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SUMMARY:Norms of Dependency in Late Antique and Early Medieval Societies
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220331
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220403
DTSTAMP:20260415T162500Z
UID:24b3a4a8264d4a6c9e56749f716838a1@www.dependency.uni-bonn.de
CREATED:20220303T092326Z
DESCRIPTION:Even after the fall of the Western Roman Empire\, Roman law an
 d legal terminology remained formative for late antique and early medieval
  societies. Their influence can\, for instance\, be observed with regard t
 o slavery and other dependency relations. The Roman legal terminology to d
 enote a person’s legal inferiority (like servus\, ancilla\, puer\, colon
 us\, famulus etc.) often appears in late antique and early medieval source
 s and thus suggests the continued relevance of the concepts connected to t
 hese terms. However\, it is far from clear to what extent the use of ident
 ical terminology actually indicates the conformity of the phenomena descri
 bed. For while particularly normative sources do indeed suggest the contin
 ued existence of chattel slavery and related legal practices\, like e.g. t
 he manumissio in ecclesia\, they also point to the emergence of new forms 
 of asymmetrical dependency.
LAST-MODIFIED:20221222T134911Z
URL:https://www.dependency.uni-bonn.de/en/outreach/events/workshop
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