"Sextus Decretalium" is a word in LAW AND LEGAL
Lat. The sixth (book) of the decretals; the sext, or sixth decretal. So called because append-ed, in the body of the canon law, to the five books of the decretals of Gregory IX.; it consists of a collection of supplementary de-cretals, and was published A. D. 1298. Butl. Hor. Jur. 172; 1 BL Comm. 82
The values we rightly associate with the modern age - the "liberty, equality, and fraternity" of the French revolution - are all endangered today not by the dead hand of tradition but by modernity itself, and they can be salvaged only by moving beyond it.
WORD SUGGESTIONS
Manager: Twenty teams in the league and you lot finish bottom ?Captain: Well, it could have been worse.Manager: How ?Captain: There could have been more teams in the league !
A supplemental collection of the canon law, published by Boniface VIII. in 1298, called, also, “Liber Sextus Decretalium,” (Sixth Book …
Read the complete definitionThe sixth book of the decretals, added by Pope Boniface VIII.
Read the complete definition