Legitimacy and Law in the Roman World: Tabulae in Roman Belief and Practice

Elizabeth A. Meyer (University of Virginia)

Legitimacy and Law in the Roman World: Tabulae in Roman Belief and Practice
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Country
United Kingdom
Published
12 February 2004
Pages
372
ISBN
9780521497015

Legitimacy and Law in the Roman World: Tabulae in Roman Belief and Practice

Elizabeth A. Meyer (University of Virginia)

Greeks wrote mostly on papyrus, but the Romans wrote solemn religious, public, and legal documents on wooden tablets often coated with wax. This book investigates the historical significance of this resonant form of writing; its power to order the human realm and cosmos and to make documents efficacious; its role in court; the uneven spread - an aspect of Romanization - of this Roman form outside Italy, as provincials made different guesses as to what would please their Roman overlords; and its influence on the evolution of Roman law. An historical epoch of Roman legal transactions without writing is revealed as a juristic myth of origins. Roman legal documents on tablets are the ancestors of today’s dispositive legal documents - the document as the act itself. In a world where knowledge of the Roman law was scarce - and enforcers scarcer - the Roman law drew its authority from a wider world of belief.

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