Decretum<\/em> in 1840 to the University of Groningen Library and that this copy was special because it had been owned by \u2018our famous\u2019 Viglius van Aytta.<\/p>\n\n\n\nViglius (Wigle) van Aytta was definitely famous. He was born in 1507 to a rich family in Wirdum near Leeuwarden. He was soon taken in by his uncle, who lived in nearby Swichum. Viglius\u2019s uncle was a lawyer and Viglius decided to study law in Louvain. He went on to become a famous and powerful politician, who was mainly known for his activities abroad. He was a close personal advisor to the emperor Charles V, who appointed him president of the Privy Council at Brussels in 1549 and president of the Council of State in 1554. Considering his education and offices, it is no surprise that Viglius was interested in the Decretum<\/em>, as this was an important law book.<\/p>\n\n\n\nMonument ter herinnering aan Viglius van Aytta en zijn broer Gerbrand bij de kerk in Swichum<\/em><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\nThis copy was printed in Venice in 1486, but the Decretum<\/em> was originally written by Gratianus in Bologna around 1140. His aim was of major importance: to solve the apparent contradictions in canon law.<\/span>Canon law is the ecclesiastical law of the Catholic church, based on the Bible and other Christian writings. This law was applied in ecclesiastical courts and had a lot of influence on the medieval legal system, as canon law was not only applied to purely religious cases but also to many other cases. In addition to canon law, Roman law, which was based on the legal system of the Roman Empire, was also used during the Middle Ages. As there was no one law system and no unambiguous, clearly organized legal system in the Middle Ages, this would often lead to problems, because the systems sometimes seemed to contradict each other. To this day, canon law still exists in ecclesiastical courts, although it no longer has an official status in most countries.<\/span>Hence, the text was used for centuries as an official code in courts, until 1917.<\/p>\n\n\n\nManicula in the margin<\/em><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\nAt least one reader carefully read through this entire copy: many sentences have been underlined, and there are tiny scrawly notes in the margins. Every now and then, there is a fun detail: a drawing of a little hand or manicula<\/span>A manicula is the symbol of a pointing hand, originally drawn by readers, but later also printed. It was used a lot in the Middle Ages and in the early modern period, sometimes to indicate a new paragraph, but more often by readers to indicate interesting passages. Sometimes, readers drew very detailed hands, with sleeves, sometimes even with an entire person connected to it, but usually it was just a quick scribble. Occasionally, a manicula can even tell us who drew it because some readers developed their own maniculae, which are just as personal as a signature or a monogram. A specific sleeve, long or short fingers, hands with or without nails: these details can help us to identify individual readers.<\/span>which points to important or interesting passages to highlight them. Is this the hand of Viglius van Aytta?<\/p>\n\n\n\n <\/figure>\n\n\n\nThe pages of this copy of the Decretum <\/em>contain a few mysteries. On the lavishly decorated first page, for example, there is a coat of arms surrounded by curling plant patterns. The coat of arms contains three gold wheels on a blue background. Which family did it belong to? There are a number of coats of arms that look like it, but they are not identical. So this image is still hiding the identity of a mysterious third owner.<\/p>\n\n\n\nAuthor: Kjelda Glimmerveen<\/p>\n\n\n\n
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Vindicat and Freemasonry - Stories of Frisia<\/title>\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n\t \n\t \n\t \n \n \n\t \n