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This collection of legal documents affecting the Christian Church in the Roman Empire is the first its kind in any language. In time the monuments here translated cover the period from the foundation of the Church to the deposition of Romulus Augustulus, the last emperor in the West (476), and to the publication of the second (and only extant) edition of the Code of Justinian I, the most conspicuous champion of Caesaropapism in the East (534)--each terminus ad quem being an arbitrary, but a natural, limit. The character of the originals, which are mostly in either Greek or Latin, is strictly secular, that is, the documents emanate from the State's officials, ordinarily the emperors, and thus expose the State's attitude toward the Church. --From the Introduction P.R. Coleman-Norton (1898-1971) was an associate professor emeritus of classics at Princeton University and an authority on Roman law. He wrote more than 400 articles in encyclopedias and in classical and theological periodicals, and published several volumes on Roman law. During World War II, he served with Army intelligence in Egypt, French North Africa and Italy.