1 / 8

Laws and Government of Ancient Rome

Laws and Government of Ancient Rome . By Madi Di Vico and Andrew Baffuto. Government in Rome. T he word republic means a public thing. In 494 B.C. the Plebeians rebelled against the patricians Rome’s republic lasted nearly 500 years

dex
Download Presentation

Laws and Government of Ancient Rome

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Laws and Government of Ancient Rome By Madi Di Vico and Andrew Baffuto

  2. Government in Rome • The word republic means a public thing. • In 494 B.C. the Plebeians rebelled against the patricians • Rome’s republic lasted nearly 500 years • Arepresentative is a person that ran for the government • the Senate’s role/job was to make the laws for the government • The Citizen Assembly’s role was to elect the tribunes and the Rome's army commander and the most powerful judges. Tribunes made sure that plebeians got fair trials. • Consuls were the third branch of the government. They served for 1 year as Rome’s army commanders and the most powerful judges. They were elected by the citizen’s assembly role.

  3. Laws of Rome • Governor’s enforced Rome’s laws and were the judges if something went wrong. • The people who enforced the laws were treated as upper class. • The Twelve Tables were the foundation of the Roman law, the earliest written collection of Roman laws they were written in 450 B.C. • The Twelve Tables were posted in the Forum, part of the market, part town square, and the place where citizen’s presented their cases before the judges.

  4. Twelve Tables of Rome • Even though the twelve tables were smashed in an invasion, we know that they existed because of the written recollections of Romans, who as children had memorized the twelve tables word-for-word in school. • The Twelve Tables were established in 450-451 B.C. because the plebeians successfully protested against unfair application of unwritten “laws” by the patricians. The Twelve Tables were not new laws created, but they were a recording of the unwritten laws that already had been in existence for many years before. • Civil law is the body of laws in a government that regulate ordinary matters. • The eldest male had the most power over his descendants because Rome was patriarchal. • There were laws protecting slave ownership because without the slaves no one would be able to work the fields.

  5. Laws in the twelve tables • I.1 "If he (plaintiff) summon him (defendant) into court, he shall go. If he does not go, (plaintiff) shall call witnesses. Then only he shall take him by force. If he refuses or flees, he (plaintiff) shall lay hands on him. If disease or age is an impediment, he shall grant him a team (of oxen). He shall not spread with cushions the covered carriage if he does not wish to. • II.3 Whoever is in need of evidence, he shall go on every third day to call out loud before the doorway of the witness." • III. 1 "When a debt has been acknowledged or a judgment has been pronounced in court, 30 days must be the legitimate grace period. Thereafter, arrest of the debtor may be made by the laying on of hands. Bring him into court. If he does not satisfy the judgment (or no one in court offers himself as surety on his behalf) the creditor may take the debtor with him. He may bind him either in stocks or fetters, with a weight of no less than 15 lbs. (or more if he desires)." [After 60 days in custody, the case is returned to the court, and if the debt is not then paid, the debtor can be sold abroad as a slave, or put to death.] • IV. 1 "A dreadfully deformed child shall be killed." • IV. 2 "If a father surrender his son for sale three times, the son shall be free."

  6. Summary Without the Twelve Tables of Rome there would be no way for the plebeians to have their laws enforced. Also that there would be no laws and Rome would be a brawl all day. Without the Twelve Tables Rome’s government wouldn't be strong and would only have protesting plebeians. The Twelve Tables made Rome not insane and kept people alive. In conclusion, Rome's government and laws wouldn't be what they are today without the Twelve Tables.

  7. Questions • When did the plebeians rebel against the patricians? • What were the Twelve Tables a foundation of and when were they written? • Why were the twelve tables written?

  8. Answers to Questions • The Plebeians rebelled against the patricians in 494 B.C. • The Twelve Tables were the foundation of the Roman law, the earliest written collection of Roman laws they were written in 450 B.C. • The Twelve Tables were established in 450-451 B.C. because the plebeians successfully protested against unfair application of unwritten “laws” by the patricians. The Twelve Tables were not new laws created, but they were a recording of the unwritten laws that already had been in existence for many years before.

More Related