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Lex agraria (111 BC)

The lex agraria of 111 BC is an epigraphically-attested Roman law on the distribution and holding of public land (ager publicus). It dealt with the confirmation of private title to formerly public lands distributed by the Gracchan land commission in Italy, public lands given in exchange for other lands given up by allies, the imposition of a rent or property tax (vectigal) on such lands, and the future privatisation or use of public lands. It also had provisions relating to the letting out of Roman lands in the provinces of Africa (especially with regard to transition provisions related to an abortive colonisation programme near Carthage) and Greece.

There is substantial disagreement about where the epigraphically-attested lex agraria should fit in the Appianic literary narrative of Roman land reform and whether the law should be equated with the lex Thoria described in Appian and Cicero. A large portion of the law is preserved on fragments of a bronze plate, along with a separate law on the reverse side. This plate was discovered during the Renaissance and the fragments which survive are now stored in various museums. There have been multiple modern transcriptions of the bronze fragments, including one in the mid-19th century by Theodor Mommsen and two transcriptions in the 1990s by Andrew Lintott and Michael Crawford.

Provisions edit

The law is dated to between 15 March 111 BC and the autumnal harvest of that year based on a line in the law referring to a future harvest, a future tax year, and to preceding magistrates in 115–112 BC.[1]

The surviving portions have three sections, dealing with lands in Italy, Africa, and Greece, respectively. The third section, on Greece, unlike the other two sections, deals largely with some actions related to agricultural produce and settlement of disputes rather than land grants (except those near Corinth) per se.[2]

Italian land edit

The portions relating to Italian land take as their start those lands present in 133 BC (the plebeian tribunate of Tiberius Gracchus) with exceptions as legislated by Gaius Gracchus. Lands held within the limits as prescribed by Gracchan legislation were fully confirmed.[3] Lands given the Gracchan land commissions, both in rural allotments as well as towns and cities,[3] were also confirmed to their possessors and made private with registration in the census.[4] Lands given in exchange for other lands taken by the Gracchan land commissions were also confirmed.[3]

In so doing, the possessors of public lands prior to 133 BC, the veteres possessores ("old possessors"), had their titles fully confirmed and made private, provided that their holdings complied with the holding limits established by statute.[5] Moreover, because land exchanges had been done without clear title, the statute also fully confirmed the possessors' rights over lands given in exchange for prior possessions; such possessors were termed pro vetere possessore ("in [the same] place of old possessors").[6] A person who at the time of the law possessed no public land could also occupy, in the future, up to 30 jugera for agricultural purposes which would then be privatised as the occupier's property.[7]

Some lands remained public and were exempted from distribution, including the lands given in usufruct for the upkeep of road maintainers, lands recently leased out by the censors, lands under long-term leases (especially in the ager Campanus), and the lands concessionarily leased in 200 BC in lieu of repayment of public debts incurred in 210 BC during the Second Punic War (the ager in trientabulis).[8][9] Lands which had been made public, ie taken by the state, in the years between 133 and 111 BC were also confirmed as state property.[10] Substantial amounts of land still available were pastures. The law of 111 BC also established that shared public pasture lands, termed ager compascuus, were not to be enclosed and that any person could graze a limited number of animals on such land without fee. Grazing more than that number of animals likely required payment to the state.[10]

The allies, and especially those with Latin rights, who were legally non-Roman foreigners also were made legal owners of Roman public land if they received it in exchange for lands surrendered to Rome for colonial projects. Such lands were also made private and protected by law on the same terms as if the owners were Roman citizens.[11] The land rights of foreigners, as given in prior treaties or laws unknown to modern scholars, were also confirmed.[12]

There is some disagreement as to whether the law of 111 BC abolished or imposed a vectigal – a rent or property tax with forfeiture on failure to pay – on former public lands made private by land commission distribution.[13]

Land in Africa and Greece edit

Rome had acquired land in Africa after its annexation of Carthaginian territories there following the Third Punic War in 146 BC.[14] Lands in Africa which had been assigned pursuant to a previously repealed lex Rubria associated with Gaius Gracchus' reform project in 123–22 BC.[15] The lex Rubria was brought by Gaius Rubrius who was plebeian tribune in 122 BC,[16] but was repealed after Gaius Gracchus' death possibly as late as 119 BC.[17] Archaeological evidence of centuriation in modern Tunisia suggests that substantial lands were distributed in Africa pursuant to the lex Rubria or later Caesarian or Augustan colonial programmes.[18]

