Effect of Manumission

As already pointed out, under the early law a slave acquired by formal manumission both freedom and citizenship. An informal manumission had at first no legal effect ; then, through the agency of the praetor, it made the slave personally free, but conferred no property rights; then, by the lex Junia Norbana (A. D. 19), an informal manumitted slave was raised to the position of a Latin Colonist; and finally, by Justinian's legislation, all manumitted slaves, whether manumitted formally or informally became both free and citizens.

A manumitted slave was called a freedman (libertinus). During the Republic there was but one class of freedmen — all were Roman citizens. Later two new classes were introduced, who did not enjoy the rank of citizenship. These were the Latini Juniani, created by the lex Junia Norbana, and the Dedititii, created by the lex Aelia Scntia (A. D. 4). The Deditifii were the lowest class of freedom, being manumitted slaves who were held subject to certain perpetual disabilities because of crimes committed by them while in slavery. These two inferior classes existed during the Empire dovi^n to the time of Justinian, who removed their disabilities, and restored the old single class of freedmen, all being Roman citizens (Inst. I, 5, 3).

But while a manumitted slave became a Roman citizen, he did not, at least during the Republic, acquire by manumission all the privileges of citizenship. In matters of private law he enjoyed the rights of a Roman citizen (the jus commercii and the jus connubii), but he did not have the public rights of a citizen. He did not enjoy capacity for office (jus honorum) and had only a limited right of suffrage (ius suffragii). (Sohm, 169, 170.)

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Effects of Marriage with Manus

Slavery by Birth

Mandate (Mandatum)