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A commercium is the more formal form of the tableround.
Its relation to objects in space gives us the conception of connection (commercium) with bodies.
The famous commercium song Gaudeamus igitur is one example.
Among his most popular motets was O admirabile commercium, which survives today in 11 sources.
Le Bitu is a book which compiles a register of numerous commercium songs.
A commercium is a traditional academic feast known at universities in most Central and Northern European countries.
Res extra commercium are among them.
The most important Latin Rights were commercium, connubium, and ius migrationis.
O admirabile commercium (part of a 5-motet cycle)
The Studentencodex is the most widely used commercium book in the Flemish part of Belgium.
In some countries, hundreds of commercium songs are compiled in commercium books.
Cantus probably shares same roots with Commercium, Sitsit and Tableround.
Commercium allowed Latins to own land in any of the Latin cities and to make legally enforceable contracts with their citizens.
At a tableround, tables usually are placed in the form of a U or a W, the participants drink beer and sing commercium songs.
As Stirner puts it, "intercourse is mutuality, it is the action, the commercium, of individuals."
Politically active students from the University of Königsberg held a commercium in Quednau in 1839.
Res extra commercium (lat.
By virtue of this commercium, phenomena, in so far as they are apart from, and nevertheless in connection with each other, constitute a compositum reale.
Finalists march through classrooms decorated with flowers for this purpose, singing traditional commercium songs, such as Gaudeamus Igitur.
It could be used by people without the right of commercium - a package of rights to participate in the ius civile and to undertake remedies.
Some very old commercium songs are in Latin, like Meum est propositum or Gaudeamus igitur.
Commercium songs are traditional academic songs that are sung during academic feasts: commerciums and tablerounds.
The case against Leibniz, as it appeared to Newton's friends, was summed up in the Commercium Epistolicum of 1712, which referenced all allegations.
Johann Friedrich Glaser's letter to the editors of Commercium Litterarium (also in German)
Its name was originally Commarchia (which means "sur la marche", i.e. at the border), and then Commercium during the Middle-Ages.