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A systematic and historical treatment of the civil and criminal
procedure of Cicero's time. At the same time, the author examines
the legal difficulties and contradictions found in Cicero's
writings on procedure. With a subject index and index to passages
found in Cicero's works. Of value to the student of Roman Law,
ciminal and military procedure and law, and the history of European
courts.
First published in 1904, this volume began what was to be the
magnum opus of the highly regarded Classical scholar, A.H.J.
Greenidge. Though published posthumously, the work stands alone as
a valuable contribution to Classical history. Beginning with a
socioeconomic history which exposes the conditions preceding and
determining the great conflict of interests to follow, Greenidge
then explores the story of Rome from Scipio Aemilianus and the
Gracchi brothers until the second election of Marius to the
consulship.
This Is A New Release Of The Original 1914 Edition.
This Is A New Release Of The Original 1894 Edition.
This Is A New Release Of The Original 1901 Edition.
This Is A New Release Of The Original 1894 Edition.
1901. Greenidge writes in the Preface that the leading design of
this book is to furnish students of Cicero's writings with a clue
to the chief legal difficulties which they will meet with in their
reading. These difficulties are far more numerous in the sphere of
procedure than in that of substantive law; and, as it was quite
impossible to write a work of moderate compass which dealt with
both branches of the subject, I have thought it better to confine
my attention mainly to the former; although, as will easily be
understood, it has proved impossible to deal thoroughly with the
procedure of the period which I have treated, without touching on
many questions of pure law; so intimately are these bound up with
the forms in which they were presented to the courts. Partial
Contents: Book I. Civil Procedure. Part I. The Courts of the
Monarchy and Early Republic; Part II. The Courts of the Ciceronian
Period; and Book II. Criminal Procedure.
1914. Greenidge writes in the Preface that this little book is
meant to be of assistance to those who find difficulty in mastering
what he has often regarded as the least attractive (probably
because it is the least understood) portion of Greek history.
Contents: Early Development of the Greek Constitutions through
Monarchy, Aristocracy, and Tyranny to Constitutional Government;
Colonisation-International Law; Classifications of
Constitutions-Oligarchy; Mixed Constitutions; Democracy; Federal
Governments; and Hellenism and the Fate of the Greek Constitutions.
See other titles by this author available from Kessinger
Publishing.
1894. Contents: On the Meaning of Existimatio; On the Meaning of
Infamia; The Censorian Infamia and Its Developments; The Praetorian
Infamia and Its Developments; Later History of the Infamia; Effects
of the Developed Conception of Infamia; Infamia in Its Application
to Women; Modes of Extinguishing Infamia; and Modified Forms of
Disqualification Based on Character and Standing. See other titles
by this author available from Kessinger Publishing.
1901. Greenidge writes in the Preface that the leading design of
this book is to furnish students of Cicero's writings with a clue
to the chief legal difficulties which they will meet with in their
reading. These difficulties are far more numerous in the sphere of
procedure than in that of substantive law; and, as it was quite
impossible to write a work of moderate compass which dealt with
both branches of the subject, I have thought it better to confine
my attention mainly to the former; although, as will easily be
understood, it has proved impossible to deal thoroughly with the
procedure of the period which I have treated, without touching on
many questions of pure law; so intimately are these bound up with
the forms in which they were presented to the courts. Partial
Contents: Book I. Civil Procedure. Part I. The Courts of the
Monarchy and Early Republic; Part II. The Courts of the Ciceronian
Period; and Book II. Criminal Procedure.
Text extracted from opening pages of book: of s antt &
ntiqtutirs A HANDBOOK GREEK CONSTITUTIONAL HISTORY A HANDBOOK GREEK
CONSTITUTIONAL HISTOBY A. PL J. - aEEEKLDGE, M. A. LATE lECTURER
AND 1' KLLOW OK ItEfiTlrtmb ( JOLLfitiK, A. ND crURER IN ANCIENT
IIIbTORY AT BRAhKNUblil ( JOLLLGU, OAKOIlD MACMILLAN AND CO.,
LIMITED ST. MARTIN'S STREET, LONDON 1914 TO MY FA THEE PEEFAGE THIS
little book Is meant to be of assistance to those who find
difficulty in mastering what I have often found regarded as the
least attractive, probably because it is the least understood,
portion of Greek history. The merest glance at its pages will be
sufficient to show how little it attempts to compete with such
standard works on Greek Political Antiquities as some of those
mentioned in the brief bibliography which I have given on page xv.
My debt to the works of Hermann, Schomann, Gilbert, and to the
scholars who have written in Handbooks or in Dictionaries of
Antiquities, is very great indeed \ for no one can move a step in
Greek Constitutional Law without consult ing authorities as
remarkable for the fulness as for the accuracy of their detail.
But, apart from the obviously smaller compass of this treatise, my
object has been somewhat different from that of most of these
writers. Completeness of detail could not be aimed at in a work of
this size; such an attempt would have changed what professes to be
a History into a too con cise, and therefore almost unintelligible,
Manual of Political Antiquities. My purpose has been to give in a
brief narrative form the main lines of development of Greek Public
Law, to represent the different types of states in the order of
their development, and to pay more attentionto the working than to
the mere structure of constitutions. I have attempted, in the
introductory chapter of this work, to offer some considera viii
OUTLINES OF GREEK CONSTITUTIONAL HISTORY tions which justify a
separate study of Greek political institu tions, so rarely
attempted in this country; consequently it is needless to
anticipate at this point the reasons for a procedure which,
perhaps, does not need defence. Throughout the work I have cited
the original passages from ancient authors on which every fact or
assertion of any degree of importance is based. Considerations of
space forbade more ample quotations from the texts of the original
authorities or a fuller discussion of passages which have given
rise to differences of interpretation. In citing inscriptions
references have been given to the Handbooks which I believed to be
most easily accessible to students. In no case have I referred to
the Corpus Inscriptiomm Graecarum or the Corpus Inscriptionum
AUkarwn where I knew that the inscription was to be found in the
Manuals of Hicks, Dittenberger, and Cauer. My thanks are due to my
wife for valuable suggestions in the correction of the proofs, for
a great share of the labour in preparing the Index, and for the map
which accompanies this voln e - A. R J. G. OXFOTID, June 1896.
