Sale of Child

The sale of children by their fathers is supposed to have been once of frequent occurrence. A child so sold did not become a slave, but passed into that condition of subordination known as mancipium, from which he could be released by enrollment on the census, even without the consent of his master.

A son so released from mancipium passed back under the potestas of his father. A son might thus have been indefinitely sold by his father but for the restriction of the Twelve Tables that a son sold three times should be free from the father. The fact that this restriction was enacted seems to indicate that repeated sales of children were common.

The practice of selling children became obsolete at an early date, and in later times only the form of a fictitious sale three times was employed as a mode of emancipation. A father whose child had committed a tort was permitted to surrender the child by mancipation to the injured party (noxal surrender), but even this right was abolished by Justinian.

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Effects of Marriage with Manus

Slavery by Birth

Mandate (Mandatum)