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Agrarian laws (from the Latin ager, meaning "land") were laws among the Romans regulating the division of the public lands, or ager publicus.In its broader definition, it can also refer to the agricultural laws relating to peasants and husbandmen, or to the general farming class of people of any society.
Jewish agrarian laws (22 P) L. ... Sheep Wars (10 P) T. Agricultural treaties (22 P) Pages in category "Agricultural law" ... Wikipedia® is a registered trademark ...
In 1979, a scholarly journal, The Agricultural Law Journal was initiated. [4] In 1980, the American Agricultural Law Association was formed [5] and an advanced law degree program, the LL.M. Program in Agricultural Law was founded at the University of Arkansas School of Law. [6]
The lex agraria of 111 BC is an epigraphically-attested Roman law on the distribution and holding of public land (ager publicus).It dealt with the confirmation of private title to formerly public lands distributed by the Gracchan land commission in Italy, public lands given in exchange for other lands given up by allies, the imposition of a rent or property tax (vectigal) on such lands, and ...
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A lex agraria (pl.: leges agrariae) was a Roman law which dealt primarily with the viritane allotment of public lands. Such laws came largely from two sources: the disposition of lands annexed by Rome in consequence of expansion and the distribution of existing public lands to poor citizens as freeholds.
The lex Appuleia agraria was a Roman agrarian law introduced by the plebeian tribune Lucius Appuleius Saturninus during his second tribunate in 100 BC. The law concerned the distribution of land to poor Romans and to Gaius Marius ' veterans.
In land law the heyday of English, Irish (and thus Welsh) agrarianism was c. 1500 to 1603, led by the Tudor royal advisors, who sought to maintain a broad pool of agricultural commoners from which to draw military men, against the interests of larger landowners who sought enclosure (meaning complete private control of common land, over which by ...