Estamos otra vez a lunes y toca otra ronda de enlaces, así que vamos con ellos: The legal status of Roman slaves @ History and Archaeology Online: “While the archaeological record preserves glimpses of the lives of Roman slaves, the Roman laws that survive as the Corpus Juris Civilis are a rich source that gives us a deeper insight into the social status of the enslaved and how they could be treated. (…) once a person became a slave, they were a piece of property rather than a person with rights. Like a domestic animal or an inanimate object, they could be bought and sold at whim, punished, maimed or killed. They could not marry, and nor were their children regarded as their own. Slaves were “articulate instruments’, according to Varro (On Agriculture, I, XVII, 1)—human tools
Ronda de enlaces (15/04/2024)
Ronda de enlaces (15/04/2024)
Ronda de enlaces (15/04/2024)
Estamos otra vez a lunes y toca otra ronda de enlaces, así que vamos con ellos: The legal status of Roman slaves @ History and Archaeology Online: “While the archaeological record preserves glimpses of the lives of Roman slaves, the Roman laws that survive as the Corpus Juris Civilis are a rich source that gives us a deeper insight into the social status of the enslaved and how they could be treated. (…) once a person became a slave, they were a piece of property rather than a person with rights. Like a domestic animal or an inanimate object, they could be bought and sold at whim, punished, maimed or killed. They could not marry, and nor were their children regarded as their own. Slaves were “articulate instruments’, according to Varro (On Agriculture, I, XVII, 1)—human tools