Gratian (born 11th century, Carraria-Ficulle?, Tuscany [Italy]—died before 1159, Bologna?) was an Italian monk who was the father of the study of canon law. His writing and teaching initiated canon law as a new branch of learning distinct from theology.
Little is known of his life. A Benedictine monk, Gratian became lecturer (magister) at the Monastery of SS. Felix and Nabor, Bologna, where he completed (c. 1140) the Concordia discordantium canonum (generally known as the Decretum Gratiani), a collection of nearly 4,000 texts on all fields of church discipline, presented in the form of a treatise designed to harmonize all the contradictions and inconsistencies existing in the rules accumulated from diverse sources. His materials were drawn from existing conciliar canons up to and including the Lateran Council (1139).
While not the first systematic compilation of canon law, the Decretum proved to be the right book at the right time, because of its completeness and because of its superior method of combining juristic and scholastic approaches. For the juristic, Gratian was indebted to the Bolognese doctors of civil law; in the scholastic, he was influenced by contemporary French theological trends. The Decretum was also a treatise of Gratian’s teaching, and it became the text of canon law as taught in all the universities. Although later papal legislation made much of its content obsolete, it remained the first part of the traditional corpus of canon law of the Roman Catholic church until the codification of 1917.