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1917 Code of Canon Law

The 1917 Code of Canon Law (abbreviated 1917 CIC, from its Latin title Codex Iuris Canonici), also referred to as the Pio-Benedictine Code,[1] is the first official comprehensive codification of Latin canon law.

Title page of the 1918 edition of the 1917 CIC

Ordered by Pope Pius X in 1904 and carried out by the Commission for the Codification of Canon Law, led by Pietro Cardinal Gasparri, the work to produce the code was completed and promulgated under Pope Benedict XV on 27 May 1917, coming into effect on 19 May 1918.[2] The 1917 Code of Canon Law has been described as "the greatest revolution in canon law since the time of Gratian"[3] (1150s AD).

The 1917 Code of Canon Law remained in force until the 1983 Code of Canon Law took legal effect and abrogated it[1] on 27 November 1983.[4]

History edit

Background edit

Papal attempts at codification of the scattered mass of canon law spanned the eight centuries since Gratian produced his Decretum c. 1150.[5] The five books of the Decretales Gregorii IX and the Liber Sextus of Boniface VIII were later published.

Reasons for codification edit

 
Pope Pius X, who ordered the codification of canon law in 1904

Since the close of the Corpus Juris, numerous new laws and decrees had been issued by popes, councils, and Roman Congregations. No complete collection of them had ever been published and they remained scattered through the ponderous volumes of the Bullaria, the Acta Sanctae Sedis, and other such compilations, which were accessible to only a few and for professional canonists themselves and formed an unwieldy mass of legal material. Moreover, not a few ordinances, whether included in the "Corpus Juris" or of more recent date, appeared to be contradictory; some had been formally abrogated, others had become obsolete by long disuse; others, again, had ceased to be useful or applicable in the present condition of society. Great confusion was thus engendered and correct knowledge of the law rendered very difficult even for those who had to enforce it.[6]

Already in the Council of Trent the wish had been expressed in the name of the King of Portugal that a commission of learned theologians be appointed to make a thorough study of the canonical constitutions binding under pain of mortal sin, define their exact meaning, see whether their obligation should not be restricted in certain cases, and clearly determine how far they were to be maintained and observed.[6]

In response to the request of the bishops at the First Vatican Council,[7] on 14 May 1904, with the motu proprio Arduum sane munus ("A Truly Arduous Task"), Pope Pius X set up a commission to begin reducing these diverse documents into a single code,[8] presenting the normative portion in the form of systematic short canons shorn of the preliminary considerations.[9]

 
Pietro Cardinal Gasparri, architect of the 1917 Code

Codification process edit

In addition to the canon law experts brought to Rome to serve on the codification commission, all the Latin Church's bishops and superiors general of religious orders were periodically consulted via letter. Every Latin bishop had the right to permanently keep a representative in Rome to give him voice at the meetings of the codification commission.[10]

By the winter of 1912, the "whole span of the code" had been completed, so that a provisional text was printed. The 1912 text was sent out to all Latin bishops and superiors general for their comment, and the notations which they sent back to the codification commission were subsequently printed and distributed to all members of the commission, in order that the members might carefully consider the suggestions.[10]

Under the aegis of Cardinal Pietro Gasparri, with the help of Eugenio Pacelli (who later became Pope Pius XII),[11] the Commission for the Codification of Canon Law completed its work under Benedict XV, who promulgated the Code which became effective in 1918. The work having been begun by Pius X and being promulgated by Benedict XV, it is sometimes called the "Pio-Benedictine Code".[1]

Period of enforcement edit

 
Pope Benedict XV, who promulgated the 1917 Code

The new code was completed in 1916.[12] The code was promulgated on 27 May 1917,[13] Pentecost Sunday,[14] as the Code of Canon Law (Latin: Codex Iuris Canonici) by Pope Benedict XV's apostolic constitution Providentissima Mater Ecclesia.[15] Benedict XV set 19 May 1918[13] as the date on which it came into force.[16]

On 15 September 1917, by the motu proprio Cum Iuris Canonici,[17] Pope Benedict XV made provision for a Pontifical Commission charged with interpreting the code and making any necessary modifications as later legislation was issued. New laws would be appended to existing canons in new paragraphs or inserted between canons, repeating the number of the previous canon and adding bis, ter, etc.[18] (e.g. "canon 1567bis" in the style of the civil law) so as not to subvert the ordering of the code, or the existing text of a canon would be completely supplanted. The numbering of the canons was not to be altered.[19]

