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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2018
1. (1703) 3 Ld. Raym. 909.
2. (1867) L.R. 2C.P. 651.
3. (1773) 2 W.BI. 892.
4. (1760) 2 Burr. 1005.
5. [1932] A.C. 562, 580.
6. D.9.2.31: for the case of one who dropped a branch from a tree or something from a scaffolding, the text reports Mucius as holding that liability depended on the presence of culpa: and: culpam autem esse quod cum a diligente provideri poterit, non esset provisum … Mucius, it will be recalled, was very early, some three hundred years before Ulpian. He was consul in 95 BC.
7. ‘The Histoy of the University of Oxford’, Vol 1, (ed J. Catto, Oxford 1984), 1–36 (R. W. Southern).
8. Tettenborn, A.M. Introduction: o the Law of Obligations (London, 1984)Google Scholar.
9. D.44.7.1 pr.; G.3.82; cf J Inst, 3.13.
10. (1982) 2LS I.
11. Cf‘The advance made in public opinion in the course of the last twenty-five years as to the importance of a sound legal education … has caused it to be acknowledged that, without becoming a professed Civilian, no-one can presume to call himself an accomplished lawyer unless he shall have some acquaintance with Roman Jurisprudence’ from Leapingwell's, G. preface to A Manual of the Roman Civil Law arranged after the analysis of Dr. Hallifax (Cambridge, 1859)Google Scholar.