Lands allotted under the lex Rubria in Africa or otherwise sold between 115 and 113 BC were, provided that a declaration was made to duumviri appointed for that purpose and adjudged sufficient, confirmed subject to payment of a vectigal.[19][20] Other mistakes in the distribution of the land, such as land promised but not assigned or lands taken by the Romans from their allies, were to be compensated for by the duumviri.[21] Moreover, lands not previously assigned or confirmed to various groups – descendants of Carthaginian deserters, the sons of the Numidian king Massinissa, citizens of Utica, and peoples paying tribute to Rome (stipendarii), etc – were made Roman state property. Enforcement of the provisions also would be furthered by incentives given to informers with punishments for false reports and declarations.[22][23]

The section on Greece is much less clear and largely relates to agricultural produce, leases, and building in that province. Some action was prescribed for the duumviri in relation to lands taken from Corinth but few details survive,[24] though possibly some regulations were laid on the payment of taxes and some lands were surveyed.[25]

Interpretations edit

Appian's three laws and the lex Thoria edit

In the narrative given by Appian of post-Gracchan legislation, he presents three laws passed in the fifteen years after the laws of "Gracchus" with a first law allowing for alienation of allotments, a second law ending distributions and privatising the land subject to a vectigal (which Appian also calls the lex Thoria), and a third law abolishing that vectigal.[26] It is not clear whether he meant Tiberius or Gaius.[27] Various theories have equated the epigraphic lex agraria with the second or third law described in Appian: Saskia Roselaar in the 2010 book Public Land in the Roman Republic identified it as Appian's third law.[28]

Michael Crawford, in the 1996 book Roman Statutes, argued that the epigraphic lex agraria of 111 BC should be identified as the lex Thoria passed by Spurius Thorius referenced in Cicero and as the second of the three Appianic laws.[29] This identification, however, is not universally shared.[30] Dominic Rathbone, for example, in a 2003 paper identified the epigraphic lex agraria with the first of the Appianic laws.[31]

The presentation by Tommaso Beggio in the online edition of the Oxford Classical Dictionary set forth three camps: a first equating the epigraphic lex agraria with the third Appianic law; a second equating the epigraphic lex agraria with the third Appianic law and the lex Thoria; and a third equating the epigraphic lex agraria as the second Appianic law and as the lex Thoria.[15]

Role in land reform edit

Appian's narrative cast post-Gracchan land legislation as a betrayal of the Gracchan programme which left the Roman poor impoverished.[32] However, the provisions of the law and the archaeological evidence for prior distributions indicate that after the Gracchan tribunates, huge amounts of public land had been distributed or exchanged and were now the private property of freeholders. Much of the ager publicus that remained was of little agricultural value or was locked into long term leases. By covering and granting legal status to all persons now in possession of ager publicus in their varied categories, the law of 111 BC signalled the republic's intents both to recognise their private titles and plan for the future.[33]

The growth of the population of Italy during the 2nd century, however, continued unabated. Demands for public lands into the future persisted but ran into the more pressing problem that Italy itself had no such lands to spare. Furthermore, the Gracchan land programmes had done little to disrupt the allies' centuries-long occupation of public lands in Etruria. Such occupation was likely illegal under the lex agraria of 111 BC and its Appianic cousins either on the basis of defective title or illegal enclosure of public pastures. Roman politicians also proposed a few attempts to distribute more lands: Lucius Marcius Philippus (plebeian tribune in 104 BC and later consul in 91 BC)[34] gave a fiery speech denouncing wealth inequality noted by Cicero; Marcus Livius Drusus' plan to disrupt those holdings in 91 BC to make room for more Roman settlers generated substantial anger and may have played a role in the start of the Social War.[35]

Role in extra-Italian land holdings edit

The lex agraria, by providing a sound basis for land right outside of Italy in Africa, may also have furthered the expansion of Roman commercial farming interests in the region and set a legal example for further such holdings outside Italy proper.[36]

Epigraphy edit

The lex agraria is preserved, along with a separate law called the lex repetundarum on judicial procedure, on fragments of a bronze plate (some 4 mm thick with inscribed letters between 5.5 and 8 mm tall) called the tabula Bembina.[37] The bronze fragments are known to have resided first in the library of the Dukes of Urbino were gifted some time in the 16th century to Cardinal Pietro Bembo. The plates are separated into twelve fragments of which ten survive and preserved in multiple locations: the Museo Nazionale di Napoli and the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna.[38]