For the most part, it applied only to the Latin Church except when "it treats of things that, by their nature, apply to the Oriental",[20] such as the effects of baptism (canon 87). It contained 2,414 canons.[21]

The Latin text of the 1917 Code remained unchanged for the first 30 years of its enactment, when Pope Pius XII issued a motu proprio of 1 August 1948 that amended canon 1099 of the code, a revision that took effect on 1 January 1949.[22]

The 1917 Code was in force until Canon 6 §1 1° of the 1983 Code of Canon Law[23] took legal effect—thereby abrogating it[1]—on 27 November 1983.[4]

Decrees edit

On 15 September 1917, shortly after promulgating the 1917 code, Benedict XV promulgated the motu proprio Cum Iuris Canonici, which forbade the Roman Congregations from issuing new general decrees unless it was necessary to do so, and then only after consulting the Pontifical Commission charged with amending the code. The congregations were instead to issue Instructions on the canons of the code, and to make it clear that they were elucidating particular canons of the code.[24] This was done so as not to make the code obsolete soon after it was promulgated. The 1917 Code was very rarely amended, and then only slightly.[25]

Structure edit

 
Hardcover of the 1917 Code of Canon Law

The 1917 Code presents canon law in five groupings:[26]

  1. the general principles of law
  2. the law of persons (clergy, religious, and laity)
  3. de rebus (including such "things" as the sacraments, holy places and times, divine worship, the magisterium, benefices, and temporal goods)
  4. procedures
  5. crimes and punishment

As the first complete collection of law for the Latin church, it paints a fairly accurate picture of the organizational design and the role of the papacy and the Roman curia at the outset of the twentieth century.[27]

The organization of the 1917 Code followed the divisions (Personae, Res, Actiones) of the ancient Roman jurists Gaius and Justinian. The code did not follow the classical canonical divisions (Iudex, Iudicium, Clerus, Sponsalia, Crimen).[28]

Scholarship and criticism edit

During the 65 years of its enforcement, a complete translation of the 1917 Code from its original Latin was never published. Translations were forbidden, partly to ensure that interpretive disputes among scholars and canonists concerning such a new type of code would be resolved in Latin itself and not in one of the many languages used in scholarship.[29] More English-language research material exists relating to the 1917 Code than in any other language except Latin.[30]

The book De rebus ('On things') was subject to much criticism due to its inclusion of supernatural subjects such as sacraments and divine worship under the category "things" and due to its amalgamation of disparate subject matter.[31] It was argued by some that this was a legalistic reduction of sacramental mystery.[32] René Metz defended the codifiers' decision on the layout and scope of De rebus as being the "least bad solution" to structural problems which the codifiers themselves fully understood.[31]

