Ancillaria
Digital canon law resources
🔗Medieval Canon Law Virtual LibrarySite founded by Prof. David Freidenreich and Prof. Reno, maintained at Prof. Freidenreich's University website at Colby. This includes a curated list of essential juridical texts from the medieval and early modern period.
🔗Bio-Bibliography of Medieval and Early Modern JuristsAbsolutely essential register and bibliography of Canon Law jurists and collections begun by Prof. Kenneth Pennington and housed now at the Ames Foundation website.
🔗Editio Romana of 1582High resolution scans of the Corpus iuris canonici, done by UCLA's Library and Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies.
🔗Hypertext version of the Liber extraPublished by the IntraText service, this presents the Liber extra using a concordance and word-based hyperlinks.
🔗Mommsen–Krueger–Schoell edition of the Corpus iuris civilis, bookmarked and hyperlinkedFrom Prof. Reno's personal stash, marked-up in the odd hours of downtime between other things. There is a bookmark tree containing every single title for each of the four volumes, and the opening 14-page alphabetized index of titles for the Codex, Digest, and Institutes is entirely hyperlinked. While there is no index for the Novellae, one may approximate such by performing a search and including the bookmarks in the queried data.