First published 1583 by Fulvio Orsini, the first important modern editions of the lex agraria date to the 19th century; it was included in the Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum in 1863.[39] Recent editions and English translations of the law include those of Andrew Lintott, published in 1992,[40] and Michael Crawford, published in Roman Statutes in 1996.[41]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Crawford et al. 1996, pp. 53, 162.
  2. ^ Roselaar 2010, p. 271; Crawford et al. 1996, pp. 53–57.
  3. ^ a b c Roselaar 2010, p. 272.
  4. ^ Crawford et al. 1996, p. 54.
  5. ^ Roselaar 2010, p. 273.
  6. ^ Roselaar 2010, pp. 273–74.
  7. ^ Roselaar 2010, p. 275.
  8. ^ Roselaar 2010, pp. 275–76, 127–28 (ager in trientabulis).
  9. ^ Crawford et al. 1996, pp. 167–68 (ager in trientabulis).
  10. ^ a b Roselaar 2010, p. 276.
  11. ^ Roselaar 2010, pp. 277–78.
  12. ^ Crawford et al. 1996, p. 167.
  13. ^ Roselaar 2010, p. 262.
  14. ^ Kim 2022, p. 580.
  15. ^ a b Beggio 2019.
  16. ^ Broughton 1951, p. 517.
  17. ^ Kim 2022, pp. 574, 576.
  18. ^ Kim 2022, p. 576.
  19. ^ Kim 2022, p. 577.
  20. ^ Crawford et al. 1996, pp. 55–56; Beggio 2019.
  21. ^ Crawford et al. 1996, p. 56; Beggio 2019; Kim 2022, p. 579.
  22. ^ Crawford et al. 1996, p. 56, citing lines 78–82 and 90–92.
  23. ^ Kim 2022, p. 578 (stipendarii).
  24. ^ Crawford et al. 1996, p. 57.
  25. ^ Crawford et al. 1996, p. 180; Kim 2022, p. 582.
  26. ^ Roselaar 2010, pp. 260, 256–57, citing App. BCiv., 1.27.
  27. ^ Roselaar 2010, p. 261.
  28. ^ Roselaar 2010, pp. 262, 271.
  29. ^ Crawford et al. 1996, p. 59, citing Cic. De orat. 284 and Brut. 136; Broughton 1951, p. 541.
  30. ^ Dart 2011, p. 353 n. 99.
  31. ^ Roselaar 2010, p. 265, citing Rathebone, D W (2003). "The control and exploitation of ager publicus in Italy under the Roman republic". In Aubert, J-J (ed.). Tâches publiques et enterprise privée dans le monde romain. Neuchâtel and Geneva. pp. 135–78.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  32. ^ Roselaar 2010, pp. 256–57, citing App. BCiv., 1.27.
  33. ^ Roselaar 2010, p. 278.
  34. ^ Broughton 1951, p. 560.
  35. ^ Roselaar 2010, pp. 279–82.
  36. ^ Kim 2022, pp. 582–86.
  37. ^ Crawford et al. 1996, pp. 44–45, 51 (on the lex repetundarum).
  38. ^ Crawford et al. 1996, pp. 40–41, 43, 45 (two fragments are no longer extant but were copied during the 16th century).
  39. ^ Crawford et al. 1996, p. 42, citing CIL I, 200 among others.
  40. ^ Beggio 2019, citing Lintott, Andrew (1992). Judicial reform and land reform in the Roman republic: a new edition with translation and commentary of the laws from Urbino. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-40373-3.
  41. ^ Crawford et al. 1996, pp. 53–63, 113–80.

Bibliography edit

Modern sources edit

  • Beggio, Tommaso (2019-04-26). "lex agraria, 111 BCE". Oxford Classical Dictionary (Online ed.). doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199381135.013.8267. ISBN 978-0-19-938113-5.
  • Broughton, Thomas Robert Shannon (1951). The magistrates of the Roman republic. Vol. 1. New York: American Philological Association.
  • Crawford, Michael Hewson; et al. (1996). Roman statutes. Bulleting of the Institute of Classical Studies Supplement 34. Institute of Classical Studies. ISBN 978-0-900587-69-6.
  • Dart, Christopher J (2011). "The impact of the Gracchan land commission and the dandis power of the triumvirs". Hermes. 139 (3): 337–357. doi:10.25162/hermes-2011-0027. ISSN 0018-0777. JSTOR 23067319. S2CID 159905234.
  • Kim, Yeong-Chei (2022). "Privatisation of ager in Africa from 123 to 63 BC". Classical Quarterly. 72 (2): 573–586. doi:10.1017/S0009838822000866. ISSN 0009-8388.
  • Roselaar, Saskia T (2010). Public land in the Roman Republic : a social and economic history of ager publicus in Italy, 396-89 BC. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-957723-1. OCLC 520714519.

