%0 Journal Article %T ¦³¦Á £¿¦¢¦Á¦Ò¦É¦Ë¦É¦Ê£¿ ¦©¦Í¦Ò¦Ó¦É¦Ó¦Ï£¿¦Ó¦Á£¿ (1706). £¿¦Í¦Á ¦Á¦È¦Ç¦Ò¦Á£¿¦Ñ¦É¦Ò¦Ó¦Ï £¿¦Ñ¦Ã¦Ï ¦Ó¦Ï¦Ô ¦­¦É¦Ê¦Ï¦Ë£¿¦Ï¦Ô ¦ª¦Ï¦Ì¦Í¦Ç¦Í¦Ï£¿ ¦°¦Á¦Ð¦Á¦Ä¦Ï¦Ð¦Ï£¿¦Ë¦Ï¦Ô ¦Ê¦Á¦É ¦Ç ¦Ä¦É£¿¦Ä¦Ï¦Ò£¿ ¦Ó¦Ï¦Ô ¦Ò¦Ó¦Ï¦Í ¦Å¦Ë¦Ë¦Ç¦Í¦É¦Ê£¿ ¦Ö£¿¦Ñ¦Ï %J - %D 2011 %R http://dx.doi.org/10.12681/er.131 http://dx.doi.org/10.12681/er.131 %X THE £¿ROYAL INSTITUTES£¿ (1706) An Unknown Work of Nikolaos Komnenos Papadopoulos and its Diffusion Three 18th-century manuscripts ¨C Patmiacus gr. 361, Metochion [monastery dependency] of the Holy Sepulchre of Constantinople 449 and Greek Philological Society of Constantinople [T¨¹rk Tarih Kurumu] 59 ¨C undoubtedly contain the same unpublished text, namely the £¿Royal Institutes£¿. The £¿Royal Institutes£¿ is a didactical explanation in Greek of the Justinian £¿Institutes£¿. In this paper, we propose that its author was Nikolaos Komnenos Papadopoulos, a Cretan professor at the law school of Padua. We also argue that Papadopoulos completed the £¿Royal Institutes£¿ in the spring of 1706, as requested by his former student and later the Patriarch of Jerusalem, Chrysanthos Notaras. Chrysanthos, in turn, used the £¿Royal Institutes£¿ as a source for his own compendium, the £¿Introduction to the Laws£¿. MARIOS TANTALO %K ¦­¦É¦Ê£¿¦Ë¦Á¦Ï£¿ ¦ª¦Ï¦Ì¦Í¦Ç¦Í£¿£¿ ¦°¦Á¦Ð¦Á¦Ä£¿¦Ð¦Ï¦Ô¦Ë¦Ï£¿ %K ¦¢¦Á¦Ò¦É¦Ë¦É¦Ê£¿ ¦©¦Í¦Ò¦Ó¦É¦Ó¦Ï£¿¦Ó¦Á %K ¦¬¦°¦³ 449 %K Patm. gr. 361 %K ¦¥¦µ¦²¦ª 59 %K ¦¶¦Ñ£¿¦Ò¦Á¦Í¦È¦Ï£¿ ¦­¦Ï¦Ó¦Á¦Ñ£¿£¿ %K N. Comnenos-Papadopoulos %K The Royal Institutes %K Met. of the Holy Sep. of Const. 449 %K Patm. gr. 361 %K ¦¥¦µ¦²¦ª (T£¿rk Tarih Kurumu) 59 %K Chrysanthos Notaras %U https://ejournals.epublishing.ekt.gr/index.php/eranistis/article/view/1498