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CODE 55672
ACADEMIC YEAR 2020/2021
CREDITS
SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINARY SECTOR IUS/18
LANGUAGE Italian
TEACHING LOCATION
  • GENOVA
SEMESTER 1° Semester
TEACHING MATERIALS AULAWEB

OVERVIEW

The subject of Institutions of Roman law concerns the study of the history of Roman juridical experience from its origins (VIII century BC) to the age of Justinian (VI century AD). Teaching is fundamental as it constitutes the basis for dealing with positive law subjects, allowing students to know the first logically coherent system of rules of conduct and to understand the inseparable link between law and legal science.

AIMS AND CONTENT

LEARNING OUTCOMES

The course aims to guide the knowledge and understanding of the main aspects of Roman legal experience, through its cultural tradition and practical applications, at the basis of the legal systems of continental Europe. In the context of appropriate information on the sources that can be used and on the history of the constitution of ancient Rome, it concerns the development of private, substantive and procedural law, with particular regard to the institutes relating to the organization of the Degree Course.

AIMS AND LEARNING OUTCOMES

The teaching of Institutions of Roman law aims, in a first part, to provide students with basic notions within the relevant historical context with specific reference to the following topics:

Module I: - Constitutional structures in the various periods; - Production and interpretation of law: analysis of the sources from archaic law to the compilation of Justinian.

Module II: the course will focus on Roman procedural law and will address the following topics: - Legis actiones; -  Trial per formulas; - Cognitio extra ordinem.

Finally, the following modules will concern Roman private law and the sectors concerned will be:

- People and family (Module III); - Real rights and possession (Module IV); - The law of obligation (Module V).

Individual study, attendance (in presence and / or remotely) and participation in the proposed training activities will allow the student to achieve the following learning outcomes: - Understand and remember the main notions underlying the Roman legal system; - Understand the institutions of Roman private law and their operating mechanisms; - Express oneself in appropriate legal technical language.

On the basis of the knowledge acquired, then, the student must be able to: - Identify and apply the main reference standards starting from the analysis of specific cases drawn from the legal experience of ancient Rome; - Read and examine critically, with autonomy of judgment, the typical cases of Roman law (always provided in Italian translation)

PREREQUISITES

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TEACHING METHODS

The course consists of lectures and remote lessons taught in synchronous and asynchronous mode, for a minimum of 36 hours (equal to 6 ECTS), during which the main theoretical notions of Roman law will be presented and analyzed, without forgetting the analysis and discussion of the cases handed down by the jurists of the time. The texts subject to specific study will be uploaded on the Aulaweb platform.

SYLLABUS/CONTENT

The constitutional structures of Monarchy and Republic. The patrician-plebeian conflict. The Republic of expansion in the Mediterranean. The Empire. The Late Empire. The production and interpretation of the law. The mores and the pontifical activity. The Twelve Tables. Leges rogatae, plebiscita and senatusconsulta. The edict of the praetor. Jurisprudence. Imperial constitutions and their collections. Justinian's compilation activity.

Legis actiones. Cognition actions: the action "with oath / bet"; the action "at the request of a judge or an arbitrator"; the action "by intimation". The executive actions: the action "by laying on of the hand"; the "for pledge" action. Litigare per formulas. The creation and affirmation of formulae. The two phases of the trial: in iure "in court" and apud iudicem "with the judge". The execution of the sentence. Formulae of actions of ius civil. Formulae of pretorious actions in ius: ficticiae; with subject transposition. Formulae in factum. Illicit acts and private criminal actions. The exceptions in favor of the defendant. Means complementary to the process: interdicta; missio in possessionem; stipulatio praetoria; restitutio in integrum.

Gentes, agnati, pater familias. The slaves. Free subordinates of the pater familias: children and women in manu. Tutela and cura. Marriage, divorce and dowry.

Real rights. The notion of possession. The 'properties' and their judicial protection. The ways of purchasing the property. Real rights over what others do: easements, usufruct, use, pledge and mortgage.

Origins, definition and content of the notion of obligation. Types of obligations. The birth of the notion of contract. The classifications of the sources of the obligations. The responsability. Obligationes re contractae: mortgage, deposit, loan and pledge. Obligationes verbis contractae: sponsio / stipulatio, dowry pronunciation, promise of the freedman. Obligationes consensu contractae: sale, lease, societas, mandate. Unnamed contracts. Obligationes ex delicto: theft, robbery, injury, damage. The extinction of obligations.

RECOMMENDED READING/BIBLIOGRAPHY

The slides used and the texts subject to specific discussion and analysis will be available on Aulaweb.

For attending students (the program is aimed at those who are present at least 2/3 of the hours of lessons, the minimum and mandatory limit established by the Regulations, and above all, follow the course with fruitful commitment): complete notes of the lessons of this semester, integrated with the study of the pages of A.D. Manfredini, Istituzioni di diritto romano, amended reprint of the III ed., Turin, Giappichelli, 2007, to which reference will be made during the course.

For non-attending students: G. Nicosia, Profili istituzionali di diritto privato romano, Catania, Libreria Editrice Torre, 2017, pp. 1-350, 365-412.

TEACHERS AND EXAM BOARD

Exam Board

STEFANIA RONCATI (President)

GLORIA VIARENGO

JAMES CAIMI (Substitute)

LUCA INGALLINA (Substitute)

FABRIZIO LOMBARDO (Substitute)

LESSONS

LESSONS START

I semester from September 14th to December 4th 2020
 

Class schedule

The timetable for this course is available here: Portale EasyAcademy

EXAMS

EXAM DESCRIPTION

The exam, both for attending and non-attending students, takes place in an oral form and normally consist in four / five open questions. The first question, which may concern any topic of the program, always proposes a treatment of a certain breadth. This is followed by questions of a more limited scope, which are intended to calibrate the final evaluation with more precision.

Its performance in presence or remotely will depend on the decisions of the Rector and / or the Director of the Department.

ASSESSMENT METHODS

The oral exam aims to verify the student's actual knowledge and assimilation of the basic theoretical notions, together with his / her legal reasoning ability. Through general theoretical questions and the analysis of concrete cases - which for students attending always draw inspiration from the teaching activity carried out in the classroom - it will be verified whether the student is able to:

- identify and define legal concepts using appropriate technical language;

- identify, distinguish, know and assimilate the way of working of the ancient jurists;

- understand and interpret, with a critical spirit and independent judgment, the main texts of some cases discussed in class;

- read and critically examine some cases of Roman law.

Exam schedule

Data appello Orario Luogo Degree type Note
07/01/2021 09:30 GENOVA Orale
01/02/2021 09:30 GENOVA Orale
10/05/2021 09:30 GENOVA Orale
24/05/2021 09:30 GENOVA Orale
14/06/2021 09:30 GENOVA Orale
05/07/2021 09:30 GENOVA Orale
01/09/2021 09:30 GENOVA Orale

FURTHER INFORMATION

Further communications relating to the Course will be provided through Notices published in Aulaweb.