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قراءة كتاب Public Lands and Agrarian Laws of the Roman Republic
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Public Lands and Agrarian Laws of the Roman Republic
JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY STUDIES
IN
HISTORICAL AND POLITICAL SCIENCE
HERBERT B. ADAMS, Editor
History is past Politics and Politics present History—Freeman
NINTH SERIES
VII-VIII
PUBLIC LANDS AND AGRARIAN LAWS
OF THE
ROMAN REPUBLIC
BY ANDREW STEPHENSON, PH.D.
Professor of History, Wesleyan University
BALTIMORE
THE JOHNS HOPKINS PRESS
JULY-AUGUST, 1891
Copyright, 1891, BY THE JOHNS HOPKINS PRESS.
PREFACE.
In the following pages it has been my object to trace the history of the domain lands of Rome from the earliest times to the establishment of the Empire. The plan of the work has been to sketch the origin and growth of the idea of private property in land, the expansion of the ager publicus by the conquest of neighboring territories, and its absorption by means of sale, by gift to the people, and by the establishment of colonies, until wholly merged in private property. This necessarily involves a history of the agrarian laws, as land distributions were made and colonies established only in accordance with laws previously enacted.
My reason for undertaking such a work as the present is found in the fact that agrarian movements have borne more or less upon every point in Roman constitutional history, and a proper knowledge of the former is necessary to a just interpretation of the latter.
This whole question presents numerous obscurities before which it has been necessary more than once to hesitate; it offers, both in its entirety and in detail, difficulties which I have at least earnestly endeavored to lessen. These obscurities and difficulties, arising in part from insufficiency of historical evidence and in part from the conflicting statements of the old historians, have been recognized by all writers and call forth on my part no claim for indulgence.
This monograph is intended as a chapter merely of a history of the public lands and agrarian laws of Rome, written for the purpose of a future comparison with the more recent agrarian movements in England and America.
ANDREW STEPHENSON.
MlDDLETOWN, CONN.
May 8, 1891.
TABLE OF CONTENTS.
Sec. 1. LANDED PROPERTY
Sec. 2. QUIRITARIAN OWNERSHIP
Sec. 3. AGER PUBLICUS
Sec. 4. ROMAN COLONIES
Sec. 5. LEX CASSIA
Sec. 6. AGRARIAN MOVEMENTS BETWEEN 486 AND 367
(a) Extension of Territory by conquest up to the year 367 B.C.
(b) Colonies Founded between 454 and 367
Sec. 7. LEX LICINIA
Sec. 8. AGRARIAN MOVEMENTS BETWEEN 367 AN 133
(a) Extension of Territory by conquest between 367 and 133
(b) Colonies Founded between 367 and 133
Sec. 9. LATIFUNDIA
Sec. 10. INFLUENCE OF SLAVERY
Sec. 11. LEX SEMPRONIA TIBERIANA
Sec. 12. LEX SEMPRONIA GAIANA
Sec. 13. LEX THORIA
Sec. 14. AGRARIAN MOVEMENTS BETWEEN 111 AND 86
Sec. 15. EFFECT OF THE SULLAN REVOLUTION
Sec. 16. AGRARIAN MOVEMENTS BETWEEN 86 AND 59
Sec. 17. LEX JULIA AGRARIA
Sec. 18. DISTRIBUTION OF LAND AFTER THE CIVIL WAR
BETWEEN CÆSAR AND POMPEY
Sec. 19. DISTRIBUTIONS FROM THE DEATH OF CÆSAR
TO THE TIME OF AUGUSTUS
(a) Lex Agraria of Lucius Antonius