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Major Jurists Cited in This Casebook | |||
Introduction to Roman Family Law | 3 | ||
Ch. I | Basic Concepts | ||
Case 1 | Freedom, Citizenship, and Household | 12 | |
Case 2 | Slavery and Freedom | 14 | |
Case 3 | Agnatic Relationship | 16 | |
Case 4 | The Household (Familia) and the Pater Familias | 18 | |
Case 5 | Sui Iuris and Alieni Iuris | 21 | |
Case 6 | The Age of Majority | 23 | |
Ch. II | Marriage | ||
Case 7 | Less Than Minimum Age | 27 | |
Case 8 | The Ability to Procreate | 29 | |
Case 9 | Conubium | 31 | |
Case 10 | Legal Impediments | 34 | |
Case 11 | Incestuous Marriage | 36 | |
Case 12 | Incentives to Marry and Reproduce | 39 | |
Case 13 | The Requirement of Agreement | 41 | |
Case 14 | A Freedwoman's Agreement | 43 | |
Case 15 | Not Standing on Ceremony | 45 | |
Case 16 | What the Neighbors Know | 47 | |
Case 17 | Marital Affection | 49 | |
Case 18 | A Wife or a Concubine? | 51 | |
Case 19 | An Archaic Wedding Ceremony | 54 | |
Case 20 | Leading a Bride into the Home | 56 | |
Case 21 | The Significance of Ceremony | 58 | |
Case 22 | Cohabitation and Marriage | 60 | |
Case 23 | The Man Who Died beside the Tiber | 62 | |
Case 24 | Arranging a Betrothal | 65 | |
Case 25 | Agreement to Betrothal | 67 | |
Case 26 | Betrothal and Marriage | 68 | |
Case 27 | An Affront to the Fiancee | 70 | |
Case 28 | Jilting Your Intended | 71 | |
Case 29 | Marriage, Dowry, and Public Policy | 72 | |
Case 30 | Giving the Dowry | 75 | |
Case 31 | The Bride Gets Cold Feet | 78 | |
Case 32 | The Duty to Provide a Dowry | 79 | |
Case 33 | Appropriate Dowries | 81 | |
Case 34 | The "Dowered" Wife | 83 | |
Case 35 | The Burdens of Marriage | 84 | |
Case 36 | Appraising the Dowry | 85 | |
Case 37 | Filiae Loco | 89 | |
Case 38 | The Wife's Property | 91 | |
Case 39 | Acquisitions by a Wife in Manus | 93 | |
Case 40 | Can a Wife in Manus Divorce? | 94 | |
Case 41 | Free Marriage: The Principle of Noninterference | 96 | |
Case 42 | Sharing Status | 97 | |
Case 43 | Showing Reverence | 99 | |
Case 44 | An Affront to a Spouse | 100 | |
Case 45 | No Infamy | 101 | |
Case 46 | An Unknown Son | 104 | |
Case 47 | Notice of Pregnancy | 105 | |
Case 48 | Protecting the Unborn Child | 108 | |
Case 49 | Custody of Children | 109 | |
Case 50 | Adultery and Marriage | 110 | |
Case 51 | Killing the Adulterer... | 112 | |
Case 52 | ...But Not His Own Wife | 114 | |
Case 53 | Pandering | 116 | |
Case 54 | The Necessity of Divorce | 118 | |
Case 55 | A Double Standard? | 120 | |
Case 56 | Separate Estates | 122 | |
Case 57 | Managing His Wife's Property | 124 | |
Case 58 | What the Woman Brings with Her | 125 | |
Case 59 | Q. Mucius's Presumption | 127 | |
Case 60 | Maintenance | 128 | |
Case 61 | No Gifts | 130 | |
Case 62 | A Fake Sale | 133 | |
Case 63 | Making Clothes | 134 | |
Case 64 | Exceptions | 135 | |
Case 65 | Severan Reforms | 137 | |
Case 66 | Equitable Ownership? | 140 | |
Case 67 | Fruits and Capital Gains | 143 | |
Case 68 | A Dowry Allowance to the Wife | 145 | |
Case 69 | Tying the Dowry to the Wife's Maintenance | 147 | |
Case 70 | Diligence | 149 | |
Case 71 | Necessary Expenses | 151 | |
Case 72 | Statutory Limits on a Husband's Power | 153 | |
Case 73 | Captured | 156 | |
Case 74 | A Daughter Is Deported | 158 | |
Case 75 | Free Divorce | 160 | |
Case 76 | Divorce by Remarriage? | 161 | |
Case 77 | The Mental Element | 163 | |
Case 78 | Formal Requirements? | 164 | |
Case 79 | Free-Form Divorce | 167 | |
Case 80 | Amicable Divorce | 169 | |
Case 81 | A Wife Dies | 170 | |
Case 82 | Divorce and the Dowry | 173 | |
Case 83 | Retention on Moral Grounds | 174 | |
Case 84 | Retaining Necessary Expenses | 177 | |
Case 85 | Reducing the Dowry by Law | 179 | |
Case 86 | Useful Expenses | 181 | |
