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[...]... plenitudeofpowerinMilan with the aim of understanding how the legal world, as well as theViscontiandtheSforza themselves, interpreted their authority and status As the rulers ofMilan attempted to make good a claim to plenitudeof power, legal opinion as to what that phrase meant changed Jurists ofthe period ofthe early Visconti were willing to grant far greater scope to plenitudeofpower than... yet another illustration ofthe inevitable problems surrounding plenitudeof power: because its purpose was to facilitate the disregard for laws and rights, the use of absolute power was bound to provoke controversy TheViscontiandtheSforza themselves continually felt the need to examine the basis of their plenitudeof power, so providing further clues to the elusive nature ofthe rule ofthe signori... denied to the rulers ofMilan This circumstance led theSforza temporarily to return to the principle of communal authority as the basis of their rule The claim to plenitudeofpower was at the centre of these developments: decrees and other acts issued by virtue of that prerogative had to reflect the changing basis ofthe regime The present study looks at the foundations, the role, andthe force of plenitude. .. sunt immutabilia’ Introduction 3 but to be seen misusing plenitudeofpower risked the accusation of injustice and therefore of illegitimacy There was a fine line between plenitudeofpowerand tyranny, and it was inthe hands of lawyers to judge whether the limits had been overstepped The attempts by medieval jurists to referee the clash between the powers of rulers andthe rights of subjects have attracted... exposition of the concept, Innocent III saw the divine commission given to Peter as the central basis ofplenitudeofpowerThe key biblical passages, according to him, were those where Peter is singled out to be given the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and where he is commanded, ‘Feed my sheep.’⁶ There were two particular strands to Innocent III’s understanding ofplenitudeofpower that were to be of interest... first, the connection between fullness ofpowerandthe pope’s role as chief judicial of cer of the Church; and second, the identification ofplenitudeofpower with absolute authority above the law.⁷ The importance ofplenitude of powerinthe first of these functions, the administration of justice, had grown up over the years From the fifth century, popes enjoyed jurisdiction over disputes involving the. .. from the idea that the emperor was legibus solutus for their analysis of papal powers: at the beginning of the thirteenth century the Roman law maxim ‘what the emperor decrees has the force of law’ (Inst 1, 2, 6) was being used in support of papal powers.²⁵ Canon and civil law came together in Hostiensis, who, in discussions of papal plenitudeof power, invariably cited the classic passages inthe Digest... ‘‘whatever the prince decrees has the force of law’’.’⁵⁵ He noted the particular association between plenitudeofpowerandthe majesty ofthe emperor: The emperor has total plenitudeofpowerin every land inthe empire,’ adding, in him all power shines; for the providence of God has seen that no one and nothing would better protect the well-being ofthe republic than Caesar.’⁵⁶ But like other lawyers,... endeavoured to distance themselves andthe regime from plenitudeof power, blaming its misuse on unscrupulous petitioners The most outstanding legal minds working inthe duchy inthe early sixteenth century were determined to discredit absolute power altogether, arguing that the liberties of small communities had been bought and sold in an outrageous manner underthe guise ofplenitudeofpowerThe reaction came... property and other rights This work relies on two main kinds of source First there are legal commentaries and consilia (mainly of lawyers whose careers brought them in touch with Milan) , showing how the parameters of absolute power changed over the period Consilia, in particular, demonstrate the effectiveness ofplenitudeofpowerInMilan consilia were a mandatory and binding aspect of court proceedings.⁶ . of plenitude of power in Milan with the aim of understanding how the legal world, as well as the Visconti and the Sforza themselves, interpreted their authority and status. As the rulers of Milan. of Milan, 1287–1535 xiii Introduction 1 Chapter 1. Plenitude of Power: Absolutism in the Middle Ages 8 The Beginnings of Plenitude of Power 8 The Century of Absolutism 11 Baldo degli Ubaldi and. absolute power in order for their acts to be accepted as legitimate. The difficulty was that in appropriating plenitude of power, the Visconti were embracing the law and language of the pope and the