登陆注册
5434100000014

第14章

The most superficial student of Roman history must be struckby the extraordinary degree in which the fortunes of the republicwere affected by the presence of foreigners, under differentnames, on her soil. The causes of this immigration arediscernible enough at a later period, for we can readilyunderstand why men of all races should flock to the mistress ofthe world; but the same phenomenon of a large population offoreigners and denizens meets us in the very earliest records ofthe Roman State. No doubt, the instability of society in ancientItaly, composed as it was in great measure of robber tribes, gavemen considerable inducement to locate themselves in the territoryof any community strong enough to protect itself and them fromexternal attack, even though protection should be purchased atthe cost of heavy taxation, political disfranchisement, and muchsocial humiliation. It is probable, however, that thisexplanation is imperfect, and that it could only be completed bytaking into account those active commercial relations which,though they are little reflected in the military traditions ofthe republic, Rome appears certainly to have had with Carthageand with the interior of Italy in pre-historic times. Whateverwere the circumstances to which it was attributable, the foreignelement in the commonwealth determined the whole course of itshistory, which, at all its stages, is little more than anarrative of conflicts between a stubborn nationality and analien population. Nothing like this has been seen in moderntimes; on the one hand, because modern European communities haveseldom or never received any accession of foreign immigrantswhich was large enough to make itself felt by the bulk of thenative citizens, and on the other, because modern states, beingheld together by allegiance to a king or political superior,absorb considerable bodies of immigrant settlers with a quicknessunknown to the ancient world, where the original citizens of acommonwealth always believed themselves to be united by kinshipin blood, and resented a claim to equality of privilege as ausurpation of their birthright. In the early Roman republic theprinciple of the absolute exclusion of foreigners pervaded theCivil Law no less than the Constitution. The alien or denizencould have no share in any institution supposed to be coeval withthe State. He could not have the benefit of Quiritarian law. Hecould not be a party to the nexum which was at once theconveyance and the contract of the primitive Romans. He could notsue by the Sacramental Action, a mode of litigation of which theorigin mounts up to the very infancy of civilisation. Still,neither the interest nor the security of Rome permitted him to bequite outlawed. All ancient communities ran the risk of beingoverthrown by a very slight disturbance of equilibrium, and themere instinct of self-preservation would force the Romans todevise some method of adjusting the rights and duties offoreigners, who might otherwise-and this was a danger of realimportance in the ancient world -- have decided theircontroversies by armed strife. Moreover, at no period of Romanhistory was foreign trade entirely neglected. It was thereforeprobably half as a measure of police and half in furtherance ofcommerce that jurisdiction was first assumed in disputes to whichthe parties were either foreigners or a native and a foreigner.

The assumption of such a jurisdiction brought with it theimmediate necessity of discovering some principles on which thequestions to be adjudicated upon could be settled, and theprinciples applied to this object by the Roman lawyers wereeminently characteristic of the time. They refused, as I havesaid before, to decide the new Cases by pure Roman Civil Law.

They refused, no doubt because it seemed to involve some kind ofdegradation, to apply the law of the particular State from whichthe foreign litigant came. The expedient to which they resortedwas that of selecting the rules of law common to Rome and to thedifferent Italian communities in which the immigrants were born.

In other words, they set themselves to form a system answering tothe primitive and literal meaning of Jus Gentium, that is, Lawcommon to all Nations. Jus Gentium was, in fact, the sum of thecommon ingredients in the customs of the old Italian tribes, forthey were all the nations whom the Romans had the means ofobserving, and who sent successive swarms of immigrants to Romansoil. Whenever a particular usage was seen to be practised by alarge number of separate races in common it was set down as partof the Law common to all Nations, or Jus Gentium. Thus, althoughthe conveyance of property was certainly accompanied by verydifferent forms in the different commonwealths surrounding Rome,the actual transfer, tradition, or delivery of the articleintended to be conveyed was a part of the ceremonial in all ofthem. It was, for instance, a part, though a subordinate part, inthe Mancipation or conveyance peculiar to Rome. Tradition,therefore, being in all probability the only common ingredient inthe modes of conveyance which the jurisconsults had the means ofobserving, was set down as an institution Juris Gentium, or ruleof the Law common to all Nations. A vast number of otherobservances were scrutinised with the same result. Some commoncharacteristic was discovered in all of them, which had a commonobject, and this characteristic was classed in the Jus Gentium.

The Jus Gentium was accordingly a collection of rules andprinciples, determined by observation to be common to theinstitutions which prevailed among the various Italian tribes.

