- Res
mancipi was one of the
categories of
property in
Roman law. The
other was res nec
mancipi.
Romans viewed res
mancipi as that
property of particular...
-
usucaption arose in
Roman law with the
divide between res
mancipi and res nec
mancipi. Res
mancipi required elaborate and
inconvenient formal methods of conveyance...
-
verbal contract by
which the
ownership of
certain types of
goods (res
mancipi) was transferred. Man****tio was also the
legal procedure for
drawing up...
-
other alienation.
According to Cicero,
abalienatio est ejus rei, quae
mancipi est, aut
traditio alteri nexu aut in jure cessio,
inter quos ea jure civili...
-
thing had been
transferred improperly (for example,
transferring a res
mancipi by traditio), or
where the
transferor of a
thing did not hold
proper title...
-
grant of
commercium allowed Latins and
certain peregrini to
trade in res
mancipi,
forms of
property privileged in the
rural economy of
early Rome that included...
-
establish that it had been
voluntarily abandoned. The
opposite was res
mancipi, or "owned" property. Res
communis Sicaricon Bouckaert,
Boudewijn (1999)...
-
people (modern German: Sklaven), who are
identified as mancipia, see res
mancipi. de Rugis. Uncertain; it
could refer to the
Rugii (see Rugiland), or to...
-
certain farmland within the
Italian peninsula, and farm
animals were all res
mancipi, a
category of
property established in
early Rome's
rural economy as requiring...
- that
these could be
acquired by man****tion, as they were
considered res
mancipi as well as the
estates between which they were established. The servitudes...