: lus naturae et gentium As a German Discipline c. 1500-1758 The Rise of State-Science: From Piety to Utility Empire vs. the Territories Westphalia in Context Reception of Grotius: Setting Up the Frame Rethinking the Empire: Pufendorf A New Science of Society A Natural Law of Sovereign Will A New Law of Nations Խ gentium As Diplomatic Propriety: Thomasius Law As Government of the State-Machine: Gundling “Nobody Trusts Alliances” “In Germany, There Are No Despots” Generating Welfare and Security: Wolff Between Humankind and a System of European States: Vattel A Law of Security and Welfare Monsters and Hypocrites: Understanding Europe 12 The End of Natural Law: German Freedom 1734-1821 The Göttingen Project Transformation of Natural Law 1: Into Empirical Political Science: Schmauss The Many Ways of State-Wisdom: Achenwall Transformation of Natural Law 2: Into Economics: Justi The Rise of the “Economy” Transformations of Natural Law 3: Into Philosophy: Kant The Laws of Freedom Between Freedom and Nature World-Wide Freedom Freedom and Human Rights The Rights of the “Nation” Transformations of Natural Law 4: Restoration Diplomacy As Modern Law of Nations: Martens “External Public Law” xii 795 797 801 807 811 816 819 823 829 832 837 842 848 851 856 860 865 869 873 878 880 884 891 897 901 904 909 915 919 924 926 930
Contents Into the Modem World: Hegel The State As Freedom Law and Universal History The Legacy of German Imagination 939 942 946 949 Conclusion and Epilogue 952 Bibliography Index 968 1070 XIII |
adam_txt |
Contents Acknowledgements page xiv Introduction The Legal Imagination Legal Imagination in Action Imagining Starts at Home A World of White Men A Note on Textual Conventions PART I TOWARDS THE RULE OF LAW 1 Legal Imagination in a Christian World: Ruling France c. 1300 Cleńcos laicos and Unam sandam “Ecclesia habet universale dominium .” Roi très Chrétien Rex Franciáé in regno suo princeps est Philip in Context 1: “Feudalism” Philip in Context 2: The Economy Ruling Humans and Owning Land lus gentium As Christian Authority 1: Systemic Aspects Example: lus gentium in Aquinas lus gentium As Christian Authority 2: Universal History lus gentium and Christian Authority 3: Property Towards Economic Justice? Common Good As the “Higher Law” Reconciling Jurisdiction and Property vii 1 1 4 8 12 14 17 19 25 31 35 40 52 59 66 72 78 83 88 94 98 107
Contents A Human Dominium: John of Paris Conclusion: Legal Imagination in the King’s Service 2 The Political Theology of lus gentium: The Expansion of Spain 1526—1559 The Court of Conscience The View from Salamanca The Salamanca Concept of “Law” lus gentium As Justice Justice As Dominium Dominium in the Indies The Salamanca Reaction No Universal Dominium Dominium Iurisdictionis An Empire of Private Rights War and Dominium Conclusion 3 Italian Lessons: lus Gentium and Reason of States An Italian Lesson The Lawyer As Humanist Warrior A New Jurisprudence Sovereignty as the Virtue of Moral Ignorance Domestic Sovereignty: Absolute and Legally Confined Law between History and Philosophy The Work of lus gentium: Equity, Utility, Necessity The Trouble with Theology Imperial Statecraft Expanding Civilisation and Protecting the Oppressed Imperial Ambivalence The Limits of Gentili’s Jurisprudence Another Italian Lesson ֊ Botero and CounterReformation Statehood 4 The Rule of Law: Grotius Interpretative Perspectives A Political Theology of Moderation The Search for Obedience: From Religious to Legal Obligation viii 111 114 117 118 130 138 143 148 155 163 170 174 181 198 210 212 215 221 228 234 236 239 244 248 254 258 264 267 271 280 284 287 294
Contents Natural Law As Frame A World of Rights Law As a Moral Science Sovereigns and Subjects: De iure praedae “[F] he Law (especially that of Nations), is in a State, like the Soul in the Human Body” Public Power and Rights of Commerce: Celebrating the Dutch Experience The Primacy of Civil Society: Property and Contract A World Seen through Law PARTII FRANCE: LAW, SOVEREIGNTY AND REVOLUTION 5 Governing Sovereignty: Negotiating French “Absolutism” in Europe 1625—1715 Statehood Reasons of Statehood Jean Bodin 1: Towards Universal Jurisprudence Jean Bodin 2: Not Tyranny, Sovereignty Jean Bodin 3: From Sovereignty to “Government” States in the World Ordering Public and Private: Loyseau The State As a “Participatory Enterprise” Thinking about Commerce Europe: Between Security and Dynastic Rights Law for a Broken Humanity: Domat Law of Nations and Moral Regeneration; Fénelon and D’Aguesseau Utrecht A Profession in Dire Straits A First Diplomatic School 6 Reason, Revolution, Restoration: European Public Law 1715-1804 Peace, Rule of Law and Political Science: Saint-Pierre Peace and Commerce: Melon States and War: Rousseau The Link between Statehood and Property Montesquieu: The Natural Laws of Commerce Towards the Brilliant Future ix 299 306 311 317 326 332 334 343 347 349 351 357 362 365 369 372 374 377 384 391 400 404 409 412 414 417 421 428 431 434 436 441