This was also the canon law that for the first time in Roman Catholic Church history, legalized interest outright.[33][better source needed] The Code of Canon Law of 1917 allowed those responsible for the church's financial affairs at the parish and diocesan levels to invest in interest-bearing securities "for the legal rate of interest (unless it is evident that the legal rate is exorbitant), or even for a higher rate, provided that there be a just and proportionate reason."[34][35]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Dr. Edward Peters, CanonLaw.info, accessed June-9-2013
  2. ^ Metz, "What is Canon Law?", p. 59
  3. ^ Edward N. Peters, 1917 Code, xxx
  4. ^ a b NYTimes.com, "New Canon Law Code in Effect for Catholics", 27 Nov 1983, accessed 25 June 2013
  5. ^ Peters, Life of Benedict XV, p. 204.
  6. ^ a b Ayrinhac, General Legislation §55.
  7. ^ Pietro Cardinal Gasparri, preface to the CIC 1917
  8. ^ Manual of Canon Law, p. 47
  9. ^ Manual of Canon Law, p. 49
  10. ^ a b Peters, Life of Benedict XV, p. 205.
  11. ^ Wolf, Hubert (2010). Pope and Devil. Translated by Kronenberg, Kenneth. Belknap Press. p. 37. ISBN 978-0674064263.
  12. ^ Entry for 'canon law, new code of'. 1910 New Catholic Dictionary. http://www.studylight.org/dictionaries/ncd/view.cgi?n=1909. 1910. Accessed 14 April 2016
  13. ^ a b La Due, William J., J.C.D.: The Chair of Saint Peter: A History of the Papacy (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 1999), p. 256.
  14. ^ La Due, William J., J.C.D.: The Chair of Saint Peter: A History of the Papacy (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 1999), p. 257
  15. ^ Metz, René (1981). "Pouvoir, centralisation et droit: La codification du droit de l'Eglise catholique au début du XXe siècle". Archives de sciences sociales des religions. 26 (51.1): 49–64. ISSN 0335-5985.
  16. ^ Ap Const. Providentissima Mater Ecclesia Benedict XV, 27 May 1917
  17. ^ Pope Benedict XV, motu proprio Cum Iuris Canonici of 15 September 1917, (Edward N. Peters, 1917 Code, p. 25)
  18. ^ Pope Benedict XV, motu proprio Cum Iuris Canonici of 15 September 1917, §III (Edward N. Peters, 1917 Code, p. 26)
  19. ^ Metz, What is Canon Law? pp. 62–63
  20. ^ canon 1, 1917 Code of Canon Law
  21. ^ Dr. Edward N. Peters, CanonLaw.info "A Simple Overview of Canon Law", accessed June-11-2013
  22. ^ Rev. Dr. Joseph Clifford Fenton, "First Change in Text Of Code of Canon Law" (sic), N.C.W.C. News Service, Dec 11, 1948.
  23. ^ 1983 Code of Canon Law Annotated, Canon 6 (p. 34)
  24. ^ Pope Benedict XV, motu proprio Cum Iuris Canonici of 15 September 1917, §§II–III (Edward N. Peters, 1917 Code, p. 26)
  25. ^ Metz, What is Canon Law? P. 64
  26. ^ Metz, What is Canon Law? pg. 71
  27. ^ William J. La Due, pg. 256
  28. ^ Codification 1225 to 1900 2015-12-29 at the Wayback Machine, accessed 7 December 2015
  29. ^ Edward N. Peters, 1917 Code, xxiv.
  30. ^ Edward N. Peters, 1917 Code, xxxi
  31. ^ a b Metz, What is Canon Law? pg. 60
  32. ^ Concilium: "The Future of Canon Law"
  33. ^ Paul S. Mills, John R. Presley , Islamic Finance: Theory and Practice, page 105, MacMillan Press Ltd (1999). ISBN 978-0-312-22448-6
  34. ^ T.L. Bouscaren and A.C. Ellis. 1957. Canon Law: A Text and Commentary. p. 825.
  35. ^ "Code du Droit Canon | Canon N° 1543 Code de Droit Canonique (1917) - CIC/1917". Faculté de Droit Canonique (in French). from the original on 2020-09-27. Retrieved 2021-03-23.

Sources edit

  • Ayrinhac, Very Rev. H. A., S.S., D.D., D.C.L., General Legislation in the New Code of Canon Law: General Norms. (Can. 1–86.) Ecclesiastical Persons in General. (Can. 87–214.) (New York: Blase Benziger & Co., Inc., 1923).
  • Caparros, Ernest, et al., 1983 Code of Canon Law Annotated "Gratianus Series", 2nd edition (Woodridge: Midwest Theological Forum, 2004).
  • Della Rocca, Fernando. Manual of Canon Law (Milwaukee: The Bruce Publishing Company, 1959). Rev. Anselm Thatcher, O.S.B. (translator).
  • La Due, William J., J.C.D.: The Chair of Saint Peter: A History of the Papacy (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 1999).
  • Metz, René. What is Canon Law? (New York: Hawthorn Books/Publishers, 1960). Michael Derrick (translator of the French original).
  • Peters, Edward N. (translator), The 1917 or Pio-Benedictine Code of Canon Law: in English Translation with Extensive Scholarly Apparatus (Ignatius Press, 2001).
  • Peters, Walter H. The Life of Benedict XV (Milwaukee: The Bruce Publishing Company, 1959).
  • The Future of Canon Law Concilium vol. 48 (Paulist, 1969).
  • This article incorporates text from the 1910 version of the New Catholic Dictionary article "Canon law, new code of", a publication now in the public domain.

Further reading edit

  • Bouscaren, T. Lincoln (1934). The Canon Law Digest: Officially Published Documents Affecting the Code of Canon Law, 1917-1933. Internet Archive. Milwaukee: The Bruce Publishing Company.

