Veteran’s estate as a category of roman land surveying

The purpose of this paper is to investigate how did form veterans landowning in the Roman land surveying. The main sources on the problem are the treatises of Roman land surveyers (1-2 centuries AD). They contain information about the principles of surveying of land plots for Roman retirees and abou...

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Main Author: Inna Andreevna Gvozdeva
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University) 2021-09-01
Series:RUDN Journal of World History
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.rudn.ru/world-history/article/viewFile/27324/19733
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author Inna Andreevna Gvozdeva
author_facet Inna Andreevna Gvozdeva
author_sort Inna Andreevna Gvozdeva
collection DOAJ
description The purpose of this paper is to investigate how did form veterans landowning in the Roman land surveying. The main sources on the problem are the treatises of Roman land surveyers (1-2 centuries AD). They contain information about the principles of surveying of land plots for Roman retirees and about right guarantees the veterans had. The task of this article is reconstruction of the process of civic assignations in Ancient Rome and highlighting of features of this action when land was granted to the veterans. At the end of 2nd century BC the limitatio has become the most common way of land division thank to activities of brothers Gracchi. The limitatio assumed the creation of dividers that organized space: Decumanus maximus and Cardo maximus . Their intersection created four parts of the future Ager Colonicus for veterans. The limits parallel to the main ones turned the colony field into a clearly organized boundary grid with a square unit of area - centuria, within which the land plots (intended for tillage, horticulture, viticulture) were formed for veterans. Since the time of Caesar and Augustus, the question of adding grazing land to the arable land was decided in the Roman land surveying art. The most desired types of non-arable land was not only forests, pastureland and relicta but also subseciva - remainders from land division. Those vacant centuriae were a good arable land which the state temporarily allocated to new settlers on a lease basis. In the cadastre, a special right of remainders (ius subsecivorum) was created, unifying the lease relations. Thus, the farm of the Roman veteran consisted of fertile land suitable for all types of agricultural activities, as well as different categories of land, which contributed to the development of property and ownership relations.
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spelling doaj.art-3e829252e4da45d6be31e520c8b1c3212022-12-21T21:43:38ZengPeoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University)RUDN Journal of World History2312-81272312-833X2021-09-0113329930910.22363/2312-8127-2021-13-3-299-30920385Veteran’s estate as a category of roman land surveyingInna Andreevna Gvozdeva0Lomonosov Moscow State UniversityThe purpose of this paper is to investigate how did form veterans landowning in the Roman land surveying. The main sources on the problem are the treatises of Roman land surveyers (1-2 centuries AD). They contain information about the principles of surveying of land plots for Roman retirees and about right guarantees the veterans had. The task of this article is reconstruction of the process of civic assignations in Ancient Rome and highlighting of features of this action when land was granted to the veterans. At the end of 2nd century BC the limitatio has become the most common way of land division thank to activities of brothers Gracchi. The limitatio assumed the creation of dividers that organized space: Decumanus maximus and Cardo maximus . Their intersection created four parts of the future Ager Colonicus for veterans. The limits parallel to the main ones turned the colony field into a clearly organized boundary grid with a square unit of area - centuria, within which the land plots (intended for tillage, horticulture, viticulture) were formed for veterans. Since the time of Caesar and Augustus, the question of adding grazing land to the arable land was decided in the Roman land surveying art. The most desired types of non-arable land was not only forests, pastureland and relicta but also subseciva - remainders from land division. Those vacant centuriae were a good arable land which the state temporarily allocated to new settlers on a lease basis. In the cadastre, a special right of remainders (ius subsecivorum) was created, unifying the lease relations. Thus, the farm of the Roman veteran consisted of fertile land suitable for all types of agricultural activities, as well as different categories of land, which contributed to the development of property and ownership relations.http://journals.rudn.ru/world-history/article/viewFile/27324/19733limitatiocenturiatiodivisioagerassignatiolocus
spellingShingle Inna Andreevna Gvozdeva
Veteran’s estate as a category of roman land surveying
RUDN Journal of World History
limitatio
centuriatio
divisio
ager
assignatio
locus
title Veteran’s estate as a category of roman land surveying
title_full Veteran’s estate as a category of roman land surveying
title_fullStr Veteran’s estate as a category of roman land surveying
title_full_unstemmed Veteran’s estate as a category of roman land surveying
title_short Veteran’s estate as a category of roman land surveying
title_sort veteran s estate as a category of roman land surveying
topic limitatio
centuriatio
divisio
ager
assignatio
locus
url http://journals.rudn.ru/world-history/article/viewFile/27324/19733
work_keys_str_mv AT innaandreevnagvozdeva veteransestateasacategoryofromanlandsurveying