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Volume I.
Volume II.
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book XX.: of laws in relation to commerce, considered in its nature and distinctions.
book XXI.: of laws relative to commerce, considered in the revolutions it has met with in the world.
book XXII.: of laws in relation to the use of money.
book XXIII.: of laws in the relation they bear to the number of inhabitants.
book XXIV.: of laws as relative to religion, considered in itself, and in its doctrines.
book XXV.: of laws as relative to the establishment of religion and its external polity.
book XXVI.: of laws, as relative to the order of things on which they determine.
book XXVII.: of the origin and revolutions of the roman laws on successions.
book XXVIII.: of the origin and revolutions of the civil laws among the french.
chap. I.: different character of the laws of the several people of germany.
chap. II.: that the laws of the barbarians were all personal.
chap. III.: capital difference between the salic laws and those of the visigoths and burgundians.
chap. IV.: in what manner the roman law came to be lost in the country subject to the franks, and preserved in that subject to the goths and burgundians.
chap. V.: the same subject continued.
chap. VI.: how the roman law kept its ground in the demesne of the lombards.
chap. VII.: how the roman law came to be lost in spain.
chap. VIII.: a false capitulary.
chap. IX.: in what manner the codes of barbarian laws, and the capitularies came to be lost.
chap. X.: the same subject continued.
chap. XI.: other causes of the disuse of the codes of barbarian laws, as well as of the roman law, and of the capitularies.
chap. XII.: of local customs. revolution of the laws of barbarous nations, as well as of the roman law.
chap. XIII.: difference between the salic law, or that of the salian franks, and that of the ripuarian franks, and other barbarous nations.
chap. XIV.: another difference.
chap. XV.: a reflection.
chap. XVI.: of the ordeal, or trial by boiling water, established by the salic law.
chap. XVII.: particular notions of our ancestors.
chap. XVIII.: in what manner the custom of judicial combats gained ground.
chap. XIX.: a new reason of the disuse of the salic and roman laws, as also of the capitularies.
chap. XX.: origin of the point of honour.
chap. XXI.: a new reflection upon the point of honour among the germans.
chap. XXII.: of the manners relative to judicial combats.
chap. XXIII.: of the code of laws on judicial combats.
chap. XXIV.: rules established in the judicial combat.
chap. XXV.: of the bounds prescribed to the custom of judicial combats.
chap. XXVI.: of the judiciary combat between one of the parties, and one of the witnesses.
chap. XXVII.: of the judicial combat between one of the parties, and one of the lord’s peers. appeal of false judgment.
chap. XXVIII.: of the appeal of default of justice.
chap. XXIX.: epoch of the reign of st. lewis.
chap. XXX.: observations on appeals.
chap. XXXI.: the same subject continued.
chap. XXXII.: the same subject continued.
chap. XXXIII.: the same subject continued.
chap. XXXIV.: in what manner the proceedings at law became secret.
chap. XXXV.: of the costs.
chap. XXXVI.: of the public prosecutor.
chap. XXXVII.: in what manner the institutions of st. lewis fell into oblivion.
chap. XXXVIII.: the same subject continued.
chap. XXXIX.: the same subject continued.
chap. XL.: in what manner the judiciary forms were borrowed from the decretals.
chap. XLI.: flux and reflux of the ecclesiastic and temporal jurisdiction.
chap. XLII.: the revival of the roman law, and the result thereof. change in the tribunals.
chap. XLIII.: the same subject continued.
chap. XLIV.: of the proof by witnesses.
chap. XLV.: of the customs of france.
book XXIX.: of the manner of composing laws.
book XXX.: theory of the feudal laws among the franks, in the relation they bear to the establishment of the monarchy.
book XXXI.: theory of the feudal laws among the franks, in the relation they bear to the revolutions of their monarchy.
endmatter
Volume III.
Volume IV.
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Volume II.
The Complete Works of Montesquieu. Electronic Edition.
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