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0 THE GROWTH OF CRIMINAL JURISPRUDENCE: DE IUDICIIS PUBLICIS

Bauman, Richard A.

Crime and Punishment in Ancient Rome, 1996, p.100-106

Routledge

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  • Título:
    0 THE GROWTH OF CRIMINAL JURISPRUDENCE: DE IUDICIIS PUBLICIS
  • Autor: Bauman, Richard A.
  • É parte de: Crime and Punishment in Ancient Rome, 1996, p.100-106
  • Descrição: As already observed, the criminal law was the poor relation of Roman jurisprudence. It did not inspire the quintessence of Roman interpretation, responsa prudentium, until well into the Principate.1 But even in the Republic interpretation was practised in other ways, notably in laws which focused on the intention with which an act was done. This made interpretation a necessary adjunct. For example, when the lex Cornelia de sicariis penalized the cut-throat ‘who walked around with a weapon (telum) for the purpose of killing someone or committing theft’, interpretation was needed to establish the particular intent, and also to define a telum.2
  • Editor: Routledge
  • Idioma: Inglês

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