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Early Rome

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Title: Early Rome


1
Early Rome
  • Legal Sources

2
Historical Evidence
  • The Laws of the Kings dating back to Romulus
  • The XII Tables , mid 5th century B.C.
  • first Roman law code (codification of established
    traditions and customs) inscribed on bronze
    tablets and set up in the Roman forum
  • mos (sg) mores (pl) custom/s
  • Reflect important values of early community
  • Many early laws remained valid into the imperial
    period, and many later laws had roots in these
    early laws

3
The laws of the kings 8th century BC
  • Every male child and the first-born female must
    be raised

4
The XII TablesTable IV patria potestas
  • 1. A notably deformed child shall be killed
    immediately.
  • 2a. To a father ...shall be given over a son the
    power of life and death.

5
The Early community
  • Laws reflect a patriarchal social organization,
    similar to that of Classical Athens
  • the extraordinary paternal power (patria
    potestas) of the paterfamilias (father of the
    family), the male head of a family (could be the
    father, grandfather, great-grandfather)
  • in his control were members of his familia his
    legitimate children, his sons children, his wife
    if married in manu, and his slaves,
  • paterfamilias had power over life and death
    (ius vitae necisque) over his children, slaves,
    in his domus (household), but not over his wife
    in manu
  • The pater had right to refuse to rear a newborn
    child mother had no legal power to prevent it.

6
patria potestas
  • If a child was refused by the paterfamilias ,
    exposure was practiced until made illegal in A.D.
    374
  • Despite this power in law, very few cases are
    recorded in Roman history where a father actually
    put an adult child to death (have some
    references to daughters put to death for
    unchastity)
  • Women who were condemned by the state were at
    times handed over to families for private
    punishment, example suppression of the
    Bacchanalia in 186 BCE
  • In 154 BCE Pomponia Graecina, accused of foreign
    superstition, was handed over to her husband, who
    in family council with his relatives, acquitted
    her.

7
Roman Law
  • Important to remember generally laws do not
    necessarily always coincide with social
    practices Laws were there to appeal to when
    deemed necessary. Many conflicts were resolved in
    the family Greece and Rome were self-help
    societies
  • Roman law was there to appeal to when a conflict,
    dispute, or any legal matter could not be
    resolved among the involved parties. Laws were
    not created to shape the actual behaviour of
    people.

8
Marriage in the early Republic
  • In the early Republic in manu marriages were the
    norm the woman moved from her fathers potestas
    into the potestas of her husband and took the
    place of a daughter (in loco filiae) in his
    family. But she was NOT subject to his power over
    life and death.

9
Marriage in the XII Tables
  • Table VI. 5. ... If any woman is unwilling to be
    subjected in this manner to her husband's marital
    control she shall absent herself for three
    successive nights in every year and by this means
    shall interrupt his prescriptive right of each
    year.

10
The Laws of the Kings
  • 9. ..does not permit a wife to divorce her
    husband, but gives him power to divorce her for
    the use of drugs or magic on account of children
    (contraception and abortion?) or for
    counterfeiting the keys or for adultery.if he
    should divorce her for any other reasons, part of
    his estate should go to the wife .. Anyone who
    sold his wife was sacrificed to the gods of the
    underworld

11
tutela mulierumguardianship of women
  • Table V
  • 1. ...Women, even though they are of full age,
    because of their levity of mind shall be under
    guardianship ... except vestal virgins, who Â
    shall be free from guardianship ...

12
Tutela - guardianship
  • tutor guardian
  • An underaged child whose father had died and thus
    became sui iuris (were in their own right, i.e.
    they were no longer in potestas) had to have a
    tutor impuberis
  • For boys this ended at puberty at age 14
  • Females continued to need a tutor all their lives
    and received a tutor mulieris
  • mulier an adult women
  • tutela mulieris
  • Note guardianship was different from potestas.
    An underaged boy or a woman who were not in the
    potestas of their father (if he had died, or in
    the case of a woman married in manu whose
    husband had died) were sui iuris and required a
    tutor

13
the tutor guardian
  • tutela legitimus - original form of guardianship
    which allowed male agnates to keep a hold on
    family property
  • if a father died without having named a tutor
    for his children, either all or the nearest male
    agnates became tutors
  • For a daughter the tutor was then the brother,
    or paternal uncle
  • If woman married with manus the husbands
    brother, or her own son would most commonly be
    the tutors.
  • This rule for tutela legitimus ended by Claudius
    in mid 1st century AD
  • If no agnates - until mid 1st century BCE the
    gens (kinspeople) could claim the tutela of a
    woman (this was the case in the Laudatio Turiae
    where some distant relatives laid a fraudulent
    claim)

14
Table Vwomens property
  • 2. The conveyable possessions of a woman who is
    under guardianship of male agnates shall not be
    acquired by prescriptive right unless they are
    transferred by herself with the authorization of
    her guardian ...

15
The role of the tutor
  • A woman had to ask consent from her tutor for
    certain transactions
  • Alienation of slaves, including manumission
  • Entering into contracts,
  • Promising a dowry
  • Marriage into manus
  • Accepting an inheritance
  • Making a will
  • All of these are actions that could diminish her
    property

16
The tutors consent was needed for some property
transactions
  • Alienation of res mancipi property that
    included slaves, oxen, horses, mules, asses, land
    in Italy (both urban and rural) rustic servitued
    land itself and man and animal power needed to
    work it - remember agriculture was the basis
    of production and wealth.
  • Everything else she could sell without consent
    from tutor, including sheep, goats, poultry,
    jewellery, clothes, furniture, houses and land
    outside of Italy everything not res mancipi

17
tutela - guardianship
  • a father could emancipated his daughter, she
    then became sui iuris, and he could be her tutor
  • Fathers could name a tutor in their will
  • Husbands of in manu wives could give wives a
    choice of tutors in their wills
  • By the late Republican period - institution of
    tutela was a mere formality

18
The Early Roman community and paternal and
familial controls of females
  • Some severe punishments for women, which reflects
    very strict controls on womenfolk by husband and
    male kin.
  • Drinking wine was considered dangerous, because
    it was feared that if a a woman got drunk it
    might be easy to seduce her.
  • In early Rome, men would kiss their female
    relatives on the mouth when greeting them in
    order to detect alcohol on their breath, not out
    of affection.
  • The reference to the key refers to the key to
    the wine cellar. Taking the key to the wine
    cellar was also considered a serious crime by a
    woman (danger of drunkenness and susceptibility
    to seduction).

19
Summary of important terms
  • pater familias - father of the family (male head
    of household)
  • patria potestas - paternal power
  • familia - family, but in later Republic and
    empire term applied most commonly to the slave
    household
  • domus - household, including the pater familias,
    his wife, their children, sometimes elderly
    parents, slaves, dependents
  • in manu into the hand (form of marriage)
  • in loco familiae - in the place of a daughter
  • Tutela tutor legitimus tutor impuberis, tutor
    mulieris
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