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Encyclopedia > Sudebnik

Sudebnik of 1497 (Судебник in Russian, or Code of Law), a collection of laws, which was introduced by Ivan III and played a big part in the centralization of the Russian state, creation of the nationwide Russian Law and elimination of feudal division. Sudebnik was written by Vladimir Gusev.


Sudebnik took its roots from Russkaya Pravda, Pskov Charter of Law, princely decrees, and common law, the regulations of which had been upgraded with reference to social and economic changes. Basically, Subednik was a collection of legal procedures. It established a universal system of the judicial bodies of the state, defined their competence and subordination, and regulated legal fees. Sudebnik expanded the range of acts, considered punishable by the standards of criminal justice (e.g., sedition, sacrilege, slander). It also renewed the concept of different kinds of a crime. Sudebnik established the investigative nature of legal proceedings. It provided different kinds of punishment, such as death penalty, flagellation etc. In order to protect the feudal landownership, Sudebnik intoduced certain limitations in the law of estate, increased term of limitation of legal actions with regards to princely lands, introduced flagellation for violation of property boundaries of princely, boyar and monastic lands (violation of peasant land boundaries entailed a fine). Sudebnik also introduced a fee (пожилое, or pozhiloye) for peasants who wanted to leave their feudal lord (Крестьянский выход, or Krestiyansky vykhod), and also established a universal day (November 26) across the Russian state for peasants, who wanted to switch their masters (Юрьев день, or Yuri’s Day).


External links

Sudebnik (http://www.departments.bucknell.edu/russian/const/sudebnik.html)


  Results from FactBites:
 
Sudebnik of 1589: Information and Much More from Answers.com (725 words)
The 1550 Sudebnik remained the major operational legal code throughout Muscovy for the next ninety-nine years - to the extent that there was one during and after the Time of Troubles.
The Sudebnik of 1589 has been thoroughly studied, and it is known which of its 289 articles originated in which of the sixty-eight articles of the Sudebnik of 1497 and in which of the one hundred articles of the Sudebnik of 1550.
Like most law, the Sudebnik of 1589 was concerned with cleaning up "social messes" and providing an infrastructure for the orderly resolution of conflicts in property and inheritance disputes, especially important in the Dvina Land where peasants still owned most of the land.
Sudebnik Information (195 words)
Sudebnik of 1497 (Судебник in Russian, or Code of Law), a collection of laws, which was introduced by Ivan III and played a big part in the centralization of the Russian state, creation of the nationwide Russian Law and elimination of feudal division.
Sudebnik took its roots from Russkaya Pravda, Legal Code of Pskov, princely decrees, and common law, the regulations of which had been upgraded with reference to social and economic changes.
Sudebnik expanded the range of acts, considered punishable by the standards of criminal justice (e.g., sedition, sacrilege, slander).
  More results at FactBites »


 

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