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Roman citizenship

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Image:Toga Illustration.png
The toga was the characteristic garment of the Roman citizen. Roman women (who were not considered citizens) and Non-citizens were not allowed to wear one.

Citizenship in the time of Ancient Rome was a privileged status afforded to certain individuals with respect to laws, property, and governance.

It is hard to offer meaningful generalities across the entire Roman period, as the nature and availability of citizenship was affected by legislation, for example, the Lex Iulia. In the Roman Republic and later in the Roman Empire, people resident within the Roman state could roughly be divided into several classes:

  • Slaves were considered property and had only certain very limited rights as granted by statute. They could essentially be sold, tortured, maimed, raped and killed at the whim of their owners. The killing of a slave was a matter of property rather than a crime against a human being. Despite this, a freed slave, a freedman, was granted a form of full Roman citizenship.[1] It was the exceptional feature of ancient Rome that all slaves freed by Roman owners automatically received a limited Roman citizenship.
    • The natives who lived in territories conquered by Rome, citizens of Roman client states and Roman allies could be given a limited form of Roman citizenship such as the Latin Right. This amounted essentially to a second-class citizenship within the Roman state. The Latin Right is the most widely known but there were many other of such Rights.
    • A Roman citizen enjoyed the full range of benefits that flowed from his status. A citizen could, under certain exceptional circumstances, be deprived of his citizenship.
    • Women were a class apart whose status and rights in Roman society varied over time. However, they were never accorded all the rights of citizens; they were not allowed to vote, or stand for civil or public office, although they did have the right to own property. They were, at least in theory, subject to the almost complete power of their paterfamilias, in many legal areas having rights barely more than those of slaves. Inside of Republican high society the marriages were used to cement political alliances and therefore combined by the paterfamilias. The paterfamilias could even force a divorce and then remarry his daughter to another politician.

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    Various methods to obtain Roman citizenship

    The following are methods whereby people were granted citizenship in the Roman period:

    • Roman citizenship was granted automatically to every male child born in a legal marriage of a Roman citizen.
    • People who were from the Latin states were gradually granted citizenship.
    • Freed slaves were given a form of Roman citizenship; they were still obliged in some aspects to their former owner who became their patron.
    • The progeny of freed slaves automatically became full citizens.
    • A Roman legionary could not legally marry, therefore all his children were denied citizenship, unless and until the legionary married after his release from service.
    • Some individuals received citizenship because of their outstanding service to the Roman republic (later, the empire).
    • One could also buy citizenship, but at a very high price.
    • Auxilia were rewarded with Roman citizenship after their term of service. Their children also became citizens and could join the Roman legions.
    • Rome gradually granted citizenship to whole provinces; the third-century Constitutio Antoniniana granted it to all free male inhabitants of the Empire.

    Rights given

    Status under the Roman law varied according to classifications of citizen within the state. Various legal classes were defined by the individual legal rights that they enjoyed. The rights available to individual citizens of Rome varied over time, according to their place of origin, and their service to the state. However, the possible rights available to citizens and non-citizens with whom Roman law addressed are:

    • Jus Suffragiorum: The right to vote in the Comitia Tributa (Tribal assembly).
    • Jus Commercii: The right to make legal contracts, and to hold property, as a Roman citizen. The jus gentium (see below) also granted right of contract and property to non-citizens, but these rights differed from the rights of the Roman citizen.
    • Jus Connubii: The right to have a lawful marriage with a Roman citizen, to have the legal rights of the paterfamilias over the family, and to have the children of any such marriage be counted as Roman citizens.
    • Jus Honorum: The right to stand for civil or public office.
    • The right to sue in the courts.
    • The right to appeal from the decisions of magistrates.
    • The right to have a trial (to appear before a proper court and to defend oneself).
    • The right not to be subjected to torture or scourging. (The biblical book of Acts reports that the Apostle Paul used his Roman citizenship to avoid this while in Jerusalem. "As they stretched him out to flog him, Paul said to the centurion standing there, 'Is it legal for you to flog a Roman citizen who hasn't even been found guilty?' When the centurion heard this, he went to the commander and reported it...Those who were about to question him withdrew immediately. The commander himself was alarmed when he realized that he had put Paul, a Roman citizen, in chains.")
    • The right of immunity from some taxes and other legal obligations, especially local rules and regulations.[2]
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