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novellae

Novellae is a Latin term meaning “new things” and can refer to several related uses in law and literature. In legal history, the most prominent use is for the Novellae Constitutiones, the body of imperial constitutions issued by Emperor Justinian I after 534 CE to supplement the corpus of Roman law. Often called the Novels, these new laws primarily addressed private law, including contracts, property, family matters, and succession. They were compiled separately from the earlier Codex Justinianus and Digest and were later integrated into the broader Corpus Juris Civilis in medieval Europe. The Novellae played a role in shaping Byzantine legal practice and, through later civil-law traditions, influenced continental European law.

In scholarly and Latin-language contexts, novellae may also simply be the plural form of novella, a short

Summary

The term novellae therefore denotes either a set of post-534 imperial constitutions within Justinian’s civil-law compilation

novel
or
long
short
story.
In
modern
English
usage,
the
plural
is
typically
novellas,
while
novellae
appears
mainly
in
academic
discussions
of
Latin
or
historical
legal
texts.
or,
in
literary
usage,
the
plural
of
novella.
As
a
legal
collection,
the
Novellae
Constitutiones
contributed
to
the
development
of
private-law
norms
in
late
antique
and
medieval
legal
systems;
as
a
literary
term,
novellae
refers
to
multiple
short
novels
within
a
broader
narrative
tradition.