A Casebook on Roman Family LawOxford University Press, 6. 11. 2003 - 529 strán (strany) The Roman household (familia) was in many respects dramatically different from the modern family. From the early Roman Empire (30 B.C. to about A.D. 250) there survive many legal sources that describe Roman households, often in the most intimate detail. The subject matter of these ancient sources includes marriage and divorce, the property aspects of marriage, the pattern of authority within households, the transmission of property between generations, and the supervision of Roman orphans. This casebook presents 235 representative texts drawn largely from Roman legal sources, especially Justinian's Digest. These cases and the discussion questions that follow provide a good introduction to the basic legal problems associated with the ordinary families of Roman citizens. The arrangement of materials conveys to students an understanding of the basic rules of Roman family law while also providing them with the means to question these rules and explore the broader legal principles that underlie them. Included cases invite the reader to wrestle with actual Roman legal problems, as well as to think about Roman solutions in relation to modern law. In the process, the reader should gain confidence in handling fundamental forms of legal thinking, which have persisted virtually unchanged from Roman times until the present. This volume also contains a glossary of technical terms, biographies of the jurists, basic bibliographies of useful secondary literature, and a detailed introduction to the scholarly topics associated with Roman family law. A course based on this casebook should be of interest to anyone who wishes to understand better Roman social history, either as part of a larger Classical Civilization curriculum or as a preparation for law school. |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 5 z 77.
Strana 3
... persons who are grouped together within a household understood as a social, political, and economic unit. Usually these persons are close kin to one another: spouses, parents, children, siblings. Plainly the family is of great legal ...
... persons who are grouped together within a household understood as a social, political, and economic unit. Usually these persons are close kin to one another: spouses, parents, children, siblings. Plainly the family is of great legal ...
Strana 11
... person has extensive and virtually exclusive power over all property belonging to the household, including any ... persons, including adopted children and also, in the archaic form of Roman marriage, his wife; but in the standard ...
... person has extensive and virtually exclusive power over all property belonging to the household, including any ... persons, including adopted children and also, in the archaic form of Roman marriage, his wife; but in the standard ...
Strana 12
... person (perhaps through manumission by a master); or when a free person changed citizenship (perhaps when a free noncitizen received Roman citizenship from the emperor). Such changes in status gave rise to legal complexities that often ...
... person (perhaps through manumission by a master); or when a free person changed citizenship (perhaps when a free noncitizen received Roman citizenship from the emperor). Such changes in status gave rise to legal complexities that often ...
Strana 14
... person is made subject to another's ownership. 1. “The Foremost Distinction.” No division is more stark in the Roman world than that which divides free persons (including Roman citizens, but also free noncitizens) from those who are ...
... person is made subject to another's ownership. 1. “The Foremost Distinction.” No division is more stark in the Roman world than that which divides free persons (including Roman citizens, but also free noncitizens) from those who are ...
Strana 15
... person and slave was defined by a “bright line.” This may well have been true for ideological purposes, but within ... persons. It is a good idea always to be alert to these possible complexities, even when the Roman sources seem to ...
... person and slave was defined by a “bright line.” This may well have been true for ideological purposes, but within ... persons. It is a good idea always to be alert to these possible complexities, even when the Roman sources seem to ...
Obsah
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11 | |
25 | |
Chapter III Patria Potestas | 189 |
Chapter IV Succession | 321 |
Chapter V Tutelage and the Status of Children and Women | 423 |
Biographies of the Major Roman Jurists | 471 |
Glossary of Technical Terms | 479 |
Suggested Further Reading | 489 |
Bibliography on the Roman Family | 491 |
Index of Sources | 495 |
Časté výrazy a frázy
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