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"P. Giss 40 and the Constitutio Antoniniana", H. I. Bell, "Journal of Egyptian Archaeology", vol. XXVIII, 1942 : [recenzja]

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SURVEY OF LITERATURE 8 1 citizenship to all citizens of the E m p i r e ( w h o were hot citizens) or w h e t h e r he excepted some groups f r o m this g r a n t ; secondly, whether the C . A . was considered by the Greeks a brutal measure to a raising in r a n k ; thirdly, whether the large numbers of citizens w h o were now called Romans, had to live exclusively according to the R o m a n law or not. H i s answers a r e : ( a ) Caracalla granted citizenship to peregrini belonging to the Empire, ( b ) T h e g r a n t was considered a distinction, ( c ) T h e residents of the city-com-munities, even as Romans, enjoyed the right of applying their local law before the native authorities, but also the right of applying the Roman l a w before the R o m a n authorities. T h e author finds an analogy for the last idea in the inscription of Rhosos, in which M a r c u s Antonius and Octavian, g r a n t i n g citizenship and exemption f r o m taxes to the head of the N a v y , Seleukos f r o m Rhosos, entitled him to choose between the Roman and the G r e e k systems of law.

A . S E G R É , Note sull' editto di Caracalla. Rend. d. P o n t . Accad. Rom. di Archeologia, vol. X V I ( 1 9 4 0 ) , p. 194ff.

T h e C.A. granted citizenship to all inhabitants of the E m p i r e b u t l e f t inaffected the status civitatis ( ! ) of the various classes of the population, so that the r u r a l Egyptians continued to be λαογραφονμ*νοι and inferior t o the metropolites, who were not considered dediticii before the C . A . T h e n e w citizens under the C . A . were Romans sui generis. T h e y retained their status civitatis ( !), and unlike the older Romans they had no tribus. H . I . B E L L , P. Giss 40 and the Constitutio Antoniniana. J o u r n a l of

Egyptian Archaeology, vol. X X V I I I ( 1 9 4 2 ) p. 39ff.

T h i s is a criticism of Segré's article. T h e r e is a good deal to be said against Segré's view that the C . A . granted citizenship to all the inhabitants of the Empire, although no restoration of the clause following the g r a n t can as yet be regarded as established. T h e r e is no evidence that metropolites and nome inhabitants, though assessed for poll-tax at different rates, were of a different status, and not alike Egyptians. Segré's view that the Aurelii were citizens sui generis does not clear up as yet unsolved problems of poll-tax in the third cent. A . D .

1 T h e latest edition of that famous inscription is given in S. Riccobono's

Fontes Iuris Anteiustiniani. Pars I Leges (second edition, Florence 1941) N o . 55, p. 308-315, with a L a t i n translation by N . Festa. T h i s new edition of Fontes has been enriched by some papyri, as SB. I l l 6 9 4 4 ; O s l o I I I 7 3 ; Giss. I 40 col. I ; O x y . X I I 1406; Columbia Inv. 181-182 and the most important provisions of the G n o m o n Idiologi. As we learn from Riccobono's Preface, in preparing the new edition intensively collaborated A. Berger w h o is responsible for the adaptation of all documents inserted for the first time into this collection.

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