Izabela Leraczyk
Cracow Studies of Constitutional and Legal History, Volume 17, Issue 4, Early Access
https://doi.org/10.4467/20844131KS.24.041.21025Izabela Leraczyk
Cracow Studies of Constitutional and Legal History, Volume 17 Issue 1, Volume 17 (2024), pp. 93 - 104
https://doi.org/10.4467/20844131KS.24.006.19463As head of the Editorial Committee of the Pamiętnik Literacko-Naukowy (Science and Literature Memoir), a magazine of the university camp in Grangeneuve (later Fribourg), Adam Vetulani conducted correspondence with General Bronisław Prugar-Ketling on the subject of creating a publication marking the 650th anniversary of the establishment of Switzerland. While he was preparing a selection of texts to be published in Polish, he sent a translation of the Swiss Confederation Act of 1291 to his commander. As Vetulani indicated, it was the first translation of that document into the Polish language. Unfortunately, as described in the present text, the publication did not come to pass and, therefore, neither did the translation of the Bundesbrief of 1291. The only copy discovered so far can be found in the collections of the Central Military Archive in Warsaw.
Izabela Leraczyk
Santander Art and Culture Law Review, 1/2019 (5), 2019, pp. 182 - 183
Informacja o książce Anny Magdaleny Kosińskiej pt. Prawa kulturalne obywateli państw trzecich w prawie Unii Europejskiej
ISBN 978-83-8061-515-1
Wydawnictwo Katolickiego Uniwersytetu Lubelskiego Jana Pawła II, Lublin 2018
Izabela Leraczyk
Cracow Studies of Constitutional and Legal History, Volume 14, Issue 2, Volume 14 (2021), pp. 285 - 286
https://doi.org/10.4467/20844131KS.21.022.13530The: “English Law and Colonial Connections: Histories, Parallels, and Influences conference” was held over the course of two afternoons, on January 26–27, 2020. It was organized by the Faculty of Law and Administration of the University of Łódź and Northumbria University in Newcastle. The symposium’s goal was to bring together researchers with interests in the history of English law and its influences on other parts of the world, particularly within an imperial context. An additional topic of the conference was the meaning of legacies and continuing influences of the empire and colonial influences of the law back to the Metropole. Nine lectures were delivered over the course of four sessions.