It is plain from many decrees in the "Corpus Juris Canonici" that the Roman Catholic Church has claimed and exercised the right, belonging to a perfect and visible society, of protecting its members by condemning the guilty to imprisonment.
Juris Doctor | Corpus Christi, Texas | Corpus Christi | Corpus Christi College, Cambridge | habeas corpus | Corpus Christi College | Corpus Christi (feast) | Corpus Christi College, Oxford | Juris Zarins | corpus | Text corpus | Corpus Juris Civilis | Habeas Corpus Act | text corpus | Port of Corpus Christi | British National Corpus | Texas A&M University–Corpus Christi | Roman Catholic Diocese of Corpus Christi | Juris Fernandez | juris doctor | Habeas Corpus Act 1862 | Crucifixion (Corpus Hypercubus) | Corpus Scriptorum Christianorum Orientalium | Corpus Juris Canonici | Corpus Christi (play) | Corpus Christi Carol | Juris Upatnieks | Juris doctor | Juris Cibuļs | Habeas Corpus (play) |
A private individual, Pierre Mathieu of Lyons, also wrote a "Liber Septimus Decretalium", inserted in the appendix to the Frankfort (1590) edition of the "Corpus Juris Canonici".