This document discusses justice and taxation in Moldavia from the late 16th century to the 17th century, specifically looking at "dedicated monasteries". It explores the relationship between Moldavia and the Ottoman Empire, and how this affected domestic politics and financial organization. As Ottoman influence increased in the 17th century and the Phanariote regime was introduced in 1714, foreign princes administered Moldavia and Romania more like provinces of the Empire. This led to significant changes in traditional Romanian structures. The document examines criminal penalties from documents of the time, most frequently redemptions paid for offenses. It also discusses fiscal immunities gained by some Moldavian monasteries, including the right to levy fines for serious crimes normally
This document discusses justice and taxation in Moldavia from the late 16th century to the 17th century, specifically looking at "dedicated monasteries". It explores the relationship between Moldavia and the Ottoman Empire, and how this affected domestic politics and financial organization. As Ottoman influence increased in the 17th century and the Phanariote regime was introduced in 1714, foreign princes administered Moldavia and Romania more like provinces of the Empire. This led to significant changes in traditional Romanian structures. The document examines criminal penalties from documents of the time, most frequently redemptions paid for offenses. It also discusses fiscal immunities gained by some Moldavian monasteries, including the right to levy fines for serious crimes normally
This document discusses justice and taxation in Moldavia from the late 16th century to the 17th century, specifically looking at "dedicated monasteries". It explores the relationship between Moldavia and the Ottoman Empire, and how this affected domestic politics and financial organization. As Ottoman influence increased in the 17th century and the Phanariote regime was introduced in 1714, foreign princes administered Moldavia and Romania more like provinces of the Empire. This led to significant changes in traditional Romanian structures. The document examines criminal penalties from documents of the time, most frequently redemptions paid for offenses. It also discusses fiscal immunities gained by some Moldavian monasteries, including the right to levy fines for serious crimes normally
This document discusses justice and taxation in Moldavia from the late 16th century to the 17th century, specifically looking at "dedicated monasteries". It explores the relationship between Moldavia and the Ottoman Empire, and how this affected domestic politics and financial organization. As Ottoman influence increased in the 17th century and the Phanariote regime was introduced in 1714, foreign princes administered Moldavia and Romania more like provinces of the Empire. This led to significant changes in traditional Romanian structures. The document examines criminal penalties from documents of the time, most frequently redemptions paid for offenses. It also discusses fiscal immunities gained by some Moldavian monasteries, including the right to levy fines for serious crimes normally
(LATE 16th CENTURY 17th CENTURY): THE CASE OF THE DEDICATED MONASTERIES (Summary) Keywords: taxation, dedicated monasteries, criminal penalties, fiscal privileges Both the subject of our research and the periodical classification we propose are tightly related to Moldavias politico-juridical relationships with the Ottoman Empire, which have direct implications in the domestic political structure and financial organization, in the criminal code practices. In the 17th century, the subordination to the Ottoman Empire increased. Afterward, the Phanariote regime introduced in 1714 implied the administration of the two countries like quasiprovinces of the Empire, with the help of Princes of Greek origin, directly appointed by the Sultan, with no consultation of the indigenous political class. These foreign Princes particular situation led to a political conduct that was their specific one, thus unavoidably determining a significant modification of the Romanian traditional world structures. In our investigation, this will be underlined by analysing the documents that mention criminal penalties that attest the execution of punishments, out of which the most frequent one was the redemption of the offence by paying a sum of money. We must say that the number of such papers is a limited one among the written documents, most of them being acts issued in the aftermath of civil trials and making no distinction between civil and criminal issues as far as the procedure is concerned. These situations are to be explained by the absence of the written motivation for the court order in jurisdictional procedure. Such procedure, consisting in the quoting, in the order, the juridical norm that the judges were referring to when making the decision, became compulsory after Constantin Mavrocordats request. This is one further reason to establish temporary limits to cover the 17th century and the first half of the 18th one. A particular problem are the fiscal immunities acquired by some of the Moldavian monasteries. Among these privileges, there is the levying, by these monasteries, of the fines (gloabe) for serious offences (big deed) like murder. By right, the investigation of the offences was the responsibility of the Prince, who was also levying the fine, established according to the gravity of the crime. Consequently, we insist upon this aspect pertaining to the relation between two institutions, the Principality and the Church, in the period we have in view, from the perspective of some juridical and fiscal privileges that the monasteries were entitled to. For that, we follow the way in which the criminal fine levied by the Prince or his tax farmers becomes both a modality to punish and a source of incomes. Continuing this idea, we intend to motivate the levying, by some monasteries, of the quantum of punishment for murder (duegubina), usually meant to the princely court. *
Cercettor tiinific, Institutul de Istorie A. D. Xenopol Iai.
The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898
Explorations by early navigators, descriptions of the islands and their peoples, their history and records of the Catholic missions, as related in contemporaneous books and manuscripts, showing the political, economic, commercial and religious conditions of those islands from their earliest relations with European nations to the close of the nineteenth century, Volume XLII, 1670-1700