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Created from the 11th-12th centuries. Author(s) Purpose guidance for the church court. |
Church Statute of Prince Yaroslav (Russian: Церковный Устав князя Ярослава) is a source of church law in Old Rus', defined legal authority of church by the prince (knyaz), his administration and churchmen. Yaroslav's Statute was a short legal code, regulated relationship between the church and the state, including demarcation of jurisdiction between church and princely courts, index of persons within the church jurisdiction, rules of family law (family law belonged to church jurisdiction) and sanctions against moral violation. The statute was written at the 11th-12th century and remaked during 13th-16th centuries, in Old Church Slavonic and Old Russian. It was one of the first church sources of Old Russian Law. Church Statute of Prince Vladimir and other Old Russian princely statutes served to closely purposes. But church jurisdiction was expanded in comparison with Vladimir's Statute. A part of the lawsuits in the Yaroslav's Statute was referred to the church jurisdiction, and a part - to joint jurisdiction of the church and the prince. One of the sources of the statute was Byzantine law, including Nomocanon.
Contents
- History
- Meaning
- Copies
- Collection of Church Statutes and Charters
- Some editions
- Some literature
- References
The statute was written on behalf of Kievan prince (and the prince of all Rus') "Yaroslav, son of Volodimir (modern writing: Vladimir), following [the example of] my father's gift, have consulted with Ilarion, Metropolitan of Kiev and All Rus' ".
History
Konstantin Nevolin, Altksey Pavlov, Vasily Klyuchevsky, Aleksandr Lototsky, V. Chernov, Mikhail Tikhomirov, Serafim Yushkov, A. Kartashov and Yaroslav Schapov attributed the emergence of the statute to Pre-Mongol Period (before the first half of the 13th century). Nikolay Karamzin, Yevgeny Golubinsky, Nikolay Suvorov and Aleksandr Zimin - to the 13th-14th centuries.
Serafim Yushkov considered that only introduction and conclusion of the statute are belonged to Yaroslav Vladimirovich. The rest of the text (code of law) was written at the middle of the 12th century.
Meaning
The statute particularly concern rules of family law: adultery, illegal marriage, divorce and others, and also sanctions against moral violation. Some offences, suppressed in Byzantium by ecclesiastical sanctions (penance, etc.), were suppressed by secular criminal punishment (monetary penalties, etc.) in the Old Russian state. The statute also reflected medieval right-privilege: punishment was differentiated by estate (social group) of victim. According to Vasily Klyuchevsky the сhurch court, described in the statute, deepened the concept of crime, expanded the concept of sanity and established sanction for prevention of violation.
Copies
The original isn't survived. The statute is survived in more than 90 copies (since 15th century), united in six redactions. This copies are a part of various Old Russian collections of laws, including Kormchiye.
Collection of Church Statutes and Charters
Copies of Short Redaction of the statute are often a part of the Collection of Church Statutes and Charters, including church statutes of prince Vladimir and prince Yaroslav, the Rule on Church People and the Rule of 165 Saint Fathers. The Collection concludes with Confirmative Charter of 1402 by Vasily Dmitrievich, Grand Prince of Moscow, and Cyprian, Metropolitan of Moscow, mentioning about the Yaroslav's Statute (the Charter confirmed rights and privileges, given to church by princes Vladimir and Yaroslav, and metropolitans). Thus the Statute of Yaroslav could be applied up to the 15th century in Grand Duchy of Moscow and it could be later. Existence of West Russian (Lithuanian) redaction of 1499 (Scroll of Yaroslav, West Russian: Свиток Ярославль) means that the statute could be also applied in Grand Duchy of Lithuania.