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Tripos.

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Monday

9 to 12

1 to 4

1. A selected Gospel (Greek) with some Patristic
Commentary, and the Latin Versions.

2. A selected Epistle or Epistles (Greek) with
some Patristic Commentary, and the Latin
Versions.

3. The New Testament (Greek) generally, with
Greek Composition.

The New Testament Paper shall contain passages for
translation, criticism, and explanation, with questions on the
subject-matter and history of the several books.

Degrees.

Sect. 1.

Part II.

1.

Selections from the Apocrypha, the Apocryphal
literature, Philo and Josephus.

2. Selected Greek and Latin Ecclesiastical writings.

Section III.

History and Literature.

Tuesday | 9 to 12

Wednesday

1 to 4
9 to 12

1 to 4

3. A Historical Period between the death of Leo
the Great and the taking of Constantinople,
with selected illustrative documents.

4. A Historical Period between the taking of Con-
stantinople and the present time, with se-
lected illustrative documents.

The Periods in (3) and (4) shall be so chosen that the
History of the English Church shall be prominently repre-
sented in one of them.

Section IV. Dogmatics and Liturgiology.

No Exami

nation on Ascension Day.

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16. If Ascension Day fall upon either of the Thursdays mentioned in the Schedules, there shall be no examination on that day, but the examinations appointed for that day and for the preceding days shall be held one day earlier (exclusive of Sunday) than is here provided,

Degrees.

Sect. 1.

Part II.

assigned to

17. The Board of Theological Studies shall determine Credit to be from time to time the credit to be assigned to the several the several subjects enumerated in the Schedules.

subjects.

of subjects.

18. Public notice of all the variable subjects selected for Public notice the examination in any year shall be given by the Board of Theological Studies before the end of the Easter Term in the year next but one preceding the Examination.

19. A General Meeting of the Examiners shall be held to draw up separate class-lists of the first and second parts, and in each list the names of those persons who pass the Examination with credit shall be arranged in three classes, the names in each class being in alphabetical order.

Arrangement

of the Class Lists in Parts

and II;

classing.

20. The class-list of the first part shall be drawn up in basis of accordance with the aggregate of marks of each Student, that of the second part on an estimate of the results of the Examinations in the sections considered separately and jointly.

21. In the class-list of the first part the Examiners may affix marks of distinction in Old Testament or New Testament, or both, to the names of those candidates who, in addition to the papers set in the first part, shall have taken one paper of the corresponding section or sections of the second part.

Marks of dis

tinction in the

List for Part

I.

ing marks in

Class I of

22. In the case of every Student who is placed in the DistinguishFirst Class of the second part, the class-list shall shew by some convenient mark, (1) the section or sections for which he is placed in that class, and (2) in which of the sections, if in any, he passed with special distinction.

knowledge

23. No credit shall be given to a Student in any of the Competent papers of either part, unless it appear to the Examiners that required. he has shewn a competent knowledge in that paper.

Approved

Candidates

may become

24. A Student who shall pass the Examination of the first part of the Theological Tripos so as to deserve Honours in Part I shall be entitled to admission to the degree of Bachelor of B.A. Arts, provided that he shall have kept the requisite number of terms at the time when he applies for the degree.

Tripos.

in Part II.

Publication of Class-list. Ordinary

B.A. degree or General Examination

allowed.

Remuneration of Examiners

25. A Student who, having previously obtained Honours in some other Tripos, shall pass the Examination of the second part of the Theological Tripos so as to deserve Honours, and shall also satisfy the Examiners in the three papers aforesaid of the first part, shall be entitled to admission to the degree of Bachelor of Arts, provided that he shall have kept the requisite number of terms at the time when he applies for the degree.

26. On the eighth day after the end of the second part of the Examination the Examiners shall publish the classlists in the Senate-House, and shall send to the ViceChancellor a list of those persons who shall acquit themselves so as to deserve the ordinary B.A. Degree, or to be excused the General Examination for the same.

27. Each of the Examiners elected by the Senate shall receive Twenty Pounds from the University Chest.

Degrees.

Sect. 1.

Part II.

Subjects.

6. LAW TRIPOS.

Report 21 Oct. 1879. Grace 13 Nov. 1879.

For Regulations respecting the standing of Candidates, the time
of the Examination, the publication of the Class List, &c.,
see page 86.

1. That in this Examination the papers shall be allotted to the following subjects :

:

1. General and Comparative Jurisprudence.

2.

Passages for Translation, taken from the sources
of Roman Law, particularly from Gaius,
Ulpian, Justinian, and some specified portion
of the Digest.

3. Questions on Roman Law and its history.
The English Law of Personal Property.

4.

