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There are two purposes to this chapter. Having formulated in the previous chapter an understanding of the types of cases that advocates accepted, we now must consider the impact that such an undertaking had on an advocate’s life

In the first broad section, time is the hub to which the various topics con­nect, the central questions being how much time did an advocate allot for each case, and what activities made up his involvement? The second purpose of this chapter is to study specifically the advocate’s participation during a case within the courtroom itself.

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Source: Bablitz L.. Actors and audience in the Roman courtroom. Routledge,2007. — 290 p.. 2007

More on the topic There are two purposes to this chapter. Having formulated in the previous chapter an understanding of the types of cases that advocates accepted, we now must consider the impact that such an undertaking had on an advocate’s life:

  1. The cases of advocates
  2. CHAPTER XXV. MANUMISSION. SPECIAL CASES AND MINOR RESTRICTIONS.
  3. CHAPTER XVI. SPECIAL CASES {amt.). S. COMMUNIS. COMBINATIONS OF DIFFERENT INTERESTS.
  4. CHAPTER X. SPECIAL CASES. SERVUS VICARIUS. S. FILIIFAMILIAS. S. IN BONIS. S. LATINI.
  5. CHAPTER XIV. SPECIAL CASES (coni.). S. PUBLICUS POPULI ROMANI, FISCI, ETC. S. UNIVERSITATIS.
  6. CHAPTER XI. SPECIAL CASES (cont.). S. HEREDITARIUS. S. DOTALIS. S. DEPOSITUS, COMMODATUS, LOCATUS, IN PRECARIO.
  7. CHAPTER XIII. SPECIAL CASES (cont.}. SERVUS PIGNERATICIUS, FIDUCIAE DATUS, STATULIBER, CAPTIVUS.
  8. CHAPTER XXVII. FREEDOM WITHOUT MANUMISSION. CASES OF UNCOMPLETED MANUMISSION.
  9. The Good Life v. the Moral Life
  10. CHAPTER XII. SPECIAL CASES (coni.). SERVUS FUGITIVUS. S. PRO DERELICTO. S. POENAE. S. PENDENTE USUFRUCTU MANUMISSUS. S. PIG­NERATUS MANUMISSUS.
  11. CHAPTER XV. SPECIAL CASES (cont.). BONA FIDE SERVIENS. SERVUS MALA FIDE POSSESSUS. SERVUS FRUCTUARIUS, USUARIUS.
  12. 4. Types of norms and types of values
  13. Provincial and out-of-town advocates
  14. THE ADVOCATE’S ROLE OUTSIDE AND IN THE COURTROOM
  15. The inhabitants of Rome lived with the reality of legal courts scattered throughout the public and private spaces of the city, and perhaps even came to resent, on occasion, the impact such courts made on traffic flow during the busy hours of the day.
  16. Types of people present
  17. UNDERSTANDING THE CONSTITUTIO ANTONINIANA