Search
Your search for 'dc_creator:( "Galsterer, Hartmut (Bonn)" ) OR dc_contributor:( "Galsterer, Hartmut (Bonn)" )' returned 59 results. Modify search
Did you mean: dc_creator:( "galsterer, hartmut (bonn)" ) OR dc_contributor:( "galsterer, hartmut (bonn)" )Sort Results by Relevance | Newest titles first | Oldest titles first
Meddix
(230 words)
[German version] (Oscan
medìss). Oscan ( Osci) and Volscian ( Volsci) term for an official (Fest. 123), which is etymologically equivalent to the Latin
iudex. If the term refers to the supreme magistrate of a
touta, an ‘(entire) people’, occasionally (for example, among the Campanians, Liv. 24,19,2)
tuticus is added (analogous to
magistratus populi or
publicus). In Ennius [1] (Enn. Ann. 298) there is an
alter meddix in addition to the
summus meddix (=
m. tuticus), possibly the
meddix of a
pagus as well. There also seem to have been other
meddices whose particular responsibilities were…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Tabula Bantina
(273 words)
[German version] Fragments of a bronze tablet, inscribed on both sides, from Bantia (at modern Venosa) in Lucania. The front, written first, contains the
sanctio of a Roman statute. Since present and future magistrates are bound in it by oath to refrain from any undertaking against the law, it is often seen as part of a
l
ex Appuleia (
agraria or
maiestatis; Ap(p)uleius [I 11]) of 103 or 100 BC; in any case, it is from the end of the 2nd cent. BC. Listed on the back, used later, are several sections of the municipal law of Bantia (or a draft of it), in the…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Lex Malacitana
(115 words)
[German version] Municipal law from the time of Domitian (end of the 1st cent. AD) for the Latin
municipium Flavium Malacitanum, modern Málaga in southern Spain, of which a bronze tablet was found in 1861 with chs. 51-69 together with the
lex Salpensana (today in the Archaeological National Museum of Madrid). The text of chs. 59-69 is identical, with several differences, to that of the corresponding chs. in the
lex Irnitana ; this would probably also apply to the rest of the law. Galsterer, Hartmut (Bonn) Bibliography CIL II 1964 ILS 6089 H. Freis, Histor. Inschr. zur röm. Kaiserzeit, 1…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Senatus consultum Hosidianum
(270 words)
[German version] Senatorial decision, named after the AD 47 suffect consul, Cn. Hosidius [4] Geta [1. 609-612]. It provided for public regulation of private construction work (Building law B.). The bronze tablet with the text of the SC was excavated at Herculaneum around 1600 and is now lost. Like the somewhat later SC Volusianum (AD 56), which was recorded on the same tablet, the SC Hosidianum penalized the purchase of
domus and
villae for the purpose of demolition with subsequent resale at a higher price of the materials and land, to stop the speculation in urban…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Ordo
(1,047 words)
in Latin referred both to an order (e.g. the marching order or that of a legal process) as well as to groups or corporations, into which several or many persons were organized (also in the plural
ordines), e.g. the Roman
equites (
ordo equester). [German version] I. Procedural law In a procedural context the term
ordo is traditionally used in the composition of the '
ordo iudiciorum' (Cod. Iust. 7,45,4). It signified the proper types of legal procedure (cf. still today: 'proper' jurisdiction) both of the formulary procedure (
formula ) as well as of the actions at law proceedings (
legis actio …
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Lex Irnitana
(446 words)
[German version] Only Latin city law extant in large sections, for a Latin
municipium from the time of Domitian (end 1st cent. AD); found during illegal excavations in El Saucejo in the south of the modern province of Seville in southern Spain in 1981, and purchased by the authorities for the National Museum of Archaeology in Seville (initial publication: [2], with English translation; authoritative text: [4]). Of the original ten bronze tablets (H 58 cm, B 91 cm), six (III, V, VII-X) are almost completely extant, if also partially in pieces. We thus possess
c. 70% of the entire text, ta…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Tabulae Caeritum
(280 words)
[German version] In the TC Roman censors registered citizens from whom they had withdrawn the active or passive right to vote, by means of a
nota censoria and/or by transfer into another
tribus (
tribu movere). The term TC is explained from the original inclusion in this list of those citizens of the Etruscan city of Caere who were liable for military service. Presumably Caere gave its name to the list because in
c. 390 BC it is supposed to have been the first community to receive
civitas sine suffragio: Caere had provided help to Rome during the Gaulish attack in
c. 390 BC and had in thanks b…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Socii (Roman confederation)
(849 words)
[German version] A. Definition The term "Roman confederation" or "Italic Federation" (Beloch) refers to the Roman manner of governing Italy during the Republic. The Romans themselves apparently had no name for this structure, in documents one encounters the paraphrase
socii nominisque (or
nominisve)
Latini quibus ex formula milites in terra Italia imperare solent [1]. Galsterer, Hartmut (Bonn) [German version] B. Participants Geographically, the confederation comprised the Apennine peninsula without the islands. The Ligurian and Gallic tribes of Upper Ita…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Civitas
(630 words)
[German version] A. Community
Civitas is the totality of the
cives, just as
societas is that of the
socii. Its meaning is largely synonymous with
populus , but it was rarely used by the Romans for their own state (instead:
populus Romanus) but instead was the official expression for all non-Roman communities, tribes and Greek
poleis with republican constitutions. A people of the state is the characteristic of a
civis, almost always a defined territory with a certain autonomy (
suis legibus uti) and mostly an urban centre. Classification was according to the legal basis of the re…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly