Roman Law and the Legal World of the Romans
8. Legal (In)equality EEE
T he american declaration of Independence asserts that “all men are created equal.” Similar ideas have led most modern legal systems to the ideal (not always lived up to) of equal treatment by the law. Roman society, by contrast, took for granted the idea that different people had different value. Consequently, the Roman legal system recognized or created a variety of inequalities. Most of these are described elsewhere in this book (especially in Chapter 10), but a brief summary in one place will be in order. Women were under restrictions that did not apply to men. Younger and younger children had pro gressively fewer rights. For political reasons, some people were free (including ex-slaves) and some enslaved. Among the free people, different ones were citizens of different communities. All of these distinctions produced different sets of rights. The blind and the deaf were also restricted, as were the “insane.” The wealthy had explicit political privileges, though generally not legal ones. Magistrates did have some legal advantages. Starting from the first century ad, there was a more lenient bankruptcy procedure available to “notable” persons. There is even some evidence that the praetor might (sometimes) simply
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