Read Anywhere and on Any Device!

Subscribe to Read | $0.00

Join today and start reading your favorite books for Free!

Read Anywhere and on Any Device!

  • Download on iOS
  • Download on Android
  • Download on iOS

The Jurisdiction of the Pontiff in the Roman Republic: A Third Dimension

The Jurisdiction of the Pontiff in the Roman Republic: A Third Dimension

Jan Hendrik Valgaeren
0/5 ( ratings)
In academic research, the pontiff of the Roman Republic has largely been a two-dimensional figure, created by Historians and Romanists. In this book, author Jan Hendrik Valgaeren - a graduate in both law and history - adds a fascinating third dimension. Taking the pontiff's jurisdiction as his starting point, Valgaeren demonstrates that most Romanists evidence a highly dogmatic approach and only pay attention to the institutional aspects of Roman law, while historians are primarily interested in the big picture and are mostly unaware of the pontiff's legal duties. What binds these perspectives is that the scholarly thinking of adherents of either discipline is rooted in the Enlightenment idea that Roman society was a secular one. This biased idea obscures the fact that, in the Roman Republic, law and religion were intimately connected and remained so well into the Empire. Valgaeren argues that it was only around 200 BC - and not earlier - that, as part of the radical reforms following the Second Punic war, jurisdiction was transferred from the pontiff to the praetor.
Language
English
Pages
164
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Wolf Legal Publishers
Release
November 01, 2012
ISBN
9058509184
ISBN 13
9789058509185

The Jurisdiction of the Pontiff in the Roman Republic: A Third Dimension

Jan Hendrik Valgaeren
0/5 ( ratings)
In academic research, the pontiff of the Roman Republic has largely been a two-dimensional figure, created by Historians and Romanists. In this book, author Jan Hendrik Valgaeren - a graduate in both law and history - adds a fascinating third dimension. Taking the pontiff's jurisdiction as his starting point, Valgaeren demonstrates that most Romanists evidence a highly dogmatic approach and only pay attention to the institutional aspects of Roman law, while historians are primarily interested in the big picture and are mostly unaware of the pontiff's legal duties. What binds these perspectives is that the scholarly thinking of adherents of either discipline is rooted in the Enlightenment idea that Roman society was a secular one. This biased idea obscures the fact that, in the Roman Republic, law and religion were intimately connected and remained so well into the Empire. Valgaeren argues that it was only around 200 BC - and not earlier - that, as part of the radical reforms following the Second Punic war, jurisdiction was transferred from the pontiff to the praetor.
Language
English
Pages
164
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Wolf Legal Publishers
Release
November 01, 2012
ISBN
9058509184
ISBN 13
9789058509185

Rate this book!

Write a review?

loader