[1644] Legg. Capital. Caroli V. c. lx. lviii.

[1645] Ibid. c. xx. lviii.

[1646] Ibid. c. lv. lvi. lvii.

[1647] Legg. Capital. Carol. V. c. xxii. lxix.

[1648] Ibid. c. xxviii.

[1649] Ibid. c. xxiii. xxi.

[1650] Ibid. c. xxxiii.-xliv.

[1651] Ibid. c. xx. lxi.

[1652] Ibid. c. lviii. lix. Accusatus, si periculum sit, ne inter vel post tormenta ob vulnera expiret, ea arte torquendus est, ne quid damni accipiat.

[1653] Heineccii Hist. Jur. Civ. Lib. II. §§ cv. sqq.—Meyer (Instit. Judiciaires, Liv. VI. chap. xi.) gives a very interesting sketch of the causes which led to the overthrow of the old system of jurisprudence throughout Germany. He attributes it to the influence of the emperors and the municipalities, each equally jealous of the authority of the feudal nobles, aided by the lawyers, now becoming a recognized profession. These latter of course favored a jurisprudence which required long and special training, thus conferring upon them as a class peculiar weight and influence.