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Roman Law in the State of Nature offers a new interpretation of the
foundations of Hugo Grotius' natural law theory. Surveying the
significance of texts from classical antiquity, Benjamin Straumann
argues that certain classical texts, namely Roman law and a
specifically Ciceronian brand of Stoicism, were particularly
influential for Grotius in the construction of his theory of
natural law. The book asserts that Grotius, a humanist steeped in
Roman law, had many reasons to employ Roman tradition and explains
how Cicero's ethics and Roman law - secular and offering a doctrine
of the freedom of the high seas - were ideally suited to provide
the rules for Grotius' state of nature. This fascinating new study
offers historians, classicists and political theorists a fresh
account of the historical background of the development of natural
rights, natural law and of international legal norms as they
emerged in seventeenth-century early modern Europe.
Roman Law in the State of Nature offers a new interpretation of the
foundations of Hugo Grotius' natural law theory. Surveying the
significance of texts from classical antiquity, Benjamin Straumann
argues that certain classical texts, namely Roman law and a
specifically Ciceronian brand of Stoicism, were particularly
influential for Grotius in the construction of his theory of
natural law. The book asserts that Grotius, a humanist steeped in
Roman law, had many reasons to employ Roman tradition and explains
how Cicero's ethics and Roman law - secular and offering a doctrine
of the freedom of the high seas - were ideally suited to provide
the rules for Grotius' state of nature. This fascinating new study
offers historians, classicists and political theorists a fresh
account of the historical background of the development of natural
rights, natural law and of international legal norms as they
emerged in seventeenth-century early modern Europe.
This book makes the important but surprisingly under-explored
argument that modern international law was built on the foundations
of Roman law and Roman imperial practice. A pivotal figure in this
enterprise was the Italian Protestant Alberico Gentili (1552-1608),
the great Oxford Roman law scholar and advocate, whose books and
legal opinions on law, war, empire, embassies and maritime issues
framed the emerging structure of inter-state relations in terms of
legal rights and remedies drawn from Roman law and built on Roman
and scholastic theories of just war and imperial justice. The
distinguished group of contributors examine the theory and practice
of justice and law in Roman imperial wars and administration;
Gentili's use of Roman materials; the influence on Gentili of
Vitoria and Bodin and his impact on Grotius and Hobbes; and the
ideas and influence of Gentili and other major thinkers from the
16th to the 18th centuries on issues such as preventive
self-defence, punishment, piracy, Europe's political and mercantile
relations with the Ottoman Empire, commerce and trade, European and
colonial wars and peace settlements, reason of state, justice, and
the relations between natural law and observed practice in
providing a normative and operational basis for international
relations and what became international law. This book explores
ways in which both the theory and the practice of international
politics was framed in ways that built on these Roman private law
and public law foundations, including concepts of rights. This
history of ideas has continuing importance as European ideas of
international law and empire have become global, partly accepted
and partly contested elsewhere in the world.
Crisis and Constitutionalism argues that the late Roman Republic
saw, for the first time in the history of political thought, the
development of a normative concept of constitutionthe concept of a
set of constitutional norms designed to guarantee and achieve
certain interests of the individual. Benjamin Straumann first
explores how a Roman concept of constitution emerged out of the
crisis and fall of the Roman Republic. The increasing use of
emergency measures and extraordinary powers in the late Republic
provoked Cicero and some of his contemporaries to turn a hitherto
implicit, inchoate constitutionalism into explicit constitutional
argument and theory. The crisis of the Republic thus brought about
a powerful constitutionalism and convinced Cicero to articulate the
norms and rights that would provide its substance; this typically
Roman constitutional theory is described in the second part of the
study. Straumann then discusses the reception of Roman
constitutional thought up to the late eighteenth century and the
American Founding, which gave rise to a new, constitutional
republicanism. This tradition was characterized by a keen interest
in the Roman Republics decline and fall, and an insistence on the
limits of virtue. The crisis of the Republic was interpreted as a
constitutional crisis, and the only remedy to escape the Republic's
fate - military despotism - was thought to lie, not in republican
virtue, but in Roman constitutionalism. By tracing Roman
constitutional thought from antiquity to the modern era, this
unique study makes a substantial contribution to our understanding
of Roman political thought and its reception.
Crisis and Constitutionalism argues that the late Roman Republic
saw, for the first time in the history of political thought, the
development of a normative concept of constitution-the concept of a
set of constitutional norms designed to guarantee and achieve
certain interests of the individual. Benjamin Straumann first
explores how a Roman concept of constitution emerged out of the
crisis and fall of the Roman Republic. The increasing use of
emergency measures and extraordinary powers in the late Republic
provoked Cicero and some of his contemporaries to turn a hitherto
implicit, inchoate constitutionalism into explicit constitutional
argument and theory. The crisis of the Republic thus brought about
a powerful constitutionalism and convinced Cicero to articulate the
norms and rights that would provide its substance; this typically
Roman constitutional theory is described in the second part of the
study. Straumann then discusses the reception of Roman
constitutional thought up to the late eighteenth century and the
American Founding, which gave rise to a new, constitutional
republicanism. This tradition was characterized by a keen interest
in the Roman Republic's decline and fall, and an insistence on the
limits of virtue. The crisis of the Republic was interpreted as a
constitutional crisis, and the only remedy to escape the Republic's
fate-military despotism-was thought to lie, not in republican
virtue, but in Roman constitutionalism. By tracing Roman
constitutional thought from antiquity to the modern era, this
unique study makes a substantial contribution to our understanding
of Roman political thought and its reception.
Was the Roman Empire just? Did Rome acquire her territories through
just wars, and did Rome's rule exert a civilizing effect,
ultimately beneficial for its subjects? Or was Roman imperialism a
massive injustice - the bellicose conquest and absorption of
countless peoples and large swaths of territory under false
pretences, driven by greed and a lust for domination and glory? In
The Wars of the Romans (1599), the important Italian jurist and
Regius Professor of Civil Law at Oxford University Alberico Gentili
(1552-1608) argues both sides of the debate. In the first book he
lays out the case against the justice of the Roman Empire, and in
the second book the case for.
Gentili's polemic and highly engaging work helped pioneer the use
of Roman law and just war theory in what became a leading
international law approach to the enduring questions of the justice
of empire. Writing in the wake of the first wave of European
colonial expansion in the Americas, and relying on models of the
controversy about Roman imperialism from Cicero to Lactantius and
Augustine, Gentili developed the arguments which were to become
pivotal in normative debates concerning imperialism. In this work
Gentili, a consummate Roman law scholar, frames the moral and
practical issues in a combination of Roman legal terminology and
the language of natural law, a combination which was to prove
highly influential in the literature from Grotius onward on natural
law, the law of nations and what eventually became international
law.
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