Responder con el propio cuerpo: Testimonios de ejecución personal y retención del deudor por deudas en derecho romano clásico y postclásico
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Publication date
2025
Defense date
06/09/2024
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Universidad Complutense de Madrid
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El presente trabajo de investigación se titula “Responder con el propio cuerpo: Testimonios de ejecución personal y retención del deudor por deudas en derecho romano clásico y postclásico” y se centra en el status del régimen de la ejecución personal por deudas a partir de la reforma procesal de Augusto en el año 17 a.C., en concreto, por la Lex Iulia iudiciorum privatorum. La mayoría de los tratados de Derecho Romano afirman que la ejecución personal se habría reducido significativamente tras la promulgación por Augusto de la Lex Iulia iudiciorum privatorum. Hay quienes incluso sostienen que habría desparecido definitivamente, sin embargo, esta posición parece oponerse a la de todos los estudios específicos que existen sobre diversas prácticas llevadas a cabo durante la época clásica y el Bajo Imperio de las que parece inferirse que la ejecución personal no sólo subsistió, sino que se practicaba con frecuencia...
The present research paper is entitled "Responding with one's own body: Testimonies of personal execution and retention of the debtor for debts in classical and post-classical Roman law" and focuses on the status of the regime of personal execution for debts after Augustus' procedural reform in 17 BC, namely by the Lex Iulia iudiciorum privatorum. Most treatises on Roman law state that personal execution would have been significantly reduced after the promulgation by Augustus of the Lex Iuliaiudiciorum privatorum. Some even maintain that it would have disappeared definitively, however, this position seems to be opposed to that of all the specific studies that exist on various practices carried out during the classical period and the Lower Empire from which it seems to be inferred that personal execution not only subsisted but was frequently practised...
The present research paper is entitled "Responding with one's own body: Testimonies of personal execution and retention of the debtor for debts in classical and post-classical Roman law" and focuses on the status of the regime of personal execution for debts after Augustus' procedural reform in 17 BC, namely by the Lex Iulia iudiciorum privatorum. Most treatises on Roman law state that personal execution would have been significantly reduced after the promulgation by Augustus of the Lex Iuliaiudiciorum privatorum. Some even maintain that it would have disappeared definitively, however, this position seems to be opposed to that of all the specific studies that exist on various practices carried out during the classical period and the Lower Empire from which it seems to be inferred that personal execution not only subsisted but was frequently practised...