Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2940459568> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 67 of
67
with 100 items per page.
- W2940459568 endingPage "125" @default.
- W2940459568 startingPage "85" @default.
- W2940459568 abstract "At risk of being unable to encompass the huge, scattered legislative production on western cities and city councils which has been preserved for Late Antiquity, the present issue deliberately focused on the context of enunciation of the legal texts, choosing those concerned by municipal government as a testing ground. In particular, the fact that very frequently texts which were given universal validity as leges genarales by the Theodosian Code were originally issued as rescripts or parts of mandata radically changes our vision of the history of mutual relations between the Empire and cities. When put in such a perspective, those texts help to specify the limits in which the central power interfered with the autonomy of late Roman civic institutions and structures. Whether curials fled to the army, higher state bureaucracy, provincial offices or the Christian Church, the emperors unfailingly adopt the same doctrine: the absolute regard towards the eminent rights of the cities should result in returning any defector to the city council. Such a principle would have dried up the recruitment of state officials unless city councils had not, as it frequently happened, neglected their claim on fugitive members. A whole side of the laws on the municipal government regards the civic munera, i.e. obligations of decurions, corpora and rich enough privates designated for fulfilling public services, some needed by the city, others by the imperial government. Those public services privately provided include: registry office, land registry, public fiscal system, military enlistment (praebitio tironum), compulsory transportation and cursus publicus, police and justice, and hospitium. Another sector of this legislation regards the relations between the cities and the agents of imperial power (palatine scrinia, governors) in situations where the imperial law interferes with the inner life of the cities. A significant part of the imperial legislation aims at giving assistance to the cities in defence of their councils, of municipal lands. The long debated and much frustrating question of the confiscation for the benefit of the imperial finances of the cities'revenues drawn from their landed and real estate may well have found its final solution. Religious matters are par excellence fields of intervention or interference of the imperial law against the autonomy of the cities. The Christian emperors edicted restrictive laws about the exemption of clerics from municipal duties and the admission of curials in the Church. Similar rules were laid for hebraic priests." @default.
- W2940459568 created "2019-05-03" @default.
- W2940459568 creator A5050426546 @default.
- W2940459568 date "2019-01-01" @default.
- W2940459568 modified "2023-09-26" @default.
- W2940459568 title "La législation impériale sur les gouvernements municipaux dans l'Antiquité tardive" @default.
- W2940459568 doi "https://doi.org/10.1484/j.at.5.116750" @default.
- W2940459568 hasPublicationYear "2019" @default.
- W2940459568 type Work @default.
- W2940459568 sameAs 2940459568 @default.
- W2940459568 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W2940459568 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2940459568 hasAuthorship W2940459568A5050426546 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConcept C11413529 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConcept C138885662 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConcept C142362112 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConcept C15708023 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConcept C166957645 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConcept C17744445 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConcept C199539241 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConcept C2776211767 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConcept C2778137410 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConcept C2779343474 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConcept C3116431 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConcept C41008148 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConcept C41895202 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConcept C48103436 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConcept C51575053 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConcept C94625758 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConcept C95457728 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConceptScore W2940459568C11413529 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConceptScore W2940459568C138885662 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConceptScore W2940459568C142362112 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConceptScore W2940459568C15708023 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConceptScore W2940459568C166957645 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConceptScore W2940459568C17744445 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConceptScore W2940459568C199539241 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConceptScore W2940459568C2776211767 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConceptScore W2940459568C2778137410 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConceptScore W2940459568C2779343474 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConceptScore W2940459568C3116431 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConceptScore W2940459568C41008148 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConceptScore W2940459568C41895202 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConceptScore W2940459568C48103436 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConceptScore W2940459568C51575053 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConceptScore W2940459568C94625758 @default.
- W2940459568 hasConceptScore W2940459568C95457728 @default.
- W2940459568 hasLocation W29404595681 @default.
- W2940459568 hasOpenAccess W2940459568 @default.
- W2940459568 hasPrimaryLocation W29404595681 @default.
- W2940459568 hasRelatedWork W1980480954 @default.
- W2940459568 hasRelatedWork W1992609303 @default.
- W2940459568 hasRelatedWork W2049867576 @default.
- W2940459568 hasRelatedWork W2055311275 @default.
- W2940459568 hasRelatedWork W2086024102 @default.
- W2940459568 hasRelatedWork W2117961686 @default.
- W2940459568 hasRelatedWork W2319987881 @default.
- W2940459568 hasRelatedWork W2601039603 @default.
- W2940459568 hasRelatedWork W2890542164 @default.
- W2940459568 hasRelatedWork W2915840938 @default.
- W2940459568 hasVolume "26" @default.
- W2940459568 isParatext "false" @default.
- W2940459568 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W2940459568 magId "2940459568" @default.
- W2940459568 workType "article" @default.