Case 87 | Opening a Quarry | 183 | |
Case 88 | Luxury Expenses | 185 | |
Case 89 | Gaius Gracchus and Licinia's Dowry | 186 | |
Ch. III | Patria Potestas | ||
Case 90 | The Consilium I: Almost the Entire Senate | 193 | |
Case 91 | The Consilium II: The Quality of Mercy | 196 | |
Case 92 | A Hunting Accident? | 199 | |
Case 93 | Disciplining a Troublesome Son | 202 | |
Case 94 | An Offense Related to Public Pietas | 204 | |
Case 95 | An Adulterous Daughter | 205 | |
Case 96 | Limitations on Killing a Daughter | 207 | |
Case 97 | A Son and the State | 210 | |
Case 98 | Who Consents | 212 | |
Case 99 | Compelling a Child's Consent | 214 | |
Case 100 | A Father's Consent | 215 | |
Case 101 | Impaired Consent: Madness | 218 | |
Case 102 | Impaired Consent: Captivity | 219 | |
Case 103 | Parental Consent and Public Policy | 221 | |
Case 104 | Divorce: The Ernperor Pius Intervenes | 222 | |
Case 105 | A Father Changes His Mind | 223 | |
Case 106 | Disposition of Gifts | 224 | |
Case 107 | Breaking Up Is Hard to Do | 226 | |
Case 108 | Stealing a Child | 229 | |
Case 109 | Mother versus Father | 230 | |
Case 110 | Deciding on Custody | 231 | |
Case 111 | Self-Custody | 234 | |
Case 112 | Maintenance of Relatives | 235 | |
Case 113 | Owning and Possessing Nothing | 240 | |
Case 114 | Through Whom Do We Acquire? | 241 | |
Case 115 | Ownership and Possession | 244 | |
Case 116 | The Father's Knowledge | 246 | |
Case 117 | Acquiring a Debt | 248 | |
Case 118 | The Uniqueness of the Son-in-Power | 251 | |
Case 119 | As Though He Were a Pater Familias | 253 | |
Case 120 | Suing the Son | 254 | |
Case 121 | The Father's Order | 255 | |
Case 122 | Turned to the Father's Benefit | 256 | |
Case 123 | Obtaining a Daughter's Dowry | 258 | |
Case 124 | Business Managers | 260 | |
Case 125 | The Nature of the Fund | 265 | |
Case 126 | The Contents of a Peculium | 267 | |
Case 127 | Constituting a Peculium | 269 | |
Case 128 | Slave Women and Daughters | 271 | |
Case 129 | Acquiring Property | 272 | |
Case 130 | Free Administration | 274 | |
Case 131 | Gifts from a Peculium | 277 | |
Case 132 | Lending Money | 278 | |
Case 133 | Defending the Peculium | 280 | |
Case 134 | Computing the Balance | 282 | |
Case 135 | Deductions from the Peculium | 285 | |
Case 136 | The Deceitful Pater | 288 | |
Case 137 | Alternative Remedies | 289 | |
Case 138 | The Camp Peculium | 290 | |
Case 139 | Noxal Actions | 292 | |
Case 140 | Liability and Status | 294 | |
Case 141 | Defending the Son | 295 | |
Case 142 | Wrongs against Children-in-Power | 296 | |
Case 143 | Paternal Power and Status | 298 | |
Case 144 | Presuming a Father | 299 | |
Case 145 | Periods of Gestation | 300 | |
Case 146 | Strange Bedfellows? | 302 | |
Case 147 | A Divorced Wife Takes Vengeance | 303 | |
Case 148 | Adrogation | 304 | |
Case 149 | The Adoption Process | 306 | |
Case 150 | Age Requirements | 309 | |
Case 151 | Family Ties | 310 | |
Case 152 | Adoption and Adrogation of Women | 311 | |
Case 153 | Adoption by Women | 312 | |
Case 154 | The Imitation of Nature | 313 | |
Case 155 | The Decision to Emancipate | 315 | |
Case 156 | Study Abroad | 317 | |
Case 157 | Emancipated versus Freed | 318 | |
Case 158 | The State Intervenes | 319 | |
Ch. IV | Succession | ||
Case 159 | Rules of the fus Civile | 323 | |
Case 160 | An Unwilling Heir | 326 | |
Case 161 | The Praetor's Rules | 328 | |
Case 162 | Emancipated and Disinherited | 330 | |
Case 163 | A Legal Puzzler | 331 | |
Case 164 | The Third Praetorian Class (Unde Cognati) | 333 | |
Case 165 | Illegitimate Children | 334 | |
Case 166 | Son-in-Power as Cognate | 335 | |
Case 167 | Husbands and Wives | 337 | |
Case 168 | Mothers Inherit from Children | 339 | |
Case 169 | Children Inherit from Mothers | 340 | |
Case 170 | Disqualifications | 341 | |
Case 171 | The Mancipatory Will | 344 | |
