Presented as part of the Centre for Classical Studies Seminar Series
Roman law came to being with the XII Tables that were promulgated in response to the plebs’ quest for transparent administration of justice.
The XII Tables, legis actiones [actions-at-law], controlled by pontifices, as well as the interpretation of laws, were three original sources of Roman private law.
The secularisation of law resulted in the legis actiones becoming publicly known, and, then, removed from the pontiffs’ office to the office of urban praetor. Urban praetors came to grant new remedies in addition to ones under strict old civil law, publishing edicts that comprised ius honorarium. Interpretation of laws (originally, in hands of the pontiffs) became secularised as well. But it did not come under the auspices of any magistrate, but became a matter of private expertise leading to formation of two school of republican jurists: the Proculians and Sabinians.
The paradox of Roman legal evolution is that if, initially, democratisation of law was a by-product of broader plebeian struggle for political representation, later-on, the dissolution of the Republican democratic institutions did not lead to the decline of Roman law or even its full takeover by the state.
Dr Anna Taitslin received her PhD from the University of Tasmania, studying the history of natural law from Zeno to Grotius. Her publications have been featured in the Australian Journal of Legal Philosophy, IVS ANTIQVVM and the forthcoming Comparative Legal History Handbook (Edward Elgar Publishing, 2016). Dr Taitslin’s research interests include the notion of possession and proprietas/dominium, the distinction between proprietary and possessory remedies and the interlink between notions of ius and dominium.
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Location
Speakers
- Dr Anna Taitslin, ANU College of Law
Contact
- Adrienne White