Pothier.—Works, 10 vols. ed. by Bugnet. 3rd ed. 1890, Paris.

(Pothier, ob. 1772, is one of the most celebrated of French lawyers. His admirably lucid and methodical expositions of Roman-French law are the source of great part of the Codes prepared in France at the beginning of the 19th century and still in force there.)

Puchta.—Cursus der Institutionen. 10th ed. 1893, 2 vols. Leipzig.

(A treatise of Roman law. Puchta, ob. 1846, was one of the leading representatives of the Historical School of German Jurisprudence, and the introductory portion of this work is of importance as setting forth the abstract theory of law as understood by that school. This portion is translated by Hastie, Outlines of the Science of Jurisprudence, 1887, Edinburgh.)

Pufendorf.—De Jure Naturae et Gentium. 1672. English trans. by Kennet, 1729:—The Law of Nature and Nations.

(This is one of the earliest and most celebrated examples of a form of literature which was once of considerable repute and importance, but has now all but disappeared, namely, Natural Jurisprudence, or the Theory of Natural Law and Justice.)

Pulszky.—The Theory of Law and Civil Society. 1888, London.

Rattigan, Sir W. H.—The Science of Jurisprudence. 3rd ed. 1909.

Regelsberger.—Pandekten. Vol. i. 1903.

Rehm.—Allgemeine Staatslehre. 1899, Freiburg.