2 chapters
38 minute read
Selected Chapters
2 chapters
PREFACE.
PREFACE.
In the following pages it has been my object to trace the history of the domain lands of Rome from the earliest times to the establishment of the Empire. The plan of the work has been to sketch the origin and growth of the idea of private property in land, the expansion of the ager publicus by the conquest of neighboring territories, and its absorption by means of sale, by gift to the people, and by the establishment of colonies, until wholly merged in private property. This necessarily involves
1 minute read
PUBLIC LANDS AND AGRARIAN LAWS OF THE ROMAN REPUBLIC.
PUBLIC LANDS AND AGRARIAN LAWS OF THE ROMAN REPUBLIC.
The Romans were a people that originally gave their almost exclusive attention to agriculture and stock-raising. The surnames of the most illustrious families, as Piso (miller), Porcius (swine-raiser), Lactucinius (lettuce-raiser), Stolo (a shoot), etc., prove this. To say that a man was a good farmer was, at one time, to bestow upon him the highest praise. [1] This character, joined to the spirit of order and private avarice which in a marked degree distinguished the Romans, has contributed to
37 minute read