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Praetor |
Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.04 sec. |
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PRAETOR, Roman civil law. A municipal officer of Rome, so called because,
(praeiret populo,) he went before or took precedence of the people. The
consuls were at first called praetors. Liv. Hist. III. 55. He was a sort of
minister of justice, invested with certain legislative powers, especially in
regard to the forms or formalities of legal proceedings. Ordinarily, be aid
not decide causes as a judge, but prepared the grounds of decision for the
judge and sent to, him the questions to be decided between the parties. The
judge was always chosen by the parties, either directly, or by rejecting,
under certain rules and limitations, the persons proposes to them by the
praetor. Hence the saying of Cicero, (pro Cluentis, 43,) that no one could
be judged except by a judge of his own choice. There were several kinds of
officers called proctors. See Vicat, Vocab.
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? References in periodicals archive |
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He sees the work of Perrault as the most formidable undertaking of interpretation and re-appropriation of the ideas of these three literary figures of the Grand Siecle (The Cartesian Turn: Perrault Against Descartes; The Sublime Turn: Perrault Against Boileau; The Pretorial Turn: Perrault Against Boileau). |
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