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LAWS0032: Roman Law

This module introduces you to the full range of legal practices and concepts developed by the lawyers of ancient Rome.

Twice in European history has a legal system been created out of the customary practices of a particular people which has gone on to dominate the legal culture of half the world. The second such system is our own Common law, varieties of which are now to be found in all English-speaking countries and in their former colonies. The first was Roman law.

Roman law was the local law of a small city-state in Italy which grew to become an empire dominating the Mediterranean and western European world during antiquity. Developing out of this in the mediaeval period, Roman law ideas influenced the law in all western countries (not excepting England). In France, Germany, Holland, Spain and Italy and their overseas possessions from the Philippines and Sri Lanka to Francophonic Africa and Louisiana, together with the Slavic countries of Eastern Europe, Roman law has dominated legal development. Codification has added Japan and Turkey to countries affected by Roman legal culture. Those who know no Roman law are ignorant of half the legal history of the world.

The growth of trade within the European Union and the consequent increase in the numbers of English lawyers setting up in continental Europe adds a peculiarly practical emphasis to the study of Roman law. As a practising barrister, Stephen Zollner, put it in a letter to The Times: 鈥淩arely in recent times has there been so visible an advantage in studying (or having studied) basic Roman law.鈥

The Roman Law module introduces you to the full range of legal practices and concepts developed by the lawyers of ancient Rome. Theirs was a customary system, like our own, developed out of the practice of the courts and there are many points of similarity and comparison between the two. Gaining an understanding of the Roman legal system is a fascinating and intriguing exercise which has engaged the minds of some of the finest legal scholars over the past few hundred years. The result is a study which offers a unique blend of comparative law, detailed scholarship, legal history and practical legal insights.

All the texts we study are translated. No prior knowledge of Latin, or of Roman history, is needed to take (and to do well in) this module.

Module outline:
1.聽聽 聽Sources of Law in the Republic and Empire
2.聽聽 聽Legal Procedure: the primacy of claims in court
3.聽聽 聽The Law of Contracts: Verbal, Real, Written and Consensual contracts. Pacts. Quasi contracts.
4.聽聽 聽The Law of Delict: Theft, damage to property (Lex Aquilia), contumelious insult. Quasi-delict.
5.聽聽 聽The Law of Property: Ownership and Possession. Servitudes.
6.聽聽 聽The Law of Succession
7.聽聽 聽The Law of Persons: Slaves. Citizenship. Marriage and family relations.

Recommended preparatory reading:

On Roman Law:
* Nicholas, B: Introduction to Roman Law (OUP 1962/1975 p/b ISBN: 0198760639)
*P Birks, 鈥淩oman Law in Twentieth Century Britain鈥 in J Beatson and R Zimmermann (ed), Jurists Uprooted (Oxford, 2004) 249 (available online through the library鈥檚 OUP subscription).
Wolff, H J: Roman Law (Oklahoma UP, 1985 p/b ISBN: 0806112964)
Robinson, O R: The Sources of Roman Law (1997 Routledge p/b ISBN: 0415089956)
On Roman history (for background):
Crawford, M H: The Roman Republic (2nd edn., 1992, p/b)
Starr, C G: The Roman Empire (1982 OUP, p/b)

Full module information is available in the聽果冻影院 Module Catalogue.

贰濒颈驳颈产颈濒颈迟测:听Students from other 果冻影院 departments or UoL institutions must be in their final year of study, and must have a background in law or have successfully completed at least one Laws module for entry onto this module.

Students outside of the 果冻影院 Faculty of Laws should consult the registration instructions on聽our website.