The course is divided into two parts:
- 1st semester: Roman Law Institutions
- 2nd semester: Roman Law
ROMAN LAW INSTITUTIONS
The course will focus on the main institutions of Roman public and private law, demonstrating the legal and historical aspects of Roman law and showing the relationships between politics, economics and legal rules.
Roman law, which developed over twelve centuries, is particularly instructive in this respect. Having been transformed in just a few centuries from a town of shepherds and farmers to the capital of a country with worldwide influence, Rome created a legal system that demonstrated a surprising ability to adapt to changes in political and economic forms. This ability is very well illustrated by the formation during the Republican era of a system (called ius honorarium) “parallel” to the old, inadequate civil law, creating a set of new rights due to the legal protection granted to situations which were previously non-existent or not deemed to require protection.
The influence of the political and economic system on the formation and development of the law will be illustrated with special reference to the contract system, family law and succession law. The part of the course devoted to the Imperial era will emphasise the relations between the forms of power and the system of law production sources.
ROMAN LAW
This course, which represents a development on the teaching of Roman law institutions, will focus on Roman litigation in Late Antiquity.
In particular the course will analyse the subject of appeals and other methods used to review judgments in the cognitio extra ordinem system.