@ARTICLE{26583261_26841129_2010, author = {Irina Getman-Pavlova}, keywords = {, D’Argentré, mixed statutes, the Breton commentator, the international law of inheritance, statutaries, bartoliststheory of statute}, title = {Science of International Private Law: D’Argentré Theory of Statutes}, journal = {}, year = {2010}, number = {1}, pages = {12-20}, url = {https://law-journal.hse.ru/en/2010--1/26841129.html}, publisher = {}, abstract = {The article is devoted the well-known French jurist Bertrand D’Argentr� (1519—1590) who in the literature of the international private law is considered the founder of the "classical" statutory doctrine. D’Argentr� was the first who made a rigid division of all laws into personal, real and mixed statutes. The category of the mixed statutes is the most powerful contribution of D’Argentr� to the development of the international private law. However, the scientist did not manage to develop any general criteria for solving problems of the conflict of laws. His theory lacks integrity and sequence; the category of the mixed statutes for D’Argentr� has no specific concept. Despite it, later D’Argentr�’s doctrine was widely referred to the legislations of many Western Europe countries of XVIII-XIXth centuries.}, annote = {The article is devoted the well-known French jurist Bertrand D’Argentr� (1519—1590) who in the literature of the international private law is considered the founder of the "classical" statutory doctrine. D’Argentr� was the first who made a rigid division of all laws into personal, real and mixed statutes. The category of the mixed statutes is the most powerful contribution of D’Argentr� to the development of the international private law. However, the scientist did not manage to develop any general criteria for solving problems of the conflict of laws. His theory lacks integrity and sequence; the category of the mixed statutes for D’Argentr� has no specific concept. Despite it, later D’Argentr�’s doctrine was widely referred to the legislations of many Western Europe countries of XVIII-XIXth centuries.} }