Persona, Homo, Res: Building a Boundary in Early Modern European Legal Thought

According to Roman law the same human being, the servus, can be understood as res mancipi or as persona, being part of the different kinds of persons described in Justinian’s Institutiones. But in the third decade of the 18th century, it would be written that »Certissimum ergo iuris axioma est: qui...

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Main Author: Carlo Bersani
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Max Planck Institute for Legal History and Legal Theory 2024-09-01
Series:Rechtsgeschichte - Legal History
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Online Access:https://rg.lhlt.mpg.de/index.php/rg/article/view/2305
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author Carlo Bersani
author_facet Carlo Bersani
author_sort Carlo Bersani
collection DOAJ
description According to Roman law the same human being, the servus, can be understood as res mancipi or as persona, being part of the different kinds of persons described in Justinian’s Institutiones. But in the third decade of the 18th century, it would be written that »Certissimum ergo iuris axioma est: quicunque nullo statu gaudet, iure Romano non persona, sed res habetur« (Heinecke). How and why did this distinction become so precise, and the boundary between the two concepts so impassable? Underlying this distinction is the joint action of two phenomena: serfdom and slavery in the modern age. Serfs and slaves define the concept of person because they constitute its boundary: on one side of the boundary there are persons, on the other res. Indeed, slavery and serfdom are at the basis of the legal concept of persona, which was transmitted from the ancient regime to 19th-century legal thinking. Comparing the many possible legal conditions between persona and res, legal thought established a moving boundary, located within individuals, making them sometimes the subject, sometimes the object of legal relationships. The mobility of this boundary, its uncertainty, its susceptibility to being the subject of continuous gradations, would be passed down to the concept of legal capacity.
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spelling doaj-art-de1e95b4a3d2493c87bb92b5a1ebbc982025-08-20T01:55:19ZdeuMax Planck Institute for Legal History and Legal TheoryRechtsgeschichte - Legal History1619-49932195-96172024-09-013210.12946/rg32/016-040Persona, Homo, Res: Building a Boundary in Early Modern European Legal ThoughtCarlo Bersani0Università di Cassino e del Lazio Meridionale, Cassino According to Roman law the same human being, the servus, can be understood as res mancipi or as persona, being part of the different kinds of persons described in Justinian’s Institutiones. But in the third decade of the 18th century, it would be written that »Certissimum ergo iuris axioma est: quicunque nullo statu gaudet, iure Romano non persona, sed res habetur« (Heinecke). How and why did this distinction become so precise, and the boundary between the two concepts so impassable? Underlying this distinction is the joint action of two phenomena: serfdom and slavery in the modern age. Serfs and slaves define the concept of person because they constitute its boundary: on one side of the boundary there are persons, on the other res. Indeed, slavery and serfdom are at the basis of the legal concept of persona, which was transmitted from the ancient regime to 19th-century legal thinking. Comparing the many possible legal conditions between persona and res, legal thought established a moving boundary, located within individuals, making them sometimes the subject, sometimes the object of legal relationships. The mobility of this boundary, its uncertainty, its susceptibility to being the subject of continuous gradations, would be passed down to the concept of legal capacity. https://rg.lhlt.mpg.de/index.php/rg/article/view/2305personaserfdomslavery
spellingShingle Carlo Bersani
Persona, Homo, Res: Building a Boundary in Early Modern European Legal Thought
Rechtsgeschichte - Legal History
persona
serfdom
slavery
title Persona, Homo, Res: Building a Boundary in Early Modern European Legal Thought
title_full Persona, Homo, Res: Building a Boundary in Early Modern European Legal Thought
title_fullStr Persona, Homo, Res: Building a Boundary in Early Modern European Legal Thought
title_full_unstemmed Persona, Homo, Res: Building a Boundary in Early Modern European Legal Thought
title_short Persona, Homo, Res: Building a Boundary in Early Modern European Legal Thought
title_sort persona homo res building a boundary in early modern european legal thought
topic persona
serfdom
slavery
url https://rg.lhlt.mpg.de/index.php/rg/article/view/2305
work_keys_str_mv AT carlobersani personahomoresbuildingaboundaryinearlymoderneuropeanlegalthought