Tribonian
Bas-relief plaque of Tribonian in the Chamber of the United States House of Representatives in the United States Capitol.
Bornc. 485
Side
(modern-day Side, Antalya, Turkey)
Died542 (aged 57)
Occupation(s)jurist and advisor
Years active529-542
Known forsupervised the revision of the legal code of the Byzantine Empire into the Code of Justinian.

Tribonian (Greek: Τριβωνιανός [trivonia'nos], c. 485?–542) was a Byzantine jurist and advisor. During the reign of the Emperor Justinian I, he supervised the revision of the legal code of the Byzantine Empire.[1] He has been described as one of the wisest collaborators of Emperor Justinian.[2]

Biography

Tribonian was a Greek,[2] born in Side, in Pamphylia, around the year 485.[3] He was well educated and practiced law before the court of the praetorian prefect.[4] Justinian made Tribonian magister officiorum (Master of Offices), although it is not clear when,[5] and then appointed him quaestor sacri palatii in September 529.[6]

In 528, before he was appointed quaestor, Tribonian was named by Justinian as one of the commissioners charged with preparing the new imperial legal code, the Codex Justinianeus, which subsequently was issued on April 7, 529.[7] In 530, after Tribonian had become quaestor, it was natural for Justinian to put him in charge of the next major law reform project: compiling and harmonizing the writings of classical Roman jurists. Justinian's main objects in creating this harmonized compilation of juristic writings were to shorten litigation (by clarifying the law), and to create a syllabus to be used at the law schools in Berytus (Beirut) and Constantinople.[8] During the same period, Tribonian also was charged with carrying out another aspect of Justinian's reforms in legal education and codification — creating a textbook for first-year law students by updating the Institutes of Gaius. Both the Digest and the new Institutes of Justinian were promulgated in December of 533.[9] In 534, Justinian decided that so many new laws had been passed, and so many older ones harmonized, since the publication of his first Code in 529, a second edition was needed. Hence, the Codex repetitae praelectionis was published, entirely superseding the edition of 529, the text of which has been lost.[10]

In 532, Tribonian was removed as quaestor due to the charges made by his enemies during the Nika riots, but he continued to work on the codification.[11] He was restored to his post as quaestor in 535 and continued in that position until his death.[12] Tribonian continued to help draft new laws for Justinian; these new laws (Novellae Constitutiones) were later combined with the Codex Justinianus, the Digest and the Institutes to comprise the Corpus Juris Civilis.

Tribonian died in 542 of a disease, perhaps the plague.[13] Tribonian's career is summarized by his noted modern biographer, Tony Honoré, in this way: "...he was Justinian's minister for legislation and propaganda for nearly twelve years...In these years the three volumes of the Corpus Juris Civilis and most of the surviving legislation of Justinian's reign were produced. He drafted about three-quarters of the surviving constitutions of Justinian's reign. He planned and directed the work of the Second Law Commission, which produced the Digest, the Institutes and the Second "Codex Iustinianus."[14]

References

  1. Roman Jurisprudence Archived 2008-01-20 at the Wayback Machine.
  2. 1 2 Laskarēs, Ēlias (1990). Βυζαντινοί αυτοκράτορες: 306-610 μ.Χ. (από το Μέγα Κωνσταντίνο μέχρι και το Φωκά) (in Greek). Vyzantis. p. 67. ISBN 978-960-85091-0-8. ΤΡΙΒΩΝΙΑΝΟΣ : Ήταν ο σοφότερος από τους συνεργάτες του Ιουστινιανού . Ήταν ειδωλολάτρης Έλληνας από την Παμφυλία
  3. "We can only guess at the date of his birth....Tribonian attained the quaestorship in 529, so he was presumably born before 500, perhaps in the last fifteen years of the fifth century." Tony Honoré, Tribonian (1978), 41.
  4. Honoré, 44.
  5. Honoré, 45
  6. Tony Honoré, "Tribonian" in The Oxford Classical Dictionary 1549 (Simon Hornblower and Antony Spawforth eds. 3rd rev. ed 2003).
  7. Honoré, supra note 2 at 44-46.
  8. Tony Honoré, "Justinian's Codification" in The Oxford Classical Dictionary 803, 804 (Simon Hornblower and Antony Spawforth eds. 3rd rev. ed 2003). For a lengthier discussion of the purpose of the second Commission, see Honoré, supra note 2 at 48-50.
  9. Honoré, "Justinian's Codification, supra note 8.
  10. Id.
  11. Honoré, supra note 2 at 48.
  12. Honoré, supra note 5.
  13. See Honoré, supra note 2 at 61-64 for a detailed sifting of the evidence.
  14. Honoré, supra note 8 at 69.
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