A Short History of Women's Rights - From the Days of Augustus to the Present Time. with Special Reference - to England and the United States. Second Edition Revised, With - Additions. by Eugene A. Hecker
page 41 of 307 (13%)
page 41 of 307 (13%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
[6] Aulus Gellius, x, 23. Cf. Suetonius, _Tiberius_, 35. [7] Gaius, i, 144. [8] Ulpian, Tit., xi, I. [9] Ulpian, Tit., xi, 28a. Gaius, i, 194. Paulus, iv, 9, 1-9. [10] Gaius, i, 145. Ulpian, Tit., x, 5. [11] Gaius, i, 137. For an example see Pliny, _Letters_, viii, 18. Cf. Spartianus. _Didius Iulianus_, 8: filiam suam, potitus imperio, dato patrimonio, emancipaverat. See also Dio, 73, 7 (Xiphilin). If emancipated children insulted or injured their parents, they lost their independence--Codex, 8, 49 (50), 1. [12] Ulpian, Tit., viii, 7_a_. [13] Paulus, i, 4, 4; Mater, quae filiorum suorum rebus intervenit, actione negotiorum gestorum et ipsis et eorum tutoribus tenebitur. [14] Ulpian in Dig., 25, 3, 5. [15] For Livia's great influence over Augustus see Seneca, _de Clementia_, i, 9, 6. Tacitus, _Annals_, i, 3, 4, and 5, and ii, 34. Dio, 55, 14-21, and 56, 47. Agrippina dominated Claudius--Tacitus, _Annals_, xii, 37. Dio, 60, 33. |
|