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Charles Loyseau : ウィキペディア英語版 | Charles Loyseau Charles Loyseau (1564–1627) was a French jurist, a lawyer in the Parlement of Paris, the highest royal court in France, as well as a judge in local and seigneurial courts.〔Loyseau, p. 13.〕 He evaluated French society and law in his best-known work, ''A Treatise on Orders and Simple Dignities'', written in 1610; it is now a source for understanding the French social structure of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.〔Herbert A. Applebaum, The Concept of Work: Ancient, Medieval, and Modern (New York: State University of New York Press, 1992, p. 370.〕 ==Life== He was born in Paris,in 1564 the son of an advocate who worked for Diane de Poitiers. He was employed as an official in Sens, and subsequently by Catherine de Gonzague, duchesse de Longueville, as ''bailli'' in the County of Dunois. Later in life he was in practice as a Paris advocate, and in 1620 was President of the Order of Advocates.〔Roland Mousnier, ''The Institutions of France Under the Absolute Monarchy, 1598-1789: Society and the state'' (1979) pp. 4–5; (Google Books )〕
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