Loss of Freedom

A Roman citizen could not legally be sold into slavery, but he might become a slave by condemnation for crime or by being captured by an enemy. With the loss of freedom the legal personality was extinguished. In the case of the capture of a Roman citizen by a hostile people, however, there was recognized what was called the jus postliminii or the right of postliminium.

If the captive returned from captivity he enjoyed once more, from the moment of his return, all the rights that he had lost by his capture. By the fiction of postliminium the returned captive was considered as never having been in captivity, and so far as possible, was placed in the same position as if he had never been captured.

If, however, he died in captivity, he, of course, died a slave and not a Roman citizen. This might seriously affect his family, for a slave could have no heirs nor make a will. To overcome these difficulties, the lex Cornelia (B. C. 81) extended the fiction of postliminium by providing that if the captive died in captivity, his death should be considered to date, not from actual moment of death, but from the moment of capture, so that although he lived a slave, he had previously died free.

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Effects of Marriage with Manus

Slavery by Birth

Mandate (Mandatum)