Case 172 | Common Substitution | 347 | |
Case 173 | Pupillary Substitution | 348 | |
Case 174 | The Causa Curiana | 349 | |
Case 175 | Who's on First? | 351 | |
Case 176 | Two Wills | 352 | |
Case 177 | Privileged Heirs | 353 | |
Case 178 | Defective Wills | 354 | |
Case 179 | Name Games | 356 | |
Case 180 | Disinheritance as an Advantage | 358 | |
Case 181 | Partial Disinheritance | 359 | |
Case 182 | Providing for Postumi | 360 | |
Case 183 | Postumi and the (Un)married Man | 361 | |
Case 184 | Subfecundity | 363 | |
Case 185 | Twins | 365 | |
Case 186 | The Challenge of the Emancipatus | 367 | |
Case 187 | Adopted Children | 369 | |
Case 188 | Passing Over Sui Heredes | 371 | |
Case 189 | The Son of an Adopted Child | 373 | |
Case 190 | Adopting a Son as a Grandson | 375 | |
Case 191 | Adopting a Grandson as a Son | 376 | |
Case 192 | Complaints about the Will | 377 | |
Case 193 | Duty and Sanity | 378 | |
Case 194 | Evil Stepmothers | 379 | |
Case 195 | A Mother's Mistake | 381 | |
Case 196 | Multiple Claims | 383 | |
Case 197 | Procedural Alternatives | 384 | |
Case 198 | The Lex Falcidia | 387 | |
Case 199 | Legacy of a Dowry | 389 | |
Case 200 | Legacy in Place of a Dowry | 390 | |
Case 201 | Generic Legacies | 392 | |
Case 202 | Things Acquired for a Wife | 394 | |
Case 203 | Legacy of a Usufruct | 397 | |
Case 204 | Legacy of a Peculium | 400 | |
Case 205 | Release from Liability | 402 | |
Case 206 | Inheritance by Another Name? | 404 | |
Case 207 | Fideicommissum or Not? | 406 | |
Case 208 | The Gargilian Farm | 408 | |
Case 209 | Legacy and Fideicommissum | 410 | |
Case 210 | Bad Blood | 412 | |
Case 211 | Motives and Reasons | 413 | |
Case 212 | Just Like a Legacy | 416 | |
App | A Specimen Roman Will | 418 | |
Ch. V | Tutelage and the Status of Children and Women | ||
Case 213 | Defining Tutelage | 425 | |
Case 214 | Appointing a Tutor | 426 | |
Case 215 | The Tutor as Owner | 428 | |
Case 216 | Authorization | 430 | |
Case 217 | Welfare of the Child | 432 | |
Case 218 | Pitfalls of Tutelage | 434 | |
Case 219 | Liability for Alienating Property | 437 | |
Case 220 | Making Whole: Restitutio in Integrum | 438 | |
Case 221 | The Appointment of a Curator | 441 | |
Case 222 | Paying a Debt | 443 | |
Case 223 | Parting Lunatics and Prodigals from Their Property | 445 | |
Case 224 | A Worried Mother | 447 | |
Case 225 | The Weaker Sex? | 450 | |
Case 226 | The Tutor's Authorization | 453 | |
Case 227 | Escaping a Tutor | 454 | |
Case 228 | Women's Wills | 455 | |
Case 229 | Where the Boys Are | 457 | |
Case 230 | Order in the Court | 460 | |
Case 231 | Male Jobs | 461 | |
Case 232 | Ignorance of the Law | 463 | |
Case 233 | The Credit of Women | 464 | |
Case 234 | Protecting Women in Financial Matters | 467 | |
Case 235 | Sexual Harassment | 468 | |
App | Biographies of the Major Roman Jurists | 471 | |
Glossary of Technical Tems | 479 | ||
Suggested Further Reading | 489 | ||
Bibliography on the Roman Family | 491 | ||
Index of Sources | 495 | <
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Add A Casebook on Roman Family Law, The Roman household (familia) was in many respects dramatically different from the modern family. From the early Roman Empire (30 B.C. to about A.D. 250) there survive many legal sources that describe Roman households, often in the most intimate detail. T, A Casebook on Roman Family Law to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add A Casebook on Roman Family Law, The Roman household (familia) was in many respects dramatically different from the modern family. From the early Roman Empire (30 B.C. to about A.D. 250) there survive many legal sources that describe Roman households, often in the most intimate detail. T, A Casebook on Roman Family Law to your collection on WonderClub |