See also:FABROT, See also:CHARLES ANNIBAL (1580-1659) , See also:French jurisconsult, was See also:born at See also:Aix in See also:Provence on the 15th of See also:September 1580. At an See also:early See also:age he made See also:great progress in the See also:ancient See also:languages and in the See also:civil and the See also:canon See also:law; and in 1602 he received the degree of See also:doctor of law, and was made avocat to the See also:parlement of Aix. In 1609 he obtained a professorship in the university of his native See also:town. He is best known by his See also:translation of the See also:Basilica, which may be said to have formed the See also:code of the Eastern See also:empire till its destruction. This See also:work was published at See also:Paris in 1647 in 7 vols. fol., and obtained for its author a considerable See also:pension from the See also:chancellor, See also:Pierre Seguier, to whom it was dedicated. Fabrot likewise rendered great service to the See also:science of See also:jurisprudence by' his edition of See also:Cujas, which comprised several See also:treatises of that great jurist previously unpublished. He also edited the See also:works of several See also:Byzantine historians, and was besides the author of various antiquarian and legal treatises. He died at Paris on the 16th of See also:January '659.
End of Article: FABROT, CHARLES ANNIBAL (1580-1659)
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