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Ancient city : a study on the religions, laws, and institutions of Greece and Rome / Fustel de Coulanges ; translated by Willard Small.

HeinOnline Religion and the Law Available online

HeinOnline Religion and the Law

HeinOnline World Constitutions Illustrated Available online

HeinOnline World Constitutions Illustrated
Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Fustel de Coulanges, 1830-1889, author.
Contributor:
Small, Willard, 1830-1904, translator.
Series:
Doubleday anchor books ; A76.
Doubleday anchor books ; A76
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Cities and towns, Ancient--Greece.
Greece--Politics and government.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (396 pages).
Other Title:
Ancient city
Place of Publication:
Garden City, New York : Doubleday, 1956.
Summary:
Study of Relgious and civil institutions of ancient.
Contents:
Book first : Ancient beliefs : Notions about the soul and death
The worship of the dead
The sacred fire
The domestic religion
Book second : The family : Religion was the constituent principle of the ancient family
Marriage among the Greeks and Romans
The continuity of the family
Celibacy forbidden
Divorce in case of sterility
Inequality between the son and the daughter
Adoption and emancipation
Kinship
What the Romans called agnation
The right of property
The right of succession : Nature and principle of the right of succession among the ancients
The son, not the daughter, inherits
Collateral succession
Effects of adoption and emancipation
Wills were not known originally
The right of primogeniture
Authority in the family : Principle and nature of paternal power among the ancients
Enumeration of the rights composing the paternal power among the ancients
Enumeration of the rights composing the paternal power
Morals of the ancient family
The Gens at Rome and in Greece : What we learn of the Gens from ancient documents -An examination of the opinions that have been offered to explain the Roman Gens
The Gens was nothing but the family still holding to its primitive organization and its unity
The family (Gens) was at first the only form of society
Book third : The city : The Phratry and the Cury
the tribe
New Religious beliefs : The gods of physical nature
Relation of this religion to the development of human society
The city is formed
The city
Urbs
Worship of the founder
Legend of Eneas
The gods of the city
The religion of the city : The public meals
The festivals and the calender
The census
Religion in the assembly, in the senate, in the tribunal, in the army
The triumph
The rituals and the annals
Government of the city
The king : Religious authority of the king
Political authority of the king
The magistracy
The law
The citizen and the stranger
Patriotism
Exile
The municipal spirit
Relations between the cities
War
Peace
The alliance of the gods
The Roman
The Athenian
Omnipotence of the state
The ancients knew nothing of individual liberty
Book fourth : The revolutions : Patricians and clients
The plebeians
First revolution : The political power is taken from the kings, who still retain their religious authority
History of this Revolution at Sparta
History of this revolution at Athens
History of this revolution at Rome
The aristocracy governs the cities
Second revolution
Changes in the constitution of the family
The right of primogeniture disappears
The Gens is dismembered
The clients become free : What clientship was at first and how it was transformed
Clientship disappears at Athens
The work of Solon
Transformation of clientship at Rome
Third revolution
Plebs enter the city : General history of this revolution
Changes in private law
Code of the twelve tables
Code of Solon
The new principle of government
The public interest and the suffrage
An aristocracy of wealth attempts to establish itself
Establishment of the democracy
Fourth revolution
Rules of the democratic government
Examples of the Athenian democracy
Rich and poor
The democracy falls
Popular tyrants
Revolutions of Sparta
Book fifth : The municipal regime disappears : New beliefs
Philosophy changes the principles and rules of politics
The Roman conquest : A few words on the origin and population of Rome
First aggrandizement of Rome (753
350 B.C.)
How Rome acquired empire (350
14 B.C.)
Rome everywhere destroys the municipal system
The conquered nations successively enter the Roman city
Christianity changes the conditions of government.
Notes:
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.

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