Redirected from Twelve tables
According to traditional, probably semi-legendary history recorded in Livy, during the earliest period of the Roman Republic the laws were kept secret by the pontifices and other representatives of the patrician class, and were enforced with untoward severity, especially against the lower plebeian cass. A plebeian named Terentilius proposed in 462 BC that an official legal code should be published, so that plebeians could not be surprised and would know the law.
For several years the patricians opposed this request, but in 451 BC a decemvir, or board of ten men, was established to draw up a code. They allegedly sent an embassy to Athens to inspect the laws of Solon in their work. In 449 BC the Twelve Tables themselves were promulgated. They were literally drawn up on twelve wooden tablets which were posted in the Forum of Rome, so that all Romans could read and know them.
The laws of the Twelve Tables are not a comprehensive statement of all law; they are a sequence of definitions of various private rights and procedures. They generally took for granted such things as the institutions of the family, and various rituals for formal transactions.
For such an important document, it is somewhat surprising that the original text has been lost. The original tablets were destroyed when the Gauls under Brennus burnt Rome in 390 BC. There was no other official promulgation of them to survive, only unofficial editions. What we have of them today is brief excerpts and quotations from these laws in other authors. They are written in a strange, archaic, laconic, and somewhat childish and sing-song version of Latin. As such, though we cannot tell whether the quoted fragments accurately preserve the original form, what we have gives us some insight into the grammar of early Latin.
Like most other primitive laws, they combine strict and rigorous penalties with equally strict and rigorous procedural forms. In most of the surviving quotations from these texts, the original table that held them is not given. Scholars have guessed at where surviving fragments belong by comparing them with the few known attribution. It cannot be known with any certainty from what survives that the originals ever were organised this way, or even if they ever were organised by subject at all.
Excerpts from the Twelve Tables
If someone is called to court, let him go. If he doesn't go, a witness should be called. Only then should he be captured.
If he shirks or flees, he should be captured. If illness or old age is an impediment, let him be given a carriage. If he doesn't want it, it should not be covered.
Only a landowner should be surety for another landowner. But any citizen can be surety for a proletarian.
When parties have made an agreement, announce it. If they don't agree, they shall state their case in the Forum before noon. They shall plead together in person. After noon, let the judge pronounce. If both are present, the case shall end at sunset.
Serious illness. . . or else a day appointed with an enemy; . . . if any of these is an impediment for the judge or any party, on that day proceedings must end.
One who seeks the testimony from an absent person should wail before his doorway every third day.
A person who admits to owing money or has been adjudged to owe money must be given 30 days to pay.
After then, the creditor can lay hands on him and haul him to court. If he does not satisfy the judgment and no one is surety for him, the creditor may take the defendant with him in stocks or chains. He may bind him with weights of at least 15 pounds. The debtor may live where he wishes. If he does not live on his own, the creditor must give him a pound of wheat a day. If he wants to he may give more.
On the third market day, (creditors) may cut pieces. If they take more than their due, they do so with impunity.
Against an enemy, title is good forever.
An obviously deformed child must be put to death.
If a father sells his son into slavery three times, the son shall be free of his father.
If a person dies intestate without heirs, the nearest male kinsman shall inherit. If there is no near male kinsmen, his clansmen[?] shall inherit.
If someone goes mad, his nearest male kinsman shall have authority over his property.
When someone makes bond or conveyance and announces it orally, right shall be given.
No one must displace beams from buildings or vineyards.
Build roads; if they become delapidated, passersby can drive their beasts whereever they want.
If rainwater does damage, he shall be made to fix it by the judge.
Those who have sung an evil spell. . .
If one has maimed another and does not buy his peace, let there be retaliation in kind.
Someone who breaks another's bone by hand or club must pay 300 sesterces[?]; for a slave, 150; if he has done simple harm against another, 25.
Someone who charms away crops, or another's corn. . .
If a patron[?] defrauds his client, let him be outlawed.
If one has been called to witness, or hold the scales, unless he gives his testimony, let him be dishonoured and incapable of further testimony.
If a weapon flies unaimed from your hand, you will owe a ram.
Private laws must not be proposed.
No dead man may be cremated nor buried in the City.
When a man wins a crown, or his slave or cattle win a crown for him, . . .
No one must add gold (to a funeral pyre). But if his teeth are held together with gold, and are buried or burnt with him, it shall be with impunity.
Marriages between plebeians and patricians are forbidden.
If a slave has committed theft or harm. . . .
Someone who has brought a false claim shall be brought before three judges, and shall pay a double penalty.
Search Encyclopedia
|
Featured Article
|