Ancient sources edit

  • Appian (1913) [2nd century AD]. Civil Wars. Loeb Classical Library. Translated by White, Horace. Cambridge – via LacusCurtius.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

agraria, agraria, epigraphically, attested, roman, distribution, holding, public, land, ager, publicus, dealt, with, confirmation, private, title, formerly, public, lands, distributed, gracchan, land, commission, italy, public, lands, given, exchange, other, l. The lex agraria of 111 BC is an epigraphically attested Roman law on the distribution and holding of public land ager publicus It dealt with the confirmation of private title to formerly public lands distributed by the Gracchan land commission in Italy public lands given in exchange for other lands given up by allies the imposition of a rent or property tax vectigal on such lands and the future privatisation or use of public lands It also had provisions relating to the letting out of Roman lands in the provinces of Africa especially with regard to transition provisions related to an abortive colonisation programme near Carthage and Greece There is substantial disagreement about where the epigraphically attested lex agraria should fit in the Appianic literary narrative of Roman land reform and whether the law should be equated with the lex Thoria described in Appian and Cicero A large portion of the law is preserved on fragments of a bronze plate along with a separate law on the reverse side This plate was discovered during the Renaissance and the fragments which survive are now stored in various museums There have been multiple modern transcriptions of the bronze fragments including one in the mid 19th century by Theodor Mommsen and two transcriptions in the 1990s by Andrew Lintott and Michael Crawford Contents 1 Provisions 1 1 Italian land 1 2 Land in Africa and Greece 2 Interpretations 2 1 Appian s three laws and the lex Thoria 2 2 Role in land reform 2 3 Role in extra Italian land holdings 3 Epigraphy 4 See also 5 References 6 Bibliography 6 1 Modern sources 6 2 Ancient sourcesProvisions editThe law is dated to between 15 March 111 BC and the autumnal harvest of that year based on a line in the law referring to a future harvest a future tax year and to preceding magistrates in 115 112 BC 1 The surviving portions have three sections dealing with lands in Italy Africa and Greece respectively The third section on Greece unlike the other two sections deals largely with some actions related to agricultural produce and settlement of disputes rather than land grants except those near Corinth per se 2 Italian land edit The portions relating to Italian land take as their start those lands present in 133 BC the plebeian tribunate of Tiberius Gracchus with exceptions as legislated by Gaius Gracchus Lands held within the limits as prescribed by Gracchan legislation were fully confirmed 3 Lands given the Gracchan land commissions both in rural allotments as well as towns and cities 3 were also confirmed to their possessors and made private with registration in the census 4 Lands given in exchange for other lands taken by the Gracchan land commissions were also confirmed 3 In so doing the possessors of public lands prior to 133 BC the veteres possessores old possessors had their titles fully confirmed and made private provided that their holdings complied with the holding limits established by statute 5 Moreover because land exchanges had been done without clear title the statute also fully confirmed the possessors rights over lands given in exchange for prior possessions such possessors were termed pro vetere possessore in the same place of old possessors 6 A person who at the time of the law possessed no public land could also occupy in the future up to 30 jugera for agricultural purposes which would then be privatised as the occupier s property 7 Some lands remained public and were exempted from distribution including the lands given in usufruct for the upkeep of road maintainers lands recently leased out by the censors lands under long term leases especially in the ager Campanus and the lands concessionarily leased in 200 BC in lieu of repayment of public debts incurred in 210 BC during the Second Punic War the ager in trientabulis 8 9 Lands which had been made public ie taken by the state in the years between 133 and 111 BC were also confirmed as state property 10 Substantial amounts of land still available were pastures The law of 111 BC also established that shared public pasture lands termed ager compascuus were not to be enclosed and that any person could graze a limited number of animals on such land without fee Grazing more than that number of animals likely required payment to the state 10 The allies and especially those with Latin rights who were legally non Roman foreigners also were made legal owners of Roman public land if they received it in exchange for lands surrendered to Rome for colonial projects Such lands were also made private and protected by law on the same terms as if the owners were Roman citizens 11 The land rights of foreigners