External links edit

  • Codex Iuris Canonici (1917), original text in Latin
  • Codex Iuris Canonici (1917) in French translation
  • Providentissima Mater Ecclesia (Vatican website, in Italian) (English version in The Catholic Columbian, p. 3)
  • Master Page on the Pio-Benedictine Code of 1917, CanonLaw.info (website of Dr. Edward N. Peters, J.C.D)

1917, code, canon, abbreviated, 1917, from, latin, title, codex, iuris, canonici, also, referred, benedictine, code, first, official, comprehensive, codification, latin, canon, title, page, 1918, edition, 1917, ordered, pope, pius, 1904, carried, commission, c. The 1917 Code of Canon Law abbreviated 1917 CIC from its Latin title Codex Iuris Canonici also referred to as the Pio Benedictine Code 1 is the first official comprehensive codification of Latin canon law Title page of the 1918 edition of the 1917 CIC Ordered by Pope Pius X in 1904 and carried out by the Commission for the Codification of Canon Law led by Pietro Cardinal Gasparri the work to produce the code was completed and promulgated under Pope Benedict XV on 27 May 1917 coming into effect on 19 May 1918 2 The 1917 Code of Canon Law has been described as the greatest revolution in canon law since the time of Gratian 3 1150s AD The 1917 Code of Canon Law remained in force until the 1983 Code of Canon Law took legal effect and abrogated it 1 on 27 November 1983 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 Background 1 2 Reasons for codification 1 3 Codification process 1 4 Period of enforcement 1 5 Decrees 2 Structure 3 Scholarship and criticism 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Sources 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory editFurther information Legal history of the Catholic Church Background edit Papal attempts at codification of the scattered mass of canon law spanned the eight centuries since Gratian produced his Decretum c 1150 5 The five books of the Decretales Gregorii IX and the Liber Sextus of Boniface VIII were later published Reasons for codification edit nbsp Pope Pius X who ordered the codification of canon law in 1904 Since the close of the Corpus Juris numerous new laws and decrees had been issued by popes councils and Roman Congregations No complete collection of them had ever been published and they remained scattered through the ponderous volumes of the Bullaria the Acta Sanctae Sedis and other such compilations which were accessible to only a few and for professional canonists themselves and formed an unwieldy mass of legal material Moreover not a few ordinances whether included in the Corpus Juris or of more recent date appeared to be contradictory some had been formally abrogated others had become obsolete by long disuse others again had ceased to be useful or applicable in the present condition of society Great confusion was thus engendered and correct knowledge of the law rendered very difficult even for those who had to enforce it 6 Already in the Council of Trent the wish had been expressed in the name of the King of Portugal that a commission of learned theologians be appointed to make a thorough study of the canonical constitutions binding under pain of mortal sin define their exact meaning see whether their obligation should not be restricted in certain cases and clearly determine how far they were to be maintained and observed 6 In response to the request of the bishops at the First Vatican Council 7 on 14 May 1904 with the motu proprio Arduum sane munus A Truly Arduous Task Pope Pius X set up a commission to begin reducing these diverse documents into a single code 8 presenting the normative portion in the form of systematic short canons shorn of the preliminary considerations 9 nbsp Pietro Cardinal Gasparri architect of the 1917 Code Codification process edit In addition to the canon law experts brought to Rome to serve on the codification commission all the Latin Church s bishops and superiors general of religious orders were periodically consulted via letter Every Latin bishop had the right to permanently keep a representative in Rome to give him voice at the meetings of the codification commission 10 By the winter of 1912 the whole span of the code had been completed so that a provisional text was printed The 1912 text was sent out to all Latin bishops and superiors general for their comment and the notations which they sent back to the codification commission were subsequently printed and distributed to all members of the commission in order that the members might carefully consider the suggestions 10 Under the aegis of Cardinal Pietro Gasparri with the help of Eugenio Pacelli who later became Pope