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Adoption

(952 words)

Author(s): Deißmann-Merten, Marie-Luise (Freiburg)
[German version] Taking a member of another family into one's own family; usually in antiquity only adults were adopted. In adoption the concern was not the well-being of the adopted person but the continuation of the agnatic family association into which the adopted person was introduced. Adoption was used above all if there was no male heir. Adoption was already documented in Cretan inscriptions (IC IV 20; IV 21) of the 7th/6th cents. BC; it was comprehensively regulated in Gortynian law (X 33-XI 23) with almost no restrictions on adoption. In Athens there were three types of adopt…

Old Age

(1,404 words)

Author(s): Deißmann-Merten, Marie-Luise (Freiburg)
[German version] A. Introduction Old age as a phase of human life received great interest in antiquity, but opinions on it vary. Sources differ in the classification of the stages of life and, particularly the determination of the year of onset of old age: Solon, like Hippocrates and Aristotle after him, counted in hebdomads in his elegy to ages. In the ninth hebdomad, language and wisdom become weaker until one is overtaken by death at the end of the tenth (19 Diehl). Pythagoras divided human life …

Gens

(1,391 words)

Author(s): Deißmann-Merten, Marie-Luise (Freiburg)
[German version] A. Politics and Society The Roman gens comprised the members of a  family who descended from a common ancestor and under whose potestas they would have been, if he had still been alive (Varro, Ling. 8,4). The main distinction between

Matrona

(726 words)

Author(s): Deißmann-Merten, Marie-Luise (Freiburg) | Lafond, Yves (Bochum) | Schön, Franz (Regensburg)
[German version] [1] Term used in family law Under Roman law of the Republican period, th…

Family

(7,857 words)

Author(s): Renger, Johannes (Berlin) | Feucht, Erika (Heidelberg) | Macuch, Maria (Berlin) | Gehrke, Hans-Joachim (Freiburg) | Deißmann-Merten, Marie-Luise (Freiburg) | Et al.
[German version] I. Ancient Orient The family in Mesopotamia was organized in a patrilineal manner; remnants of matrilineal family structures are to be found in Hittite myths, among the Amorite nomads of the early 2nd millennium BC and the Arab tribes of the 7th cent. BC. As a rule monogamy was predominant; marriage to concubines with lesser rights was possible, while there is evidence of polygamy particularly in the ruling families. The family consisted of a married couple and their children although it is not possible to obtain…