Lex duodecim tabularum

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Information for Authority record
Name (Hebrew)
משפט שנים עשר הלוחות
Name (Latin)
Lex duodecim tabularum
Name (Arabic)
משפט שנים עשר הלוחות
Other forms of name
Lex XII tabularum
Leges XII tabularum
Twelve tables
Law of the Twelve Tables
Leges duodecim tabularum
Tabulae duodecim
Duodecim tabulae
XII tavole
"Shih erh piao fa"
MARC
MARC
Other Identifiers
VIAF: 178266150
Wikidata: Q203686
Library of congress: n 87848524
Old Aleph NLI id: 624432
Sources of Information
  • Poma, G. Tra legislatori e tiranni, 1984:
  • Fontes iuris Romani Antejustiniani, pt. 1 (ed. S. Riccobono), 1941: p. [21] half title (Lex XII tabularum); running title p. 27-75 (XII tabulae)
  • LC data base, 6-10-88
  • Oxford class. dict.
  • New Enc. Brit.
  • Enc. Amer.
  • Der kl. Pauly
  • Harper's dict. of class. lit.
  • Chʻü, K.S. Lo-ma fa yüan li, 1988:
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Wikipedia description:

The Laws of the Twelve Tables (Latin: lex duodecim tabularum) was the legislation that stood at the foundation of Roman law. Formally promulgated in 449 BC, the Tables consolidated earlier traditions into an enduring set of laws. In the Forum, "The Twelve Tables" stated the rights and duties of the Roman citizen. Their formulation was the result of considerable agitation by the plebeian class, who had hitherto been excluded from the higher benefits of the Republic. The law had previously been unwritten and exclusively interpreted by upper-class priests, the pontifices. Something of the regard with which later Romans came to view the Twelve Tables is captured in the remark of Cicero (106–43 BC) that the "Twelve Tables...seems to me, assuredly to surpass the libraries of all the philosophers, both in weight of authority, and in plenitude of utility". Cicero scarcely exaggerated; the Twelve Tables formed the basis of Roman law for a thousand years. The Twelve Tables are sufficiently comprehensive that their substance has been described as a 'code', although modern scholars consider this characterization exaggerated. The Tables 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. The provisions were often highly specific and diverse.

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