Pius XII 11 the Commission for the Codification of Canon Law completed its work under Benedict XV who promulgated the Code which became effective in 1918 The work having been begun by Pius X and being promulgated by Benedict XV it is sometimes called the Pio Benedictine Code 1 Period of enforcement edit See also 1983 Code of Canon Law nbsp Pope Benedict XV who promulgated the 1917 Code The new code was completed in 1916 12 The code was promulgated on 27 May 1917 13 Pentecost Sunday 14 as the Code of Canon Law Latin Codex Iuris Canonici by Pope Benedict XV s apostolic constitution Providentissima Mater Ecclesia 15 Benedict XV set 19 May 1918 13 as the date on which it came into force 16 On 15 September 1917 by the motu proprio Cum Iuris Canonici 17 Pope Benedict XV made provision for a Pontifical Commission charged with interpreting the code and making any necessary modifications as later legislation was issued New laws would be appended to existing canons in new paragraphs or inserted between canons repeating the number of the previous canon and adding bis ter etc 18 e g canon 1567bis in the style of the civil law so as not to subvert the ordering of the code or the existing text of a canon would be completely supplanted The numbering of the canons was not to be altered 19 For the most part it applied only to the Latin Church except when it treats of things that by their nature apply to the Oriental 20 such as the effects of baptism canon 87 It contained 2 414 canons 21 The Latin text of the 1917 Code remained unchanged for the first 30 years of its enactment when Pope Pius XII issued a motu proprio of 1 August 1948 that amended canon 1099 of the code a revision that took effect on 1 January 1949 22 The 1917 Code was in force until Canon 6 1 1 of the 1983 Code of Canon Law 23 took legal effect thereby abrogating it 1 on 27 November 1983 4 Decrees edit Main articles Decree Catholic canon law and Acts of Roman Congregations On 15 September 1917 shortly after promulgating the 1917 code Benedict XV promulgated the motu proprio Cum Iuris Canonici which forbade the Roman Congregations from issuing new general decrees unless it was necessary to do so and then only after consulting the Pontifical Commission charged with amending the code The congregations were instead to issue Instructions on the canons of the code and to make it clear that they were elucidating particular canons of the code 24 This was done so as not to make the code obsolete soon after it was promulgated The 1917 Code was very rarely amended and then only slightly 25 Structure editSee also Jurisprudence of Catholic canon law nbsp Hardcover of the 1917 Code of Canon Law The 1917 Code presents canon law in five groupings 26 the general principles of law the law of persons clergy religious and laity de rebus including such things as the sacraments holy places and times divine worship the magisterium benefices and temporal goods procedures crimes and punishment As the first complete collection of law for the Latin church it paints a fairly accurate picture of the organizational design and the role of the papacy and the Roman curia at the outset of the twentieth century 27 The organization of the 1917 Code followed the divisions Personae Res Actiones of the ancient Roman jurists Gaius and Justinian The code did not follow the classical canonical divisions Iudex Iudicium Clerus Sponsalia Crimen 28 Scholarship and criticism editSee also Philosophy theology and fundamental theory of Catholic canon law During the 65 years of its enforcement a complete translation of the 1917 Code from its original Latin was never published Translations were forbidden partly to ensure that interpretive disputes among scholars and canonists concerning such a new type of code would be resolved in Latin itself and not in one of the many languages used in scholarship 29 More English language research material exists relating to the 1917 Code than in any other language except Latin 30 The book De rebus On things was subject to much criticism due to its inclusion of supernatural subjects such as sacraments and divine worship under the category things and due to its amalgamation of disparate subject matter 31 It was argued by some that this was a legalistic reduction of sacramental mystery 32 Rene Metz defended the codifiers decision on the layout and scope of De rebus as being the least bad solution to structural problems which the codifiers themselves fully understood 31 This was also the canon law that for the first time in Roman Catholic Church history legalized interest outright 33 better source needed The Code of Canon Law of 1917 allowed those responsible