Criminal law principles in the legends of ancient Rome

Cover Page

Cite item

Abstract

The description of the history of early Rome (VIII-IV centuries BC) in the works of ancient authors is usually perceived as a mythological legend, which shifts the focus of scientific discussion to assessing the degree of reliability of the events being told. As a result, the normative-value and legal significance of ancient legends sufficient attention of researchers. The oral and therefore naturally plastic nature of archaic law creates additional difficulties for its modern study, in contrast to numerous and well-studied legislative texts. The author proposes to refer to modern types of legal understanding and turn down strict positivism with the aim of expanding the boundaries of legal analysis, rethinking the legend (on the example of Lucius Junius Brutus), recognizing it as a source of Roman law, and reconstructing its criminal law content. For this purpose, using socio-psychological, historical-legal, formal-logical and other scientific methods, the author singles out that part of the story that was not lost, but was steadily reproduced from generation to generation. The surviving core of the legend remained in history because it carried socially significant information modeling of behavior (behavioral stereotypes) of the ancient Romans. The article shows that children`s execution by the first republican magistrate not only legitimized the right of paternal power (patria potestas), but also proclaimed the priority protection of the public interest (civitas) that became the cornerstone of the Roman legal order. The legend set a special imperative for citizens, shaped their worldview and sense of justice. From the criminal law standpoint, this precedent fixed the standard of both prohibited behavior and retribution for it, i.e., a measure of justice, broadcast the requirements of the inevitability and personal nature of responsibility, laid foundation for the requirement of legal equality of all citizens before the law. Ultimately, the legend set the vector for the development of Roman criminal law, which led to the formation of its principles, many of which are accepted and developed in modern legal systems.

About the authors

Viktoriya A. Nikulina

National Research University «Higher School of Economics»

Author for correspondence.
Email: vnikulina@hse.ru
ORCID iD: 0000-0002-9415-7257
SPIN-code: 2664-0862

Candidate of Legal Sciences, Associate Professor of the Department of Constitutional and Administrative Law

