Italy etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster
Italy etiketine sahip kayıtlar gösteriliyor. Tüm kayıtları göster

16 Eylül 2020 Çarşamba

Calabresi and Godi on Italian Constitutional History

Calabresi and Godi on Italian Constitutional History

Steven G. Calabresi and Matteo Godi have published Italian Constitutionalism and Its Origins in the Italian Law Journal 6:1 (2020): 23-53:

Focusing on the evolution of constitutional thought in Italy is key to understand not only Italy’s current legal order, but also constitutionalism more generally. In Italy, there has not been a true rupture point between the pre-unitary legal systems and the new constitutional order; a comprehensive study of Italian constitutional law, then, cannot do away with the preceding legal orders as modern textbooks do. And a study of modern constitutionalism cannot ignore Italy’s contribution: centuries of attempts at constitutionalizing, detached from any meaningful revolutionary vacuum. This Article sets out to fill that gap by focusing on the little known, three-centuries-long history of Italian constitutionalism, and it does so by offering many previously unpublished English translations of Italian constitutions. Part II discusses the genesis of modern constitutional thought in Italy. It focuses, in particular, on the Draft Constitution of Tuscany (1787); the Second Constitution of the Cisalpine Republic (1798); and the Constitution of the Kingdom of Italy (1802). Part III analyzes the Albertine Statute, the most famous pre-modern Italian constitution, first enacted in 1848 by the Kingdom of Piedmont and Sardinia and later extended to the entire nation following the unification of Italy in 1861. Part IV briefly focuses on the 1948 Constitution of the Italian Republic – Italy’s current constitutional document. Part V extrapolates from this history in order to make a few normative claims. A brief conclusion follows.

--Dan Ernst

11 Kasım 2019 Pazartesi

Unit 2 - Unification of Italy & Germany

Unit 2 - Unification of Italy & Germany

Here you have two videos explaining the italian and the german unification processes in just 3 minutes... Not easy, not so difficult... you can use the subtitles.



4 Şubat 2008 Pazartesi

BSA and the British School at Rome

BSA and the British School at Rome

Students at the BSA often combined part of the year at the British School at Rome.

Cambridge students:
  • Alan John Bayard Wace (BSR 1903/04)
  • Mary Hamilton (BSR 1905)
  • Henry Julius Wetenhall Tillyard (BSR 1905)
  • Gisela Marie Augusta Richter (BSR 1906)
  • John Percival Droop (BSR 1907)
  • Arthur Charles Sheepshanks (BSR 1907)
  • Wynfrid Laurence Henry Duckworth (BSA 1909)
  • Sidney Wilson Grose (BSR 1910)
  • Agnes Ethel Conway (BSR 1912)
  • Mary N.L. Taylor (BSR 1913, 1914; Gilchrist Studentship 1914); married to Harold C. Bradshaw, Rome Scholar
Oxford students:
Other students:
  • William Alexander Kirkwood (BSR 1904)
  • Duncan Mackenzie
Architects:
  • Frank George Orr (BSR 1904)
  • W. Harvey (BSR 1908)
  • Lionel Bailey Budden (1909)
  • Harry Herbert Jewell (BSR 1910)
  • George Esslemont Gordon Leith (BSR 1911, Herbert Baker Studentship)

Several former students of the BSA also held positions at the BSR:
  • Henry Stuart-Jones was the second director Director of the BSR (1903-05)
  • Alan John Bayard Wace was librarian of the BSR (1905/06).
  • Augustus Moore Daniel (associate student of the BSA), was Assistant Director of the BSR (1906/07); he was married to Margery Katharine Welsh a former student of the BSA
  • Eugenie Sellers-Strong was Assistant Director of the BSR (1909-25)
  • William Loring was honorary secretary of the BSR (as well as the BSA)
  • John Ff. Baker Penoyre, secretary to the BSR (1904-12) (as well as the BSA)