The State, the Law, and the People in the Roman Empire
A Sourcebook
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Publishing:31st Jul '25
£120.00
This title is due to be published on 31st July, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Judicious collection of legal texts in new translations, enabling their wider use in the study of Roman imperial history.
Aimed at students and teachers of Roman history, this volume provides easy access to new translations of legal texts that are an enormously valuable historical resource for the study of the administrative, economic, and social history of the empire when citizens encountered magistrates, governors, and officials empowered by the state.This volume makes more widely available to students and teachers the treasure trove of evidence for the administrative, social, and economic history of Rome contained in the Digest and Codex of Justinian. What happened when people encountered the government exercising legal jurisdiction through governors, magistrates, and officials within the legal framework and laws sponsored by the state? How were the urban environment of Rome and Italy, the state's assets, and human relations managed? How did the mechanisms of control in the provinces affect local life and legal processes? How were contracts devised and enforced? How did banks operate? What was the experience of going to court like, and how did you deal with assault or insult or recover loss? How did you rent a farm or an apartment and protect ownership? The emperor loomed over everything, being the last resort in moderating relations between state and subject.
ISBN: 9781107163164
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
530 pages