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Roman Law in Context_ Terms (1)

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  • ROMAN LAW
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  • ROMAN LAW

Roman Law in Context_ Terms (1)

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  • August 9, 2024
  • 2
  • 2024/2025
  • Exam (elaborations)
  • Questions & answers
  • ROMAN LAW
  • ROMAN LAW
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Roman Law in Context: Terms
754 BC - 510 BC, Romulus and Remus, origins of legis actio procedure - ANS-Monarchy in
Rome

509 BC- 27 BC; consuls and magistrates replace monarch; plebians conflict with patricians;
constant foreign war; legis actio sacremento, legis actiones; shift to formulary procedure by in
last two centuries - ANS-Republic in Rome

27 BC - 248 AD; Anthony dies, Octavian becomes emperor; legis actio basically gone, formulary
and cognitio are main; formulary gone by end of principate

212 AD, citizenship granted to virtually everyone in Roman empire - ANS-The Principate in
Rome

248 AD - 565 AD; empire divides; cognitio procedure is established as procedure - ANS-The
Dominate in Rome

elected by popular assembly, held office for a year; consuls, praetors, lesser magistrates -
ANS-Magistrates

beginning of Roman private law in 450 BC; list of important legal rules; don't survive, but we can
guess they concerned matters of family law, property and succession - ANS-The Twelve Tables

customary or common law apart from 12 Tables; not created by enactment, unwritten but
followed - ANS-Ius

passed by popular assemblies, proposed by magistrates; very little private law made by statute;
drafted in narrow and literal manner - ANS-Statutes

urban praetor's office created in 367 BC; most formal source of Roman private law was his
edict; annually published legal formulae and remedies; flexible for reform; heyday was 2nd-1st
century BC

Hadrian and jurist Julian drew up finalized version - ANS-Praetor's edict

Former theoretically lesser than latter; latter is 12 Tables, customs, and statutes; former is edict
and remedies - ANS-Ius honorarium versus ius civile

general term for law made by emperor; included, decretum (ruling made in court), edicta
(general order of the emperor), epistula (response to letter) - ANS-Constitutio

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