(image source: Wikimedia Commons)
Job abstract:
This PhD position is part of the interdisciplinary research project “Innovation through Education: Pioneering Change in Law and Theology in Louvain’s Golden Age”. The project is led by an interdisciplinary team of KU Leuven researchers consisting of LECTIO members Prof Wim Decock (Roman Law and Legal History, spokesperson), Prof Wouter Druwé (Roman Law and Legal History), Prof Randall Lesaffer (Roman Law and Legal History), Dr An Smets (KU Leuven Libraries) and Prof Violet Soen (Early Modern History), with the support of Prof Mark Depauw (Ancient History/Digital Humanities), Prof Wim François (History of Church and Theology) and Prof Jan Papy (Latin Literature). The successful candidate will be affiliated to the Department of Roman Law and Legal History at KU Leuven's Faculty of Law (https://www.law.kuleuven.be/romrecht/engels). For more information about LECTIO, please visit http://lectio.ghum.kuleuven.be/.
The Dutch Revolt put questions of the constitutional and political order of the Netherlands at the centre of academic and public debate during early 17th century. The question of the international legitimacy of the Revolt spurred interest in the laws of war and peace. The secession of the northern provinces from the Habsburg conglomerate in the Netherlands fostered debate on the reconstitution of the Habsburg ‘state’ in the Southern Netherlands, first under the Archdukes Albert and Isabel (1598-1621), and then under the restored Spanish regime after Albert’s death. The Leuven faculty of secular law and its professors rose to the challenge of the reconstitution of the Habsburg state, with its implied need for legally-trained officials who were attuned to the changing context, by exploring novel pathways in the understanding and teaching of the learned, Roman law. The project on two leading Leuven law professors from the early 17th century: Petrus Gudelinus (1550-1620) and Antonius Peresius (1583-1672). The research project aims to map and analyse three major innovations in the teaching and study of law. Firstly, in line with a wider European movement, the Leuven law professors pioneered the gradual emergence and gradual emancipation of public law, and its international pendant the law of nations, into autonomous legal categories. Secondly, it will be assessed whether and to what extent these Leuven law authors operated a theory and discourse of natural law as part of a strategy to define, defend or limit royal authority in relation to individual rights. Thirdly, there is the role of the influence of the humanist revival at Leuven on the Leuven jurisprudence to consider. This vacancy is part of the large-scale project "Innovation through Education. Pioneering Change in Law and Theology during Leuven's Golden Age”, which will be conducted by 5 PhD students and their supervisors in the Faculties of Arts, Law and Theology. It investigates how Louvain professors in law and theology during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries adapted the content and methods of their teaching to the changing needs of society, in order to prepare the future elites for tackling the religious, political and economic challenges of their time. The source material consists of student notes that will be compared with printed material such as treatises and textbooks of the professors involved.More information on the KULeuven website.
(source: Standen&Landen)
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