Sources of Roman Law

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A01=O. F. Robinson
Ab Epistulis
ancient legal systems
Author_O. F. Robinson
Capitis Deminutio
Category=NHC
Category=NHD
Centuriate Assembly
civile
classical legal interpretation
code
Concilium Plebis
dispute resolution methods
edict
Editio Maior
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Imperial Enactments
ius
Ius Civile
Ius Honorarium
Ius Respondendi
Judgment Debtor
Juristic Writing
Justinian's Compilers
Justinian’s Compilers
law transmission processes
legal historiography
Leges Regiae
Legis Actio
Lex Aquilia
Lex De Imperio Vespasiani
Litis Contestatio
Pauli Sententiae
praetor's
Praetor's Edict
praetorian
Praetor’s Edict
prefect
Querela Inofficiosi Testamenti
Roman jurisprudence
sources of ancient Roman legal practice
tables
theodosian
Theodosian Code
Tribal Assembly
twelve
Twelve Tables
Urban Praetor
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415089944
  • Weight: 317g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 05 Dec 1996
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The notion and understanding of law penetrated society in Ancient Rome to a degree unparalleled in modern times. The poet Juvenal, for instance, described the virtuous man as a good soldier, faithful guardian, incorruptible judge and honest witness.
This book is concerned with four central questions: Who made the law? Where did a Roman go to discover what the law was? How has the law survived to be known to us today? And what procedures were there for putting the law into effect? In The Sources of Roman Law, the origins of law and their relative weight are described in the light of developing Roman history. This is a topic that appeals to a wide range of readers: the law student will find illumination for the study of the substantive law; the student of history will be guided into an appreciation of what Roman law means as well as its value for the understanding and interpretation of Roman history. Both will find invaluable the description of how the sources have survived to inform our legal system and pose their problems for us.

O.F.Robinson, Reader in Law at the University of Glasgow, is a Roman lawyer and legal historian. She has published widely on Roman criminal and administrative law and is the author of Ancient Rome: City Planning and Administration (1992) and The Criminal Law of Ancient Rome (1995).

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