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A Bavarian Code that was little more than a kind of table of contents to Roman law
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The West Galician code was a civil code created in the 18th century and introduced in West Galicia, an administrative region of the Habsburg Monarchy, created after the Third Partition of Poland, prior to the introduction of ABGB, the civil code of Austria. It contained little in the way of solving feudal-class problems and was based on the laws of nature
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After intensive scrutiny by the Council of State, by 1804 the Code was complete and was followed by a number of additional codes, which are collectively known as "les cinq codes".
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In 1808, the Civil Code was adopted, with some modifications by its drafters Kentucky lawyer James Brown and French-trained Louis Moreau Lislet, in Louisiana
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Current code of Chile and was based off of the principles of the Napoleonic Code
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A civil code with strong Napoleonic influences was also adopted in 1864 in Romania, and remained in force until 2011
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The Code was based on the Napoleonic code and replaced a mixture of French law and English law which had arisen in Lower Canada since the creation of the Province of Quebec in 1763.
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Served as the backbone of the single largest legal reform of the modern age, the Napoleonic Code, which marked the abolition of feudalism