Contents Commercial Statecraft The Natural Laws of the Economy: The Physiocrats Natural Rights and the Legal Order: Sieyès Revolutions 1: Europe Exporting the Revolution? From Rights to Science European Public Law Restored: Rayneval 444 447 455 457 463 475 480 7 Colonies, Companies, Slaves: French Dominium in the World 1627—1804 Slavery and the Philosophes Colonisation As Struggle of Proprietary Rights: Early Developments Rule by Company 1 : Nouvelle Frame Rule by Company 2: Caribbean The Return of the State: Colbert Sugar, Slavery and Feudal Rights: Crozat An Empire of Commerce? “Pearl of the Antilles” Revolutions 2: Saint-Domingue Slavery or Independence? Ending . and Starting Again Epilogue: A Legal Anomaly 500 508 512 515 520 526 530 534 547 552 556 PART III 559 BRITAIN: LAWS AND MARKETS 8 The Law and Economics of State-Building: England c. 1450-c. 1650 Corpus mysticum economicum The Economics of Law and Government: Thomas Smith Two Concepts of the Law of Nations Common Law Views The Structure of Commercial Power: Companies and State Commercial State: Mercantile Law Monopolies As Law of Nations: The East India Company and Sandys Case Prerogative vs. Property Rights Ship Money; Quis judicabit? From “Opinion” to Authority: Hobbes Natural Law As the Science of Government x 488 491 561 564 569 574 579 585 592 599 603 608 611 616
Contents 9 “Giving Law to the World”: England c. 1635-c. 1830 Mare Clausum The Dutch Problem 1688: Towards a Mercantile State Rule by Property: John Locke Giving Law to the World The “Blue Water Strategy” The Laws of a Commercial World Imagining Commercial Society: David Hume The Benefits of Commerce “Foundation of the Laws of All Nations”: Adam Smith The Unity of Morality, Law and Commerce Diplomacy, War, Empire The Laws of “Utility” “International Law”: Jeremy Bentham “Universal Jurisprudence” As Political Economy “Omission and Neglect of. International Law, As a Science” Governing a Commercial World 10 Global Law: Ruling the British Empire The Laws of Improvement The Game ofJustifications: From Conquest to Settlement Locke: Government by Improvement Colonialism As Feudalism: Transformations of Proprietary Rule Thinking about Native Inhabitants Asserting Sovereignty 1609—1763 Sovereignty from Property Rights 1763—1776 Into a New Commercial Order: Pownall Another Kind of Property: Slaves Fighting Property: The East India Company 1600-1757 The EIC after 1765: “Farmers to the Public” “The Merchant Is Become the Sovereign” Paramountcy The Move to Protection: China A Global Rule of Law xi 622 623 627 630 633 640 643 648 656 660 664 667 671 674 679 682 687 695 699 700 712 723 726 7 36 744 751 754 757 764 768 772 775 777 783
Contents PART IV GERMANY: LAW, GOVERNMENT, FREEDOM 11 A Science of State-Machines: lus naturae et gentium As a German Discipline c. 1500-1758 The Rise of State-Science: From Piety to Utility Empire vs. the Territories Westphalia in Context Reception of Grotius: Setting Up the Frame Rethinking the Empire: Pufendorf A New Science of Society A Natural Law of Sovereign Will A New Law of Nations Խ gentium As Diplomatic Propriety: Thomasius Law As Government of the State-Machine: Gundling “Nobody Trusts Alliances” “In Germany, There Are No Despots” Generating Welfare and Security: Wolff Between Humankind and a System of European States: Vattel A Law of Security and Welfare Monsters and Hypocrites: Understanding Europe 12 The End of Natural Law: German Freedom 1734-1821 The Göttingen Project Transformation of Natural Law 1: Into Empirical Political Science: Schmauss The Many Ways of State-Wisdom: Achenwall Transformation of Natural Law 2: Into Economics: Justi The Rise of the “Economy” Transformations of Natural Law 3: Into Philosophy: Kant The Laws of Freedom Between Freedom and Nature World-Wide Freedom Freedom and Human Rights The Rights of the “Nation” Transformations of Natural Law 4: Restoration Diplomacy As Modern Law of Nations: Martens “External Public Law” xii 795 797 801 807 811 816 819 823 829 832 837 842 848 851 856 860 865 869 873 878 880 884 891 897 901 904 909 915 919 924 926 930
Contents Into the Modem World: Hegel The State As Freedom Law and Universal History The Legacy of German Imagination 939 942 946 949 Conclusion and Epilogue 952 Bibliography Index 968 1070 XIII |
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geographic | Europa (DE-588)4015701-5 gnd |
geographic_facet | Europa |
id | DE-604.BV047434489 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-03T17:59:18Z |
indexdate | 2024-11-27T13:03:03Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780521768597 9780521745345 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-032836819 |
oclc_num | 1258220881 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-20 DE-11 DE-706 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-12 DE-703 DE-29 |
owner_facet | DE-20 DE-11 DE-706 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-12 DE-703 DE-29 |
physical | xviii, 1107 Seiten |
psigel | BSB_NED_20220128 |
publishDate | 2021 |
