Williamson C.. The laws of the Roman people: public law in the expansion and decline of the Roman Republic. University of Michigan,2005. — 535 p.. 2005
In 91, THE Italian allies of Rome broke away and formed a federation they named Italia.1 The basis for the most serious revolt ever to shake the Roman state was the strident desire on the part of the allies, who now made up the bulk of the Roman army, for equal standing with the Romans or the destruction of Rome.2 Led by the Samnites and Marsi, the Italian federation included most of the Oscan-speaking peoples of central and southern Italy. While other allies did not join them—including most Latins and Etruscans, the two largest groups in Italy after the Romans, as well as the Umbrians, Greeks, and Bruttians—their loyalties were nonetheless equivocal.3 At the Paelignian town of Corfinium, situated high in the central Apennines, the allies established a federal center, called Italica, on the model of Rome.4 Corfinium became the site of a federal mint, the central meeting place of a Senate drawn from elite members of the different tribal states, and the muster point for the Italian legions called up to fight the Romans. A brief and bloody war ensued that ended formally for most participants only after the Romans, in 90, called together in a voting assembly to consider a proposal of law, agreed as a people to a major redirection of their goals on granting citizenship. Loyal allies would henceforth be brought into the Roman state as full citizens. By the end of 89, Italia was dissolved.
Books and textbooks on the discipline Roman law:
- Beggiato Martina et alii (eds.). Iulius Paulus: Ad edictum libri IV-XVI. Roma – Bristol: L'Erma di Bretschneider,2022. — 380 p. - 2022 ãîä
- Verhagen Hendrik L.. Security and Credit in Roman Law: The Historical Evolution of Pignus and Hypotheca. Oxford University Press,2022. — 448 p. - 2022 ãîä
- Du Plessis Paul J. Borkowski's. Textbook on Roman Law. Oxford University Press,2020. — 440 p. - 2020 ãîä
- Beggio T.. Paul Koschaker (1879-1951): Rediscovering the Roman Foundations of European Legal Tradition. Heidelberg: Universitätsverlag Winter,2018. — 334 p. - 2018 ãîä
- Domingo Rafael. Roman Law: An Introduction. Routledge,2018. — 252 p. - 2018 ãîä
- Mousourakis G.. Roman Law and the Origins of the Civil Law Tradition. Springer,2015. — 339 p. - 2015 ãîä
- Birks Peter. Roman Law of Obligations. Oxford University Press,2014. — 303 p. - 2014 ãîä
- Plessis P.J. du. (ed.). New Frontiers: Law and Society in the Roman World. Edinburgh University Press,2013. — 256 p. - 2013 ãîä
- Du Plessis P.. Studying Roman Law. Bristol Classical Press,2012. — 150 p. - 2012 ãîä
- Mousourakis G.. Fundamentals of Roman Private Law. Springer, 2012.— 366 p. - 2012 ãîä
- Bablitz L.. Actors and audience in the Roman courtroom. Routledge,2007. — 290 p. - 2007 ãîä
- Cairns J.W., Plessis P.J. du. (eds.). Beyond Dogmatics: Law and Society in the Roman World. Edinburgh University Press,2007. - 236 p. - 2007 ãîä
- Oudshoorn Jacobine G.. The Relationship between Roman and Local Law in the Babatha and Salome Komaise Archives. IDC Publishers,2007. — 456 p. - 2007 ãîä
- Stein P.. Roman Law in European History. Cambridge University Press,2004. — 149 p. - 2004 ãîä
- Zimmermann R.. Roman law, Contemporary law, European law. Oxford University Press,2004. — 113 p. - 2004 ãîä
- Mousourakis George. The Historical and Institutional Context of Roman Law. Routledge,2003. — 480 p. - 2003 ãîä
- Baumann Richard A.. Human Rights in Ancient Rome. Routledge,2000. — 208 p. — (Routledge Classical Monographs) - 2000 ãîä
- Crook J.A.. Legal advocacy in the Roman world. Cornell University Press,1995. — 228 p. - 1995 ãîä
- Zimmermann R.. The Law of Obligations. Roman Foundations of the Civilian Tradition. Juta & Co, Ltd,1992. — 1241 p. - 1992 ãîä
- Schiller A.A.. Roman Law: Mechanisms of Development. Mouton Publishers,1978. — 606 p. - 1978 ãîä