for the church s financial affairs at the parish and diocesan levels to invest in interest bearing securities for the legal rate of interest unless it is evident that the legal rate is exorbitant or even for a higher rate provided that there be a just and proportionate reason 34 35 See also editCode of Canons of the Eastern ChurchesReferences edit a b c d Dr Edward Peters CanonLaw info accessed June 9 2013 Metz What is Canon Law p 59 Edward N Peters 1917 Code xxx a b NYTimes com New Canon Law Code in Effect for Catholics 27 Nov 1983 accessed 25 June 2013 Peters Life of Benedict XV p 204 a b Ayrinhac General Legislation 55 Pietro Cardinal Gasparri preface to the CIC 1917 Manual of Canon Law p 47 Manual of Canon Law p 49 a b Peters Life of Benedict XV p 205 Wolf Hubert 2010 Pope and Devil Translated by Kronenberg Kenneth Belknap Press p 37 ISBN 978 0674064263 Entry for canon law new code of 1910 New Catholic Dictionary http www studylight org dictionaries ncd view cgi n 1909 1910 Accessed 14 April 2016 a b La Due William J J C D The Chair of Saint Peter A History of the Papacy Maryknoll NY Orbis Books 1999 p 256 La Due William J J C D The Chair of Saint Peter A History of the Papacy Maryknoll NY Orbis Books 1999 p 257 Metz Rene 1981 Pouvoir centralisation et droit La codification du droit de l Eglise catholique au debut du XXe siecle Archives de sciences sociales des religions 26 51 1 49 64 ISSN 0335 5985 Ap Const Providentissima Mater Ecclesia Benedict XV 27 May 1917 Pope Benedict XV motu proprio Cum Iuris Canonici of 15 September 1917 Edward N Peters 1917 Code p 25 Pope Benedict XV motu proprio Cum Iuris Canonici of 15 September 1917 III Edward N Peters 1917 Code p 26 Metz What is Canon Law pp 62 63 canon 1 1917 Code of Canon Law Dr Edward N Peters CanonLaw info A Simple Overview of Canon Law accessed June 11 2013 Rev Dr Joseph Clifford Fenton First Change in Text Of Code of Canon Law sic N C W C News Service Dec 11 1948 1983 Code of Canon Law Annotated Canon 6 p 34 Pope Benedict XV motu proprio Cum Iuris Canonici of 15 September 1917 II III Edward N Peters 1917 Code p 26 Metz What is Canon Law P 64 Metz What is Canon Law pg 71 William J La Due pg 256 Codification 1225 to 1900 Archived 2015 12 29 at the Wayback Machine accessed 7 December 2015 Edward N Peters 1917 Code xxiv Edward N Peters 1917 Code xxxi a b Metz What is Canon Law pg 60 Concilium The Future of Canon Law Paul S Mills John R Presley Islamic Finance Theory and Practice page 105 MacMillan Press Ltd 1999 ISBN 978 0 312 22448 6 T L Bouscaren and A C Ellis 1957 Canon Law A Text and Commentary p 825 Code du Droit Canon Canon N 1543 Code de Droit Canonique 1917 CIC 1917 Faculte de Droit Canonique in French Archived from the original on 2020 09 27 Retrieved 2021 03 23 Sources edit Ayrinhac Very Rev H A S S D D D C L General Legislation in the New Code of Canon Law General Norms Can 1 86 Ecclesiastical Persons in General Can 87 214 New York Blase Benziger amp Co Inc 1923 Caparros Ernest et al 1983 Code of Canon Law Annotated Gratianus Series 2nd edition Woodridge Midwest Theological Forum 2004 Della Rocca Fernando Manual of Canon Law Milwaukee The Bruce Publishing Company 1959 Rev Anselm Thatcher O S B translator La Due William J J C D The Chair of Saint Peter A History of the Papacy Maryknoll NY Orbis Books 1999 Metz Rene What is Canon Law New York Hawthorn Books Publishers 1960 Michael Derrick translator of the French original Peters Edward N translator The 1917 or Pio Benedictine Code of Canon Law in English Translation with Extensive Scholarly Apparatus Ignatius Press 2001 Peters Walter H The Life of Benedict XV Milwaukee The Bruce Publishing Company 1959 The Future of Canon Law Concilium vol 48 Paulist 1969 This article incorporates text from the 1910 version of the New Catholic Dictionary article Canon law new code of a publication now in the public domain Further reading editBouscaren T Lincoln 1934 The Canon Law Digest Officially Published Documents Affecting the Code of Canon Law 1917 1933 Internet Archive Milwaukee The Bruce Publishing Company External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Codex Iuris Canonici Codex Iuris Canonici 1917 original text in Latin Codex Iuris Canonici 1917 in French translation Providentissima Mater Ecclesia Vatican website in Italian English version in The Catholic Columbian p 3 Master Page on the Pio Benedictine Code of 1917 CanonLaw info website of Dr Edward N Peters J C D Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1917 Code of Canon Law amp oldid 1202799498, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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