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18 Roman Legal Trad. 1 (2022)

handle is hein.journals/rltrad18 and id is 1 raw text is: 




Managing Crises by Way of Ritualization and
Exception in Roman Testamentary Succession
Law



Constantin Willems*


Abstract - In principle, a Roman  citizen could make  a will only
when  observing a set of strictly ritualized testamentary formalities.
However,  in times of crises, sticking to time consuming and labor
intensive rituals entails high transaction costs, while at the same
time the threats experienced as a consequence of the crisis at hand
increase the individual need to stipulate one's last will. In this
paper, it will be argued that throughout the centuries, from archaic
times to late antiquity, Roman testamentary succession law looked
for a  compromise   between   ritualization and  exception, thus
managing  crises in an effective way.


                     I. Preliminary remarks

Stipulating one's last will under Roman law was a highly formal-
ized affair.' However, before addressing the different steps in the
development  of testamentary  formalities2 as forms of ritualized
ways  to pass on one's assets on death, it must be remembered that
is does not go without saying that a person is free to choose the fate
of his or her patrimony after his or her death and that thereby the




    .  The author is Professor of Roman Law and  Civil Law at the
University of Marburg, Germany. An earlier version of this paper was
presented at a workshop on Crisis Management: Ritualization and States
of Exception in Ancient Cultures, hosted by Susanne Godde and Reinhard
Bernbeck at Freie Universitat Berlin on November 13, 2020. Helpful
remarks have been made by Reinhard Bernbeck, Mark Geller, Susanne
Godde, Marietta Horster and Cosima M6ller in the subsequent discussion
and by the anonymous reviewer for and editor of Roman Legal Tradition.
    1  See D. Johnston, Roman Law in Context (Cambridge 1999), 45.
    2  For an overview see P. du Plessis, Borkowski's Textbook on Roman
law, 6th ed. (Oxford 2020), 221-24; for details, see T. Rfifner, Testament-
ary Formalities in Roman Law, in K. G. C. Reid, M. J. de Waal, and R.
Zimmermann,  eds., Testamentary Formalities (Oxford 2011), 1-26.

Roman Legal Tradition, 18 (2022), 1-22. ISSN 1943-6483. Published by the Ames Foundation
at the Harvard Law School and the Alan Rodger Endowment at the University of Glasgow. This
work is licensed under Creative Commons License CC BY-SA 4.0. Copyright @ 2022 by
Constantin Willems. romanlegaltradition.org. DOI 10.55740/2022.1

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