Roman
Citizenship, laws, justice, punishment by: Bella Crawford
Roman Citizenship
In the Roman Republic and later in the Roman Empire, people residing within the Roman state could roughly be divided into several classes: A male Roman citizenenjoyed a wide range of privileges and protections defined in detail by the Roman state.
Slavs had very little rights like owning land.
Women could do mostly everything but vote.
Men had every right.
Roman Laws
Slave had to follow the law to be a slave
Women had to fallow the law to not be able to vote
There were Marriage laws that stated you could only be married to one spouse at a time
There were criminal laws for anyone who was not following the laws of Rome
Roman laws
Roman Citizenship
Citizenship in ancient Rome was a privileged political and legal status afforded to unenslaved individuals with respect to laws, property, and governance. In the Roman Republic and later in the Roman Empire, people residing within the Roman state could roughly be divided into several classes:
Roman punishment
- Beheading (percussio securi)
- Strangling in prison (strangulatio)
- Throwing a criminal from that part of the prison called Robur (precipitatio de robore)
- Throwing a criminal from the Tarpeian rock (dejectio e rupe Tarpeia)
- Crucifixion (in crucem actio)
- Burying a person alive