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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.
The law of 111 BC, among other things, buttressed recognition of the lands distributed in the prior law of 133. [ 7 ] [ 8 ] Other leges agrariae include a series of three laws vaguely described by Appian, [ 9 ] the laws of Saturninus in 103 and 100 BC, [ 10 ] the laws of Julius Caesar in 59 BC, [ 11 ] and a law of Mark Antony in 44 BC.
American law schools and legal scholars first recognized agricultural law as a discipline in the 1940s when law schools at Yale, Harvard, Texas, and Iowa explored and initiated agricultural law courses. [3] These early efforts were short-lived, however, and agricultural law as a distinct discipline did not resurface for three decades.
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 ...
The bill did not pass the vote. Cicero opposed subsequent proposals for agrarian laws to redistribute land. In 59 BC Julius Caesar managed to pass a law which gave land to 20,000 Roman citizens with more than three children in Campania, in the same area which had been earmarked for redistribution by the bill of Publius Servilius Rullus.
First publication. Roman Agrarian History and its Significance for Public and Private Law (original German: Die römische Agrargeschichte in ihrer Bedeutung für das Staats- und Privatrecht) was the habilitation thesis, in law at the University of Berlin in 1891, of the sociologist Max Weber.
Printable version; In other projects ... Agrarian means pertaining to agriculture ... Agrarianism; Agrarian law, Roman laws regulating the division of the ...
Lalor advised the Irish people to refuse "obedience to usurped authority" and resist English law, instead setting up their own government and "refus[ing] ALL rent to the present usurping proprietors". [16] Lalor's writings were the basis of the agrarian code enforced by the Irish National Land League during the Land War in the 1880s. [17]