Legal Evidence

J. Gardner
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Roman law is documented in greater detail than that of any ancient Greek state, principally through an enormous corpus of legal writings. The four most important are the so-called Twelve Tables, the Institutes of Gaius, the Codex of Justinian, and Justinian’s Digest. Legal writings can shed important light on slavery in Roman life, especially when combined with the evidence of inscriptions; but much of their content is anecdotal, sometimes hypothetical. Frequency of mention of a given situation in juristic writings does not necessarily correspond to its frequency in litigation, let alone in everyday life. Moreover, little in Roman law is directly or exclusively concerned with slaves—there is, arguably, no Roman law of slavery.
法律证据
罗马法的文献比任何古希腊国家的文献都要详细,主要是通过大量的法律著作。最重要的四本是所谓的《十二表》、《盖乌斯要略》、《查士丁尼手抄本》和《查士丁尼文摘》。法律著作可以对罗马生活中的奴隶制提供重要的启示,特别是当与铭文证据相结合时;但他们的大部分内容都是轶事,有时是假设。在法律著作中提及特定情况的频率不一定与诉讼中的频率相对应,更不用说在日常生活中了。此外,罗马法中很少直接或专门与奴隶有关——可以说,没有关于奴隶制的罗马法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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