Právněhistorické studie / Legal History Studies (Charles University journal; below referred to as PHS or Journal) is a scientific journal listed in the international prestigious database SCOPUS. The journal is published by Charles University in Prague under the guarantee of the Department of Legal History of the Faculty of Law of Charles University. It is published by the Karolinum Press. The journal focuses on the field of legal history and related topics.
Issue 1 of the Journal was published by the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences Publishing in June 1955. The Journal was initially published by the Cabinet of Legal History of the Czechoslovak Academy of Science (CSAV), later by the Institute of State and Law (CSAV) and then by the Institute of Legal History of the Faculty of Law of Charles University.
PHS is issued three times a year in April, August, and December and it presents original scientific works/papers as well as reviews, annotations and news from the scientific field of legal history. It also introduces annotated texts of a legal history nature. PHS accepts manuscripts from domestic as well as foreign authors. Manuscripts submitted by foreign authors are published in original language, namely in English, Slovak, German, French, Italian or Polish.
PHS (ISSN 0079-4929) is registered in the Czech national ISSN centre (supervised by the State Technical Library). The Journal is registered by the Ministry of Culture of the Czech Republic according to Act No. 46/2000 Sb., on Rights and Liabilities for the Publishing of Periodicals and Change of Some Acts (Press Act), and it is allocated with registration number of periodical press MK E 18813.
PHS is an open journal and ensures open access to scientific data (Open Access). The entire content is released as open to the public on the web pages of the journal.
The journal is archived in Portico.
PRÁVNĚHISTORICKÉ STUDIE, Vol 45 No 1 (2015), 96–111
Ohlédnutí za českou právní slavistikou 19. a prvních desetiletí 20. století
[Review of Slavic Law Studies in Czech Countries in 19th Century and in First Decades of 20th Century]
Ladislav Vojáček
published online: 14. 09. 2015
abstract
The branch of the Slavic law studies belonged to the Slavic studies as a multidisciplinary but, at the same time, integrated area of research on the Slavs and their culture (language, art, esp. literature, history, economics, religion and law). In the beginning, the researchers presumed the existence of a common Slavic law and, thus, they focused on finding this law. Later on, they move their attention to comparison of the particular legal systems of the individual Slavic nations. Czech Slavic Law studies has been forming since 1960s, with its main representatives Hermenegild Jireček and Jaromír J. Hanel, later on Karel Kadlec and his followers Theodor Saturník, Rucholf Rauscher and Jozef Markov. In the first part of the article, the author follows the development of the Slavic law studies until the end of the1930s. In the second one, he tries to show how the development, aims and methods of the Slavic law studies were understood and presented both by its main representatives (K. Kadlec, R. Rauscher, F. Čáda and, in the postwar period, Vladimír Procházka) and in the texts written by the team of the top representatives of the Slavic studies since mid 1970s to mid 1990s.
Ohlédnutí za českou právní slavistikou 19. a prvních desetiletí 20. století is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
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ISSN: 0079-4929
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