BachelorDragon.png

The bachelor programme Celtic Languages and Culture at Utrecht University is under threat.

Bibliography

Houlihan, James W., Adomnán's Lex innocentium and the laws of war, Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2020.

  • Book/Monograph
Citation details
Work
Adomnán's Lex innocentium and the laws of war
Place
Dublin
Publisher
Four Courts Press
Year
2020
Description
Abstract (cited)
This book studies the Irish law dating from AD 697, called Lex Innocentium or the Law of the Innocents. It is also known as Cáin Adomnáin, being named after Adomnán (d. 704), ninth abbot of Iona, who was responsible for its drafting and promulgation. The law was designed to offer legislative protection for women, children, clerics and other non-arms-bearing people, primarily though not exclusively, in times of conflict. It will be of interest to historians, both professional and lay, in many fields, with special relevance for historians of warfare, the laws of war, and of attitudes towards violence in general. The study seeks to identify the place of this law in the history of the laws of war and, in so doing examines many of the relevant sources in the Christian West, with conclusions that some will find surprising.
Subjects and topics
Headings
early Irish law the church in Ireland
Sources
Texts
History, society and culture
Agents
AdomnánAdomnán
(fl. c.628–704)
Adomnán mac Rónáin was abbot of Iona (r. 679–704) and author of the Latin Life of St Columba and an account of the holy places of the Near East (De locis sanctis). He is credited with the proclamation of the Lex innocentium or Cáin Adomnáin at the Synod of Birr.
See more
Contributors
Dennis Groenewegen
Page created
September 2020