publishDateSearch | 2021 |
publishDateSort | 2021 |
publisher | Cambridge University Press |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Koskenniemi, Martti 1953- Verfasser (DE-588)129499137 aut To the uttermost parts of the earth legal imagination and international power, 1300-1870 Martti Koskenniemi Cambridge ; New York ; Port Melbourne ; New Delhi ; Singapore Cambridge University Press 2021 xviii, 1107 Seiten txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Includes bibliographical references and index Legal imagination in a Christian world : ruling France c. 1300 -- The political theology of jus gentium : the expansion of Spain 1524-1559 -- Italian lessons : ius gentium & reason of state -- The rule of law : Grotius -- Governing sovereignty : negotiating French "absolutism" in Europe 1625-1715 -- Reason, revolution, restoration : European public law 1715-1804 -- Colonies, companies, slaves. French dominium in the world 1627-1804 -- The law and economics of state-building : England c. 1450-c. 1650 -- "Giving law to the world" : England c. 1635-c.1830 -- Global law : ruling the British empire -- A science of state-machines. Ius naturae et gentium as a German discipline c. 1500-1758 -- The end of natural law. German freedom, 1734-1821 "To the Uttermost Parts of the Earth addresses the uses of law by successive generations of lawyers, theologians, philosophers and political writers to deal with the exercises of power beyond the single polity. From the novel understanding of royal authority as analogous to that of a Roman emperor in the 13th century to the treatment of an expanding bourgeois civil society in the early 19th century, the book traces the use of the notions of sovereignty and property across more than five centuries of reflection on the international exercise of European power. The book not only transcends the conventional limits between private and public law, domestic and international law, but shows how such limits were constituted in the first place. Its thesis is that European power is neither the power of state nor that of capital. Instead it has always been and continues to exist as a locally specific, legally constituted combination of the two"-- Grotius, Hugo 1583-1645 (DE-588)118542702 gnd rswk-swf Geschichte 1300-1870 gnd rswk-swf Recht (DE-588)4048737-4 gnd rswk-swf Naturrecht (DE-588)4041411-5 gnd rswk-swf Scholastik (DE-588)4053169-7 gnd rswk-swf Hegemonie (DE-588)4023979-2 gnd rswk-swf Europa (DE-588)4015701-5 gnd rswk-swf Grotius, Hugo / 1583-1645 Rule of law / History Religion and law / History Natural law / History International law / History Europa (DE-588)4015701-5 g Hegemonie (DE-588)4023979-2 s Recht (DE-588)4048737-4 s Geschichte 1300-1870 z DE-604 Grotius, Hugo 1583-1645 (DE-588)118542702 p Scholastik (DE-588)4053169-7 s Naturrecht (DE-588)4041411-5 s Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe, PDF 9781139019774 Digitalisierung BSB München - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032836819&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Koskenniemi, Martti 1953- To the uttermost parts of the earth legal imagination and international power, 1300-1870 Grotius, Hugo 1583-1645 (DE-588)118542702 gnd Recht (DE-588)4048737-4 gnd Naturrecht (DE-588)4041411-5 gnd Scholastik (DE-588)4053169-7 gnd Hegemonie (DE-588)4023979-2 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)118542702 (DE-588)4048737-4 (DE-588)4041411-5 (DE-588)4053169-7 (DE-588)4023979-2 (DE-588)4015701-5 |
title | To the uttermost parts of the earth legal imagination and international power, 1300-1870 |
title_auth | To the uttermost parts of the earth legal imagination and international power, 1300-1870 |
title_exact_search | To the uttermost parts of the earth legal imagination and international power, 1300-1870 |
title_exact_search_txtP | To the uttermost parts of the earth legal imagination and international power, 1300-1870 |
title_full | To the uttermost parts of the earth legal imagination and international power, 1300-1870 Martti Koskenniemi |
title_fullStr | To the uttermost parts of the earth legal imagination and international power, 1300-1870 Martti Koskenniemi |
title_full_unstemmed | To the uttermost parts of the earth legal imagination and international power, 1300-1870 Martti Koskenniemi |
title_short | To the uttermost parts of the earth |
title_sort | to the uttermost parts of the earth legal imagination and international power 1300 1870 |
title_sub | legal imagination and international power, 1300-1870 |
topic | Grotius, Hugo 1583-1645 (DE-588)118542702 gnd Recht (DE-588)4048737-4 gnd Naturrecht (DE-588)4041411-5 gnd Scholastik (DE-588)4053169-7 gnd Hegemonie (DE-588)4023979-2 gnd |
topic_facet | Grotius, Hugo 1583-1645 Recht Naturrecht Scholastik Hegemonie Europa |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032836819&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT koskenniemimartti totheuttermostpartsoftheearthlegalimaginationandinternationalpower13001870 |