Historical School of Law

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The Historical School of Law[6]founded by Gustav Hugo and developed prominently by Friedrich Carl von Savigny[1]emerged as a critical response to the rationalist theories of the natural law[4]. Rejecting universal legal principles, the school saw law as an organic product of historical and cultural development, embodied in the concept of "Volksgeist" or national spirit. Influenced by Kantian ethics and historicist philosophies, it emphasised the evolution of law through customary practices rather than legislative decrees. The school challenged the Napoleonic Code[2] and the German Civil Code[3] de Thibaut, arguing that legal systems should reflect specific national characteristics. Its main contributions included criticising speculative natural law, highlighting the historical context of legal institutions and understanding law as a dynamic and culturally rooted phenomenon. The Historical School significantly influenced legal theory in the Romano-Germanic legal traditions and paved the way for the jurisprudence[5] normative positivism.

Terms definitions
1. Friedrich Carl von Savigny ( Friedrich Carl von Savigny ) Friedrich Carl von Savigny was a prominent German legal scholar who founded the historical school of jurisprudence. Orphaned at the age of 13, he studied and then taught law at the University of Marburg. In 1814, he published a seminal work criticising legal codification and advocating a historical approach to law. He established the "Zeitschrift für geschichtliche Rechtswissenschaft" and wrote extensively on Roman law, including his landmark work "System of Current Roman Law". Savigny challenged the prevailing theories of natural law, emphasising the importance of understanding law within its historical context. Appointed Grosskanzler in Prussia in 1842, he implemented significant legal reforms before resigning during the 1848 revolution. He influenced many scholars, including the Brothers Grimm, and is considered a founder of modern private international law. Savigny died in Berlin in 1861, leaving a lasting legacy in legal research.
2. Napoleonic Code ( Napoleonic Code ) The Napoleonic Code, enacted between 1803-1805, was a comprehensive codification of civil law that replaced the old French legal privileges with principles of legal equality. Developed under Napoleon Bonaparte, it systematically organised civil law in areas such as marriage, inheritance and property rights. Influenced by the Justinian Code and ideals of the French Revolution, the code was structured into three books covering people, property and the acquisition of property. Its innovative approach balanced traditional legal concepts with modern principles, emphasising practicality and individual property rights. The clear and accessible language of the code made the law more comprehensible to the public. Its significant impact extended beyond France, being adopted in several countries, including Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium, and influencing civil law systems in Switzerland, Germany and parts of North America. The Napoleonic Code represented a fundamental achievement in legal systematisation and remains a crucial milestone in the development of modern civil law.

A Historical School of Law was a school of legal thinking - forerunner of the normativist positivism that would appear with the Jurisprudence of concepts - which appeared in the German territories at the beginning of 19th century and exerted a strong influence in all countries with a tradition of Roman-Germanic.

The Historical School of Law, strongly influenced by the romanticismThis school of law was based on the assumption that legal norms were the result of historical evolution and that their essence was to be found in the customs and beliefs of social groups. Using the terminology used by this legal-philosophical school, the Lawas a historical product and a cultural manifestation, would be born from "spirit of the people" (in German: Volksgeist). In the words of Friedrich Carl von Savigny o Law would have its origins "in the silent forces and not in the will of the legislator".

The historical school of law emerged as an opposition to jusnaturalism Enlightenment, which considered the Law as a phenomenon independent of time and space and whose foundations would be found in reason and the nature of things.

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