[1728] Ibid. No. 118.

[1729] Simancæ de Cathol. Instit. Tit. LXV. No. 73.

[1730] Zangeri, op. cit. I. Nos. 8-25.

[1731] Zangeri cap. IV. Nos. 25-30.—Damhouder, op. cit. cap. xxxvii. Nos. 15, 16.—Baldi de Periglis de Quæstionibus, cap. i. § 7.—Alberti de Gandino de Quæstionibus § 11.

[1732] Grilland. de Quæstione et Tortura Q. iv. §§ 2-10. “Quod tunc corpus ipsius rei dilaniatur membraque et ossa quodammodo dissolvuntur et evelluntur a corpore.”

[1733] Zangeri, op. cit. cap. III. No. 3.

[1734] Process. Criminal. Tit. V. cap. x. No. 7.

We have already seen (p. 514) that in France the accused was not allowed to see the evidence against him; and the same rule was in force in Flanders—“Toutes depositions de tesmoins en causes criminelles demeureront secrètes à l’égard de l’accusé.”—Coutume d’Audenarde, Stile de la Procedure, Art. 10. (Le Grand, Coutumes de Flandre, Cambrai, 1719, p. 103).

[1735] Diss. Inaug. cap. I. § xii.

[1736] Goetzii, op. cit. p. 36.