2023-2024 / DROI1102-2

Roman Law

Duration

60h Th

Number of credits

 Bachelor in law5 crédits 
 Extra courses intended for exchange students (Erasmus, ...) (Faculty of Law, Political Science and Criminology)6 crédits 

Lecturer

Jean-François Gerkens

Language(s) of instruction

French language

Organisation and examination

Teaching in the first semester, review in January

Schedule

Schedule online

Units courses prerequisite and corequisite

Prerequisite or corequisite units are presented within each program

Learning unit contents

The Romans invented the Law. They were the first to separate law and religion. Therefore they were also the first to criticise the rule of law, in order to improve it.
So one could say that Roman law has the same importance for the jurist, as the Pythagoras Theorem for the mathematician or Aristotle for the philosopher... It is impossible to seriously pretend to do without them.
Study Roman law helps to understand much better the rules we deal with today. Many rules can only be understood with help of the Roman law.
It is impossible to speak of the whole Roman law the Romans developed over more than a millenary in only 60 hours. Therefore, most of the lectures will be about private law. It is indeed in private law that the Roman Roots of our law appear to be the most evident.
The evolution of Roman law will not be neglected. The students will have to make sure that they are aware of the historical perspective.

Learning outcomes of the learning unit

Help the future jurists to understand their law system and particularly the mechanisms of private law. By learning the origins of today's rules of law, one can understand them much better. It is useful that the rules of law can be understood also when it has not the form of a law written in a modern code.

Prerequisite knowledge and skills

Planned learning activities and teaching methods

The Roman Law course relies on a MOOC. The Roman Law MOOC is divided in 10 modules and the students must watch these modules before the lectures.

The material learned in the MOOC modules will then be the subject of interactive discussions on the Roman legal texts included in the syllabus, following the scripts of each MOOC module.

Mode of delivery (face to face, distance learning, hybrid learning)

Blended learning


Additional information:

During the first two weeks, students will need to view and understand the first 4 modules of the MOOC.

No courses will be given during this period, in order to allow time for this autonomous learning.

Thereafter, the teachings will be organised in two parallel groups, with two weekly sessions lasting one and a half hours for each group.

Rehearsal sessions will also be organised by student monitors and assistants.

Recommended or required readings

A syllabus containing the scripts of the video capsules, as well as the texts that will be the subject of the presencial teachings, is available at the Presses de l'Université de Liège (PULg).

Any session :

- In-person

written exam ( open-ended questions )

- Remote

oral exam

- If evaluation in "hybrid"

preferred in-person


Additional information:

The final exam is written and the students must show that they understand the reasoning of the roman jurists. They will also be able to apply this reasoning to new pratcial cases. 

Work placement(s)

Organisational remarks and main changes to the course

The distribution of student groups will be based on alphabetical order.

Group 1 will be that of students whose surname initial is from A to J.

Group 2 includes students whose surname initial is from K to Z.

Contacts

Professor: JF.Gerkens@uliege.be

Assistant: Robin.Navez@uliege.be
URL: https://www.uliege.be/cms/c_9054334/fr/repertoire?uid=u015254

Association of one or more MOOCs

The MOOC entitled 'Les Romains, un peuple de juristes : introduction au Droit romain (D5)' is associated with this course.


Additional information:

The Roman Law MOOC (in French) has 10 modules:



Module 1 : Histoire du Droit romain

Module 2 : Sources du Droit romain

Module 3 : La deuxième vie du Droit romain

Module 4 : Procédure et monde romain

Module 5 : Le droit de propriété

Module 6 : Les démembrements du droit de propriété

Module 7 : Les droits de créance

Module 8 : Les délits

Module 9 : Les contrats

Module 10 : Les obligations de sources diverses

Items online

Only in french so far
Only in french so far.