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 55 of 307 (17%)
page 55 of 307 (17%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
Pomponius in Dig., 48, 2, 1: non est permissum mulieri publico iudicio
quemquam reum facere. [134] Ulpian in Dig., 1, 16, 9. Salvius Julianus, Pars Prima, vi: si non habebunt advocatum, ego dabo. Alexander Severus (222-235 A.D.) gave pensions to those advocates in the provinces who pleaded free of charge--Lampridius, _Alex. Severus_, 44. [135] Cf. Paulus in Dig., 23, 3, 28. Codex, v, 13, 1, and 18, 1. Ulpian in Dig., iii, 3, 8. [136] Gaius, i, 137. [137] Frag. iur. Rom. Vat., 325; id., 327 (from Papinian): mulieres quoque et sine tutoris auctoritate procuratorem facere posse. [138] Ulpian in Dig., iii, 3, 8; ibid., Paulus, iii, 3, 41. [139] Ulpian in Dig., iii, 5, 3. [140] Pomponius in Dig., 48, 2, 1; ibid., Papinian, 48, 2, 2--who adds that she could also do so in a case regarding the will of a mother or father's freedman. [141] Marcianus in Dig., 48, 2, 13. [142] Papinian in Dig., 48, 4, 8. [143] Juvenal, vi, 242--245. |
|