Medieval Church Law And The Origins Of The Western Legal Tradition A Tribute To Kenneth Pennington |link| -

Kenneth Pennington is the Kelly-Quinn Professor of Ecclesiastical and Legal History at The Catholic University of America . His work is celebrated for:

– Explores the birth of formal canonistic theory, particularly following Gratian’s in the 12th century. Section III: Intellectual Exchanges It is to see that the West’s legal

To honor Kenneth Pennington is to reject the stale dichotomy of sacred and secular. It is to see that the West’s legal tradition—its faith in reasoned argument, its suspicion of raw power, its commitment to the rule of law—emerged not from the Renaissance alone, nor from the Enlightenment alone, but from the crucible of medieval ecclesiastical courts. It is to understand that a bishop’s tribunal, striving to save souls, ended up shaping the very structure of civil liberty. In Pennington’s hands

This tribute honors Pennington’s central thesis: that the ius commune —the common law of Europe—was not Roman alone, but a dynamic fusion of Roman jurisprudence and canonistic equity. In Pennington’s hands, the medieval canonists (Gratian, Huguccio, Innocent IV, and a host of lesser-known masters) emerge as the true architects of concepts we now take for granted: due process, the presumption of innocence, the right against self-incrimination, and the limits of sovereign power. Long before Magna Carta became a secular icon, canon lawyers were arguing that a pope—let alone a king—could be bound by law. the medieval canonists (Gratian