同类推荐
  • 太上泰清拔罪升天宝忏

    太上泰清拔罪升天宝忏

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 明伦汇编人事典名字部

    明伦汇编人事典名字部

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 声律启蒙

    声律启蒙

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 明目至宝

    明目至宝

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 徐霞客游记

    徐霞客游记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 2015中国年度诗歌

    2015中国年度诗歌

    本书由中国诗歌界选家从全国近百种文学刊物中精心编选,视域广阔,旨在全景呈现2015年诗歌创作的实绩,力求公正客观地推选出有代表性、有影响力的作品。
  • Letters from the Cape

    Letters from the Cape

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 豪门盛婚之千亿暖媳

    豪门盛婚之千亿暖媳

    本文1V1,男女主身心干净,绝对宠文,希望亲们加入书架,么么哒!*她是京都云氏家族的千金大小姐。高贵淡雅,气质脱俗,容貌绝美。却在家中地位不如两个私生子女。老爸不疼,继母伪善,弟妹背地里对她耍尽阴招。当她是病猫?*阮尚东;国内第一豪门唯一继承人。矜贵冷傲,气势逼人,姿容超绝,永远一副睥睨天下的姿态。传言他从来不近女色。即便如此,依旧引得各路女人争先恐后。
  • 大星落

    大星落

    在恒星都开始熄灭的日子里,流落在异乡的马牛牛,一心却想要过好日子,于是一路走来一路认亲,却慢慢的点燃了世界的明灯。
  • 夫人们(二)

    夫人们(二)

    官场太太的结局总跟主旋律契合。出轨普遍、官商勾结、欲望无限。扣人心弦的故事,跌宕起伏的情节,活灵活现的人物,行云流水的叙述,让你在阅读的过程中感悟到夫人们早已成为当今缤纷生活的变奏:有钱的夫人想感情,有感情的夫人想钱,又有钱又有感情的夫人想什么呢?三个女人,三个层面,呈现了三种婚姻的格局,三种截然不同的结果。还是那句话,出来混,迟早都是要还的。有节制的生活,生活总坏不到哪去;有节制的人生,在平淡中会有精彩。
  • 钢珠枪

    钢珠枪

    我专门给那把钢珠枪做了个套子,往皮带上一套,腰间就鼓凸起来,市场上的人眼珠子也跟着亮了。二所长,公安执勤室的人也配枪?一个小贩问。我嗯了一声,装得蛮神秘。这枪不是假的吧?小贩仍然不相信。我学着电视上胡司令的样子,拍拍肚皮,再拍拍枪,照例不作回答。小贩这下是相信了。市场公安执勤室挂牌一个月了,我从市管所抽调到执勤室做副主任,跟公安一样,穿警服。前两天,执勤室通过公安局,购了几把钢珠枪。
  • 重生农门商妃

    重生农门商妃

    "异世重生,她带着心中的遗憾,奉养今世的父母。只愿能减少自己心中的遗憾。极品奶奶,阴险小叔,尖酸婶娘,这些人的嘴脸让她无时无刻都在忆起前世自己所处的境地。前世,自己努力打拼却无法奉养父母姐弟,今生今世,她要用她所学的知识与阅历打造一个商业帝国回报现在的父母救赎前世的遗憾。"
  • 国民男神有家室:温柔娇妻很暴力

    国民男神有家室:温柔娇妻很暴力

    他是耀眼的明星,她是默默忠于他的粉丝。他是她成长的动力,是她未来前进的方向,是她黑暗人生的一束光。她想待在他身边,无论用什么样的身份。费尽心思也只能远远的看着他。本以为这一生只能默默地祝福他,可上苍总是爱与人开玩笑。她在最落魄的时候他从天而降。有些事身不由己,有些人不舍却又必须割舍。她在追随他的脚步的途中遗漏了爱她的人。当昔日默默守护的青梅竹马倒在她的面前,她才明白,原来最爱的人一直在身边。原来她从来不是孤身一人。本文主线甜宠,小虐怡情。
  • 丑女敛财:驭夫女将军

    丑女敛财:驭夫女将军

    (棺材里重生,丑女敛财,玩转古代。)面对他的压迫,“曾经的曾经我将心全部的交给了你,你用一万万两买下了它。”对于他的纠缠,“当初为了一万两,你的残酷,我从没宽恕!想娶我,就算下辈子也未必轮到你。”唯有他,“这是我全部的家当,你签收吧!”见她拿钱走人,他邪气一笑,“你遗落了一样珍宝。”“什么?”她双目放光,四处寻觅。
  • 陪你度过抑郁期

    陪你度过抑郁期

    本书的内容从了解内心深处开始,主要希望大家不要抱有“抑郁症原来就是这样一种疾病”或“抑郁症是非常可怕的疾病”等先入为主的看法。抑郁症是一种“精神感冒”。感冒如果不治疗的话有可能发展成肺炎。“精神感冒”也是一样,如果放任自流,也会逐渐加重,甚至有可能发展到最坏的结果--自杀。希望大家能够充分认识这一点。本书先介绍了抑郁症各种时期的特点,紧接着讲述了抑郁症的三大疗法,最后讲述了抑郁症的预防及家人的配合治疗。希望这本书能对读者抗击抑郁有帮助。