-
considered goods instead of
human beings and the
owners had ius
vitae necisque over them (right to end the life of the slave);
while robie is the feudal...
- honorum, only
available to the aristocracy). They also
possessed ius
vitae necisque, "the
right of life and death." The male head of a
Roman family (pater...
- Westbrook, "Vitae
Necisque Potestas,"
Historia 48:2 (1999), p. 208. Westbrook, "Vitae
Necisque Potestas," pp. 203–204. Westbrook, "Vitae
Necisque Potestas,"...
- and
tradition (mos majorum)
allowed him
powers of life and
death (vitae
necisque potestas). He was also
obliged to
observe the
constraints imposed by Roman...
-
complied with. In
ancient Rome, the 'power of life and killing' (vitae
necisque potestas, more
commonly 'power of life and death') was
vested in the husband...
- Plutarch:
Mulierum virtutes 6. Caesar: De
bello Gallico 6,19: …
vitae necisque potestatem.
Strabo Geôgraphiká III 3, 7
Strabo Geôgraphiká IV 4, 3 Ammi****...
-
disobedient libertus, In
older times he
could even kill him (ius
vitae necisque), but
later he
could not. In some cir****stances he
could even ask a magistrate...