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Family and inheritance in the Augustan marriage laws*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2013
Extract
“Finally in his sixth consulship Caesar Augustus, securely in control, cancelled the orders he had issued as triumvir and laid the legal foundations for use in peace under principate. The bonds were more bitter from then on; watchers were set over us, with the inducement of rewards from the lex Papia Poppaea; the aim was that if men shirked the privileges of parenthood, the state as common parent should lay claim to their vacant possessions”.
Tacitus Annals 3.28.
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- Copyright © The Author(s). Published online by Cambridge University Press 1981
References
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Brunt, P. A., ‘The Augustan Marriage Laws’, in Italian manpower (1971), Appendix 9, 558–66Google Scholar
Goody, J., Thirsk, J., Thompson, E. P., Family and inheritance rural society in Western Europe 1200–1800 (1916)Google Scholar
Nörr, D., ‘Planung in der Antike Uber die Ehegesetze des Augustus’, in Freiheit und Sachzwang Beitr. zu Ehren Helmut Schelskys (1977)Google Scholar
Raditsa, L. F., ‘Augustus' legislation concerning marriage, procreation, love affairs and adultery”, ANRW II 13 (1980) 278–339Google Scholar
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