17 Promyshlennaya str., Saint-Petersburg, 198099, Russian Federation

References

  1. Alexander, M. C. (2005) The Case for the Prosecution in the Ciceronian Era. Ann Arbor, University of Michigan Press.
  2. Anners, E. (1994) History of European Law. Transl. from the Swedish. Moscow, Institute of Europe. (in Russian).
  3. Berger, A. (1953) Encyclopedic Dictionary of Roman Law. Transactions of the American Philosophical Society. T. 43. Part 2. Philadelphia, American Philosophical Society.
  4. Briquel, D. (2007) Mythe et Révolution. La fabrication d’un récit: la naissance de la république à Rome. Bruxelles, Éditions Latomus. (in French).
  5. Chestnov, I.L. (2012) Postclassical Theory of Law. Monograph. Saint Petersburg, Alef-press Publ. (in Russian).
  6. Cicero, Marcus Tullius (1962) Speeches. In 2 Vols. T. II. Moscow, USSR Academy of Sciences. (in Russian).
  7. Cicero, Marcus Tullius (1964) Speeches: The speeches with an English translation. Harvard Univ. Press.
  8. Cornell, T. J. (1995) The Beginnings of Rome: Italy and Rome from the Bronze Age to the Punic Wars (c. 1000-264 BC). London, Routledge.
  9. Dementieva, V.V. (2009) Roman Identity: Formation of the Traditions of the Civil Collective. In: Ancient World and Archaeology. (13), 202-213. (in Russian).
  10. Dozhdev, D.V. (2020) Roman private law: textbook. Nersesyants V.S. (ed.). 3rd ed., rev. and additional. Moscow, Norma Publ: INFRA-M Publ. (in Russian).
  11. Dworkin, R. (2004) Taking Rights Seriously. Moscow, Russian Political Encyclopedia (ROSSPEN) Publ. (in Russian).
  12. Enman, A. (1896) The legend of the Roman kings, its origin and development. Saint Petersburg, Printing house of Balashev and Co. (in Russian).
  13. Franchosi, J. (2004) Institutional course of Roman law. Transl. from Italian; Rep. ed. Kofanov L.L. Moscow, Statut Publ. (in Russian).
  14. Forsythe, G. (2005) A Critical History of Early Rome: From Prehistory to the First Punic War. California, University of California Press.
  15. Harries, J. (2007) Law and crime in the Roman world (Key themes in ancient history). Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.
  16. Harries, J. (2013) Roman Law from City State to World Empire. In: Duindam J.F.J., Harries Jill, Humfress Caroline & Hurvitz Nimrod (eds.). Law and Empire: Ideas, Practices, Actors. Boston, Brill.
  17. Hutton, P. H. (2003) History as the art of memory. Transl. from English by. Bystrov V.Yu. Saint Petersburg, Vladimir Dal; University Fund. (in Russian).
  18. Ihering, R. (1875) Spirit of Roman law at various stages of its development. Part 1. Saint Petersburg, Printing by V. Bezovrazov and Co. (in Russian).
  19. Isaev, I. A. (2021) Metaphors of the Law: from “light” to “flame”. In: Lex Russica (Russian law). 6 (175), 23-35. (in Russian).
  20. Kashanina, T.V. (1999) Origin of State and Law. Modern interpretations and new approaches: Textbook. Moscow, Lawyer Publ. (in Russian).
  21. Kelsen, H. (2015) Pure Theory of Law. 2nd edition. Transl. from German by Antonov M. & Loesov S. Saint Petersburg, Alef Press Publ. (in Russian).
  22. Kovler, A.N. (2002) Anthropology of Law: Textbook for High Schools. Moscow, Norma Publ. (in Russian).
  23. Kofanov, L. L. (2006) Lex and ius: the emergence and development of Roman law in the VIII-III centuries BC. Moscow, Statut Publ. (in Russian).
  24. Kofanov, L.L. (2020) The system of Roman public law in the era of the Republic and the Principate. Moscow, Idrik Publ. (in Russian).
  25. Kudryavtsev, P. N. (1887) Ancient Roman history according to the study of Schwegler. Part I. Moscow, Printed by A.A. Kartsev. (in Russian).
  26. Mayak, I. L. (1983) Rome of the first kings. The Genesis of the Roman Polis. Moscow, Publishing House of Moscow University. (in Russian).
  27. McKnight, E. (2017) Offences Against the Res Publica: The Role of Public Interest Arguments in Cicero’s Forensic Speeches. Hague Journal on the Rule of Law. (9), 237-263.
  28. Mommsen, T. (1997) History of Rome. Vol. I. Rostov-on-Don, Phoenix Publ. (in Russian).
  29. Netushil, I.V. (2019) The legend of the twins Romulus and Remus. Moscow, URSS. Series Academy of Basic Research: History. (in Russian).
  30. Polyakov, A.V. & Timoshina, E.V. (2005) General Theory of Law: Textbook. Saint Petersburg, Publishing House of the Faculty of Law Saint Petersburg State University. (in Russian).
  31. Rulan, N. (1999) Legal Anthropology. Textbook for universities. Transl. from French. Rep. ed. V.S. Nersesyants. Moscow, Norma Publ. (in Russian).
  32. Sandberg, K. (2018) Monumenta, Documenta, Memoria: Remembering and Imagining the Past in Late Republican Rome. In: Kaj Sandberg & Christopher Smith, (eds.). Omnium Annalium Monumenta: Historical Writing and Historical Evidence in Republican Rome. Leiden and Boston, Brill, pp. 351-389.
  33. Sanfilippo, C. (2007) Course of Roman private law: textbook. Transl. from Italian. Makhankova I.I.; Dozhdev D.V. (ed.). Moscow, Norma Publ. (in Russian).
  34. Schwegler, A. (1853) Römische Geschichte. Tübingen, H. Laupp'schen Buchhandlung. (in German).
  35. Spiridonov, L.I. (1995) Theory of State and Law. Lecture course. Saint Petersburg, AOOT «TPNII-5» Publ. (in Russian).
  36. Strachan-Davidson, J. L. (1912) Problems of the Roman Criminal Law. T. 1. Oxford, Clarendon Press.
  37. Tsirkin, Yu.B. (2020) History of Rome. Imperial Rome in Tyrrhenian Italy. Saint Petersburg: Publishing house of the Russian State Pedagogical University named after A.I. Herzen. (in Russian).
  38. Vico, J. (1994) Foundations of the New Science. Transl. from Italian. Moscow, REFL-book - ISA. (in Russian).
  39. Walbank, F.W., Astin, A.E., Frederiksen, M.W. & Ogilvie R.M. (eds.). (2015) The Cambridge Ancient History. Vol. VII, Part 2: The Rise of Rome to 220 B.C. Transl. from English. Moscow, Ladomir Publ. (in Russian).
  40. Walt, S. (2011) Der Historiker C. Licinius Macer: Einleitung, Fragmente, Kommentar. Berlin, B.G. Teubner. (in German).
  41. Wiseman, T.P. (2014) Popular Memory. In: K. Galinsky (ed.). Memoria Romana: Memory in Rome and Rome in Memory. Ann Arbor, University of Michigan Press, pp. 43-62.
  42. Wiseman, T.P. (1998) Roman Drama and Roman History. Exeter, Devon, UK, University of Exeter Press.
  43. Wiseman, T.P. (2008) Unwritten Rome. Exeter, England, University of Exeter Press.

Copyright (c) 2022 Nikulina V.A.

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.

This website uses cookies

You consent to our cookies if you continue to use our website.

About Cookies