CONTENTS ( The references are to the pages) CHAPTER I INTRODUCTORY
SECT. The constitutional aspect of Greek History, 1. Primary
political COP captions, 4; the State and the Constitution, 4;
political office, 6; the Citizen, 7; the Law, 8; public and piivate
law, 9; authoritative character of law, 10. CHAPTER II EARLY
DEVELOPMENT OP THE GREEK CONSTITUTIONS THROUGH MONARCHY,
ARISTOCRACY, AND TYRANNY TOCONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT Origin of the
city-state; the tribe and the clan, 12. Origin of Greek monarchy,
14; character of the heroic monarchy, 15; downfall of this
monarchy, 17. Transfer of government to the clans, 19; nature of
the clan, 20, The early aristocracies, 21; tendency to oligarchic
govern ment, 22. Impulse to colonisation, 24. Early Greek tyranny,
25; its origin, 25; the tyrants, 27; character of their government,
30; how far was it constitutional, 31; political and social
consequences of their rule, 32; downfall of tyranny, 33. Rise of
con
1894. Contents: On the Meaning of Existimatio; On the Meaning of
Infamia; The Censorian Infamia and Its Developments; The Praetorian
Infamia and Its Developments; Later History of the Infamia; Effects
of the Developed Conception of Infamia; Infamia in Its Application
to Women; Modes of Extinguishing Infamia; and Modified Forms of
Disqualification Based on Character and Standing. See other titles
by this author available from Kessinger Publishing.
The democratic principle in its extreme form is the assertation
that the mere fact of free birth is alone sufficient to constitute
a claim to all offices. It is never the claim of a majority to
rule, but it is the demand that every one, whether rich or poor,
high- or low-born, shall be equally represented in the
constitution. This is what Aristotle calls the principle of
numerical equality.-from "Chapter VI: Democracy"One of the most
renowned classical scholars of the turn of the 20th century here
offers a lucid and highly readable overview of a difficult and
little understood aspect of Greek history: its public law, not just
how it was structured but how it behaved in action. This 1896
book-perfect for university students, amateur historians, and
readers of the history of the law-covers the full range of Greek
legal development, from the origin of the city-state and the
beginnings of the Greek monarchy to the social and political
institutions of the far-flung Greek civilization to the rise of
federalism and its long-term historical impact on the cultures that
came after.British classical scholar A.H.J. GREENIDGE was a
lecturer in ancient history at Brasenose College, Oxford. He is
also the author of Roman Public and Private Law (1894), Legal
Procedure in Cicero's Time (1901), and Roman Public Life (1901),
among many other works of ancient history.
1894. Contents: On the Meaning of Existimatio; On the Meaning of
Infamia; The Censorian Infamia and Its Developments; The Praetorian
Infamia and Its Developments; Later History of the Infamia; Effects
of the Developed Conception of Infamia; Infamia in Its Application
to Women; Modes of Extinguishing Infamia; and Modified Forms of
Disqualification Based on Character and Standing. See other titles
by this author available from Kessinger Publishing.
1901. Greenidge writes in the Preface that the leading design of
this book is to furnish students of Cicero's writings with a clue
to the chief legal difficulties which they will meet with in their
reading. These difficulties are far more numerous in the sphere of
procedure than in that of substantive law; and, as it was quite
impossible to write a work of moderate compass which dealt with
both branches of the subject, I have thought it better to confine
my attention mainly to the former; although, as will easily be
understood, it has proved impossible to deal thoroughly with the
procedure of the period which I have treated, without touching on
many questions of pure law; so intimately are these bound up with
the forms in which they were presented to the courts. Partial
Contents: Book I. Civil Procedure. Part I. The Courts of the
Monarchy and Early Republic; Part II. The Courts of the Ciceronian
Period; and Book II. Criminal Procedure.
1901. Greenidge writes in the Preface that the leading design of
this book is to furnish students of Cicero's writings with a clue
to the chief legal difficulties which they will meet with in their
reading. These difficulties are far more numerous in the sphere of
procedure than in that of substantive law; and, as it was quite
impossible to write a work of moderate compass which dealt with
both branches of the subject, I have thought it better to confine
my attention mainly to the former; although, as will easily be
understood, it has proved impossible to deal thoroughly with the
procedure of the period which I have treated, without touching on
many questions of pure law; so intimately are these bound up with
the forms in which they were presented to the courts. Partial
Contents: Book I. Civil Procedure. Part I. The Courts of the
Monarchy and Early Republic; Part II. The Courts of the Ciceronian
Period; and Book II. Criminal Procedure.
1914. Greenidge writes in the Preface that this little book is
meant to be of assistance to those who find difficulty in mastering
what he has often regarded as the least attractive (probably
because it is the least understood) portion of Greek history.
Contents: Early Development of the Greek Constitutions through
Monarchy, Aristocracy, and Tyranny to Constitutional Government;
Colonisation-International Law; Classifications of
Constitutions-Oligarchy; Mixed Constitutions; Democracy; Federal
Governments; and Hellenism and the Fate of the Greek Constitutions.
See other titles by this author available from Kessinger
Publishing.
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