Special Cases of Slavery Arising under the Jus Civile

These were all cases in which a person lost his liberty as a punishment for crime or other wrong doing.

  1. A Roman citizen who, for the purpose of avoiding military service, failed to have himself enrolled on the census, thereby lost his liberty. As the census ceased under the Empire, this case was obsolete in the time of Justinian.
  2. Under the XII Tables a thief taken in the act might be adjudged to belong to the person from whom he stole. (Gaius, 3, 189). This case was rendered obsolete by the substitution by the praetor of the penalty of fourfold restitution.
  3. By the XII Tables an insolvent debtor might be sold into slavery.
  4. By the Senatus Consultum Claudianum a free woman who had repeated intercourse with a slave might be made the slave of his master. This was abolished by Justinian (Inst. III, 12, 1).
  5. A person condemned for crime to the mines or to fight with wild beasts were regarded as slaves of punishment {servi poena), having no other master. The infliction of slavery as a punishment for crime was abolished by Justinian (Nov. 22, 8).
  6. In certain cases a freedman again became the slave of his former master for undutiful conduct to him.
  7. A freeman over twenty years of age who caused himself to be sold as a slave in order to get a share of the price by collusion with the seller, thereby became a slave. The fact that the sale of a free person was legally void afforded an opportunity to commit this fraud.

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Effects of Marriage with Manus

Slavery by Birth

Mandate (Mandatum)