Degrees.

The English Law of Real Property.

Sect. 1. Part II.

5.

6.

English Criminal Law.

7.

The Legal and Constitutional History of Eng-
land.

8. Public International Law.

9.

Essays or Problems on the subjects of Exami-
nation.

Subjects;

2. That it be the duty of the Board of Legal Studies List of Books. to publish from time to time a list of books recommended to Candidates for Examination: and that it be competent to the said Board to limit any or all of the above-named Limitation of subjects to a department or departments of the same; provided that public notice of such limitation shall be given notice of in the Lent Term of the civil year next but one preceding that in which the Examination in the subjects so limited shall take place.

3. That the names of those students who shall acquit themselves so as to deserve Honours be arranged in three classes in order of merit, and that the Examiners shall send to the Vice-Chancellor a list of those who shall acquit themselves so as to deserve the ordinary B.A. degree, or to be excused the General Examination for the same; provided that no such student shall be allowed the ordinary B.A. degree unless he have acquitted himself to the satisfaction of the Examiners in at least four papers.

same.

Candidates Honours to three classes. serving the B.A. Degree, excused Ge

deserving

be placed in

Those de

Ordinary

or to be

neral Exami

nation.

Examiners.

Regius Pro

fessor of Civil Law; also

three to be

nominated

and elected,

4. That the Examiners shall be the Regius Professor of Civil Law and three other Members of the Senate nominated by the Board of Legal Studies and elected by Grace before the Division of the Michaelmas Term in every year and that, if the Regius Professor shall be prevented from examining in any year, a Deputy to examine in his Regius Prostead shall be nominated by the Vice-Chancellor and elected by the Senate.

5. [That persons who, being already Bachelors of Arts and not having obtained Honours in the Law Tripos, desire to proceed to the degree of Bachelor or Master of Law, shall be required to satisfy the Examiners in the

ORDINATIONES,

5

and, when necessary, a Deputy for

fessor.

B.A. Candidegree of

dates for

Bachelor or

Master of

Law.

Examiners'

remuneration.

Books.

papers numbered 4, 5, and 6 and to pay a fee of £3. 3s.
to the Regius Professor of Civil Law. Provided that no
person shall be admitted, in virtue of this regulation, to
the degree of Bachelor of Law unless he shall have obtained
Honours in some Tripos. Grace 13 May 1880.]

6. That each of the three Examiners elected by
the Senate shall receive Thirty Pounds from the Univer-
sity Chest.

List of Books recommended for the Law Tripos and
Medal Examinations.

The Board of Legal Studies publish (Oct. 30, 1883) the
following list of works as most likely to be valuable to students
of the respective subjects, but do not urge the necessity of
reading every book recommended. The Board however con-
sider that no satisfactory knowledge of the subjects treated
in the various text-books can be attained without frequent
reference to the original authorities.

JURISPRUDENCE.

Austin's Jurisprudence. Clark's Practical Jurisprudence. Blackstone's Commentaries, Introduction, § 3, and the general part in the first chaps. of each Book. Holland's Jurisprudence. Maine's Ancient Law, Early History of Institutions, and Early Law and Custom. Markby's Elements of Law, with the Supplement. Thibaut, System des PandektenRechts. The general part translated by Lindley (Introduction to the study of Jurisprudence). Savigny, System des heutigen Römischen Rechts. See the French translation by Guenoux and the English (System of the Modern Roman Law) by Holloway.

ROMAN LAW.

For Gaius and Justinian parallel texts are recommended, e.g. Polenaar,
Syntagma Institutionum Novum (with Studemund's readings of the Verona
MS.); Pellat, Manuale Juris Synopticum; Gneist, Institutionum et Regularum
Juris Romani Syntagma; or, Cumin's Manual of Civil Law. The last three
also contain the text of Ulpian and Paulus. As a Lexicon, Dirksen's
Manuale Juris Civilis.

Commentaries and Translations.

Gaius, by Poste.

Gaius and Ulpian, by Abdy and Walker. Gaius and Ulpian, by
Muirhead.
Justinian, by Ortolan (Explication
Historique des Instituts. Tomes 2, 3). Justiniau, by Abdy and Walker.
Justinian, by Sandars. On Roman Law generally, Mackeldey's Lehrbuch
(or the Systema Juris Romani, which is a translation of the 12th ed. of
Mackeldey). Hunter's Roman Law.

Degrees.

Sect. 1.

Part II.

History.

Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, chap. 44.
Expl. Hist. T. 1 (Histoire et Généralisation).

Ortolan,

Mackeldey (Einleitung,

Absch. 2).

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