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X-WR-CALNAME;VALUE=TEXT:How Ill-Gotten Gains Produced Public Good in Late Medieval Canon Law
PRODID:-//Harvard events data//EN
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UID:event_1802371_0
SUMMARY:How Ill-Gotten Gains Produced Public Good in Late Medieval Canon Law
DESCRIPTION:<p>	A talk by Prof. Silvia Di Paolo (Law Faculty, University of Roma III, Italy), with the title “Restitution: How ill-gotten gains produced public good in Late Medieval canon law”</p><p>	 </p><p>	Abstract: This talk will examine how the Augustinian principle "Sin is not wiped out unless the ill-gotten gains are returned," led to the development of a particular vision of justice and economic equity in medieval canon law. This vision held that every illicit form of appropriation and gain was an injury to equality and justice that was reparable only by means of restitution. Constituting both a form of compensation and an investment, this principle allowed to finance church buildings, as well as religious and artistic works. A typical example was the 14th century commission to decorate a chapel in Padua that the Scrovegni bankers gave Giotto so to return to the community that part of their wealth which was allegedly usurious.</p><p>	 </p><p>	Date/time: Tuesday, March 26, 5-6:30 pm</p><p>	Sponsor: Annual Lectureship in Law – IAP- UAM</p><p>	Co-sponsors: Early Modern Workshop in History at Harvard, Legal History Colloquium.</p>
LOCATION:Harvard Law School, Wasserstein Hall (WCC), 18 Everett Street (corner with Mass Ave) room 3008.
STATUS:CONFIRMED
DTSTART:20240326T210000Z
DTEND:20240326T223000Z
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