释义 |
▪ I. Sabinian, n. and a.1 Roman Law.|səˈbɪnɪən| [ad. L. Sabinianus, f. Sabinus (see below).] A. n. A follower of Massurius Sabinus, a celebrated jurist in the time of the emperor Tiberius. B. adj. Of or pertaining to Massurius Sabinus or his views.
1862T. Mackenzie Stud. in Roman Law 13 Capito..was the chief of the rival sect, called after two of his followers Sabinians or Cassians. 1886E. E. Whitfield tr. Salkowski's Inst. & Hist. Roman Law 47 The opposition..arises between the two schools of Law..the Proculians and Sabinians. 1903F. P. Walton Hist. Introd. Roman Law xvii. 137 We frequently read that the Proculian view upon some question was so and so, and that the Sabinian view differed from it. 1907S. L. Phipson Law of Evidence (ed. 4) xlvi. 558 The old controversy between the Proculians and the Sabinians, between the logical, inferential or liberal school of interpreters, and the grammatical or literal. 1953A. Berger Encycl. Dict. Roman Law 687/1 Among the prominent Sabinians after Sabinus and Cassius were Lavolenus, Gaius, and Julian. 1977A. Watson Nature of Law vii. 102 Even in the second century A.D. one of the two famous schools of jurists, the Sabinian, argued that barter should be included within the contract of sale. ▪ II. Saˈbinian, a.2 rare. [f. Sabine a. and n.1 + -ian.] = Sabine a.
1902Belloc Path to Rome 432 Rome was hidden by the low Sabinian hills. |