Autore: Zarecki, Jonathan
Titolo: The Cypriot Exemption from Evocatio and the Character of Cicero’s Proconsulship
Rivista/Miscellanea: Greece & Rome, 59,1
Anno edizione: 2012
Pagine: 46-55
Parole chiave: Droit - Diritto - Law, Histoire - Storia - History, Politique - Politica - Politics
Descrizione: Scholars have taken slight notice (if they mention it at all) of Cicero’s interesting comment that Cypriots were exempt from evocatio, the summons of a defendant or witness to a legal proceeding by a Roman magistrate with imperium. While the legal ramifications of the ban on evocatio on Cyprus are clear, the origin of this exemption is not. The only explicit theory on its origin – Badian’s argument that the prohibition was part of Lentulus’ lex provinciae, a law for the formal organization of the province of Cyprus – has been influential, though it is based on tenuous evidence. Few ancient sources for Roman rule on Cyprus during the Late Republic have survived, and we must rely almost entirely on Cicero’s letters. Cicero’s correspondence, however, indicates (against Badian) that the ban on evocatio was a codicil of Cicero’s provincial edict, and not a part of either Lentulus’ lex provinciae or his provincial edict. Personal, political, and military considerations all played a role in Cicero’s decision to make the citizens of Cyprus exempt from being called to the administrative gathering for the dispensation of justice and other legal and political matters known as a conventus [Author].
Opere:
Link: https://libres.uncg.edu/ir/uncg/f/J_Zarecki_Cypriot_2013.pdf
Sigla autore: Zarecki 2012
Titolo: The Cypriot Exemption from Evocatio and the Character of Cicero’s Proconsulship
Rivista/Miscellanea: Greece & Rome, 59,1
Anno edizione: 2012
Pagine: 46-55
Parole chiave: Droit - Diritto - Law, Histoire - Storia - History, Politique - Politica - Politics
Descrizione: Scholars have taken slight notice (if they mention it at all) of Cicero’s interesting comment that Cypriots were exempt from evocatio, the summons of a defendant or witness to a legal proceeding by a Roman magistrate with imperium. While the legal ramifications of the ban on evocatio on Cyprus are clear, the origin of this exemption is not. The only explicit theory on its origin – Badian’s argument that the prohibition was part of Lentulus’ lex provinciae, a law for the formal organization of the province of Cyprus – has been influential, though it is based on tenuous evidence. Few ancient sources for Roman rule on Cyprus during the Late Republic have survived, and we must rely almost entirely on Cicero’s letters. Cicero’s correspondence, however, indicates (against Badian) that the ban on evocatio was a codicil of Cicero’s provincial edict, and not a part of either Lentulus’ lex provinciae or his provincial edict. Personal, political, and military considerations all played a role in Cicero’s decision to make the citizens of Cyprus exempt from being called to the administrative gathering for the dispensation of justice and other legal and political matters known as a conventus [Author].
Opere:
Link: https://libres.uncg.edu/ir/uncg/f/J_Zarecki_Cypriot_2013.pdf
Sigla autore: Zarecki 2012