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  1.  4
    The Influence of the Principle "Necessitas Non Habet Legem" on Nordic Medieval Laws on Theft.Mia Korpiola &Jørn Øyrehagen Sunde -2024 -Journal of the History of Ideas 85 (4):681-711.
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    Medieval Iconography of Justice in a European Periphery: The Case of Sweden, ca. 1250–1550.Mia Korpiola -2018 - In Stefan Huygebaert, Georges Martyn, Vanessa Paumen, Eric Bousmar & Xavier Rousseaux,The Art of Law: Artistic Representations and Iconography of Law and Justice in Context, From the Middle Ages to the First World War. Cham: Springer Verlag. pp. 89-110.
    This chapter investigates medieval Sweden and its iconography of justice. The Swedish lay judges were without university education, and especially the commoners had few opportunities of seeing images of justice on artefacts or in secular buildings. Yet, the ecclesiastical imagery in churches was seen and understood by all, thanks to the Church’s teaching. Based on surveys of justice-related iconography in medieval Swedish and Finnish churches, the chapter argues that the scope of these motifs was very limited. Images of the Last (...) Judgment and Saint Michael weighing souls predominate, while some churches had murals with Moses receiving the Tables of the Law, Solomon’s justice, or truth- or justice-related Biblical verses in Latin. No images of Lady Justice or other justice-related representations came up. Even only a fraction of the Finnish churches had a Last Judgment or Saint Michael to adorn them. However, these two images together, with images of devils tempting people to sin and perdition, were visualisations that had practical meaning in the Swedish legal culture. The practices of justice and judging were popular and daily reiterated, making each sworn oath a step towards either heaven or hell. (shrink)
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    Testamentary Freedom in Law and Practice in Medieval Sweden: Conflicts and Coexistence.Mia Korpiola -2018 - In Maria Gigliola di Renzo Villata,Succession Law, Practice and Society in Europe Across the Centuries. Cham: Springer Verlag. pp. 149-165.
    The chapter discusses the limits of testamentary freedom in medieval Swedish law. Last wills, testaments and donations for pious causes were introduced in Sweden in the twelfth century. Some thirteenth-century papal decretals indicate that according to Swedish law, the consent of relatives was required to valid deathbed donations. This was condemned as a “perverse custom” by the popes, advocating testamentary freedom. However, both these decretals and the Swedish thirteenth- and early fourteenth-century provincial laws provide evidence of the tensions between ecclesiastical (...) authorities and Swedish lay society. The provincial laws limited testamentary freedom regarding various aspects: requiring the consent of the heirs, the timing of the bequest, the proportion of the donation vis-à-vis the whole property of the donor, and type of property. With the free assent of one’s closest heirs, all and any restrictions of testamentary freedom could be overcome. In legal practice, donators often sought to ensure the consent of their heirs in advance. They used them as witnesses and signatories, they used redemption clauses or bought off relatives with claims to the property. Acquiring the consent of heirs to wills and donations of land became customary practice in later medieval Sweden. (shrink)
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