"Fran\u00E7ois Douaren"@en . . "Franciscus Duarenus"@pt . . . . . . . . "Fran\u00E7ois Douaren (or le Douaren) (also sometimes spelled Duaren; Latin: Franciscus Duarenus) (1509, near Saint-Brieuc \u2013 1559, Bourges) was a French jurist and professor of law at the University of Bourges. After studies in Paris under Bud\u00E9 and in Bourges, Douaren worked as an advocate for the Parlement of Paris. In 1538, he was called to teach at Bourges. Following a bitter dispute with Baro, he abandoned the chair for Paris until Baro's death in 1550, after which Douaren returned to teach at Bourges. Like his compatriots Jacques Cujas, Fran\u00E7ois Hotman and Hugues Doneau, Douaren was one of the leading representatives of the legal humanist school of thought within the science of Roman law on the European continent. These 16th-century French law professors applied the philological methods of the Italian humanists to legal texts. It was their aim to arrive at a historically more accurate understanding of the texts of the Roman Corpus Iuris Civilis. In addition to numerous commentaries on the Corpus, Douaren wrote a leading commentary on the Roman law of obligations, Commentarius de pactis (1544), which greatly influenced modern theories of obligations. His 1544 programme of studies, De ratione docendi discendique iuris epistola, was the first statement of the mos gallicus, the French Humanist approach to higher education. Its core contents \u2013 language studies, introductory classes on the base of the Justinian Code, a methodical approach based on the laws of the Corpus \u2013 came to be introduced at most European legal faculties."@en . . "1119378173"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . "Fran\u00E7ois Le Douaren ou Fran\u00E7ois Douaren (en latin : Franciscus Duarenus), n\u00E9 en 1509 \u00E0 Moncontour et mort en 1559 \u00E0 Bourges, est un juriste et professeur de droit fran\u00E7ais, qui exer\u00E7a \u00E0 l'universit\u00E9 de Paris o\u00F9 il eut au nombre de ses \u00E9l\u00E8ves les trois fils de Guillaume Bud\u00E9, puis \u00E0 celle de Bourges. Selon de Thou, il \u00E9tait le plus savant homme de son temps en droit civil. Ces professeurs de droits appliquaient les m\u00E9thodes philologiques des humanistes italiens aux textes juridiques. Leur objectif \u00E9tait notamment de parvenir \u00E0 une compr\u00E9hension plus pr\u00E9cise des textes du Corpus juris civilis."@fr . "Fran\u00E7ois Douaren"@it . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Fran\u00E7ois Douaren"@fr . "Fran\u00E7ois Douaren (o le Douaren; talvolta scritto anche Duaren), in latino Franciscus Duarenus (vicino a Saint-Brieuc, 1509 \u2013 Bourges, 23 luglio 1559) \u00E8 stato un giurista francese professore di diritto all'Universit\u00E0 di Bourges."@it . . "Fran\u00E7ois Le Douaren ou Fran\u00E7ois Douaren (en latin : Franciscus Duarenus), n\u00E9 en 1509 \u00E0 Moncontour et mort en 1559 \u00E0 Bourges, est un juriste et professeur de droit fran\u00E7ais, qui exer\u00E7a \u00E0 l'universit\u00E9 de Paris o\u00F9 il eut au nombre de ses \u00E9l\u00E8ves les trois fils de Guillaume Bud\u00E9, puis \u00E0 celle de Bourges. Selon de Thou, il \u00E9tait le plus savant homme de son temps en droit civil. Disciple d'Andrea Alciato, avec ses compatriotes Jacques Cujas, Fran\u00E7ois Hotman et Hugues Doneau, Douaren \u00E9tait l'un des principaux repr\u00E9sentants de l'\u00E9cole humaniste de droit romain (voir humanisme juridique) sur le continent europ\u00E9en. Ces professeurs de droits appliquaient les m\u00E9thodes philologiques des humanistes italiens aux textes juridiques. Leur objectif \u00E9tait notamment de parvenir \u00E0 une compr\u00E9hension plus pr\u00E9cise des textes du Corpus juris civilis."@fr . . . "3088"^^ . . "Franciscus Duarenus"@de . . "Franciscus Duarenus (eigentlich: Duarein, latinisiert: Franciscus Duarenus, auch: Fran\u00E7ois Douaren) (* 1509 bei Saint-Brieuc; \u2020 23. Juli 1559 in Bourges) war ein franz\u00F6sischer Rechtsgelehrter und Professor an der Universit\u00E4t von Bourges."@de . . . . . . . . "6579456"^^ . . "Franciscus Duarenus (sinon\u00EDmia: Fran\u00E7ois Douaren, Franz Duarein), foi um jurista franc\u00EAs e professor de Direito da Universidade de Bourges.Nasceu em Saint-Brieuc, Fran\u00E7a em 1509 e morreu em Bourges, em 23 de Julho de 1559."@pt . . . "Fran\u00E7ois Douaren (o le Douaren; talvolta scritto anche Duaren), in latino Franciscus Duarenus (vicino a Saint-Brieuc, 1509 \u2013 Bourges, 23 luglio 1559) \u00E8 stato un giurista francese professore di diritto all'Universit\u00E0 di Bourges."@it . . . . . . . . . . "Fran\u00E7ois Douaren (or le Douaren) (also sometimes spelled Duaren; Latin: Franciscus Duarenus) (1509, near Saint-Brieuc \u2013 1559, Bourges) was a French jurist and professor of law at the University of Bourges. After studies in Paris under Bud\u00E9 and in Bourges, Douaren worked as an advocate for the Parlement of Paris. In 1538, he was called to teach at Bourges. Following a bitter dispute with Baro, he abandoned the chair for Paris until Baro's death in 1550, after which Douaren returned to teach at Bourges."@en . "Franciscus Duarenus (sinon\u00EDmia: Fran\u00E7ois Douaren, Franz Duarein), foi um jurista franc\u00EAs e professor de Direito da Universidade de Bourges.Nasceu em Saint-Brieuc, Fran\u00E7a em 1509 e morreu em Bourges, em 23 de Julho de 1559."@pt . "Franciscus Duarenus (eigentlich: Duarein, latinisiert: Franciscus Duarenus, auch: Fran\u00E7ois Douaren) (* 1509 bei Saint-Brieuc; \u2020 23. Juli 1559 in Bourges) war ein franz\u00F6sischer Rechtsgelehrter und Professor an der Universit\u00E4t von Bourges."@de . . . .