as given in prior treaties or laws unknown to modern scholars were also confirmed 12 There is some disagreement as to whether the law of 111 BC abolished or imposed a vectigal a rent or property tax with forfeiture on failure to pay on former public lands made private by land commission distribution 13 Land in Africa and Greece edit Rome had acquired land in Africa after its annexation of Carthaginian territories there following the Third Punic War in 146 BC 14 Lands in Africa which had been assigned pursuant to a previously repealed lex Rubria associated with Gaius Gracchus reform project in 123 22 BC 15 The lex Rubria was brought by Gaius Rubrius who was plebeian tribune in 122 BC 16 but was repealed after Gaius Gracchus death possibly as late as 119 BC 17 Archaeological evidence of centuriation in modern Tunisia suggests that substantial lands were distributed in Africa pursuant to the lex Rubria or later Caesarian or Augustan colonial programmes 18 Lands allotted under the lex Rubria in Africa or otherwise sold between 115 and 113 BC were provided that a declaration was made to duumviri appointed for that purpose and adjudged sufficient confirmed subject to payment of a vectigal 19 20 Other mistakes in the distribution of the land such as land promised but not assigned or lands taken by the Romans from their allies were to be compensated for by the duumviri 21 Moreover lands not previously assigned or confirmed to various groups descendants of Carthaginian deserters the sons of the Numidian king Massinissa citizens of Utica and peoples paying tribute to Rome stipendarii etc were made Roman state property Enforcement of the provisions also would be furthered by incentives given to informers with punishments for false reports and declarations 22 23 The section on Greece is much less clear and largely relates to agricultural produce leases and building in that province Some action was prescribed for the duumviri in relation to lands taken from Corinth but few details survive 24 though possibly some regulations were laid on the payment of taxes and some lands were surveyed 25 Interpretations editAppian s three laws and the lex Thoria edit In the narrative given by Appian of post Gracchan legislation he presents three laws passed in the fifteen years after the laws of Gracchus with a first law allowing for alienation of allotments a second law ending distributions and privatising the land subject to a vectigal which Appian also calls the lex Thoria and a third law abolishing that vectigal 26 It is not clear whether he meant Tiberius or Gaius 27 Various theories have equated the epigraphic lex agraria with the second or third law described in Appian Saskia Roselaar in the 2010 book Public Land in the Roman Republic identified it as Appian s third law 28 Michael Crawford in the 1996 book Roman Statutes argued that the epigraphic lex agraria of 111 BC should be identified as the lex Thoria passed by Spurius Thorius referenced in Cicero and as the second of the three Appianic laws 29 This identification however is not universally shared 30 Dominic Rathbone for example in a 2003 paper identified the epigraphic lex agraria with the first of the Appianic laws 31 The presentation by Tommaso Beggio in the online edition of the Oxford Classical Dictionary set forth three camps a first equating the epigraphic lex agraria with the third Appianic law a second equating the epigraphic lex agraria with the third Appianic law and the lex Thoria and a third equating the epigraphic lex agraria as the second Appianic law and as the lex Thoria 15 Role in land reform edit Appian s narrative cast post Gracchan land legislation as a betrayal of the Gracchan programme which left the Roman poor impoverished 32 However the provisions of the law and the archaeological evidence for prior distributions indicate that after the Gracchan tribunates huge amounts of public land had been distributed or exchanged and were now the private property of freeholders Much of the ager publicus that remained was of little agricultural value or was locked into long term leases By covering and granting legal status to all persons now in possession of ager publicus in their varied categories the law of 111 BC signalled the republic s intents both to recognise their private titles and plan for the future 33 The growth of the population of Italy during the 2nd century however continued unabated Demands for public lands into the future persisted but ran into the more pressing problem that Italy itself had no such lands to spare Furthermore the Gracchan land programmes had done little to disrupt the allies centuries long occupation of public lands in Etruria Such occupation was likely illegal under the lex agraria of 111 BC and its Appianic cousins either on the basis of defective title or illegal enclosure of public pastures Roman politicians also proposed a few attempts to distribute more lands Lucius Marcius Philippus plebeian tribune in 104 BC and later consul in 91 BC 34 gave a fiery speech denouncing wealth inequality noted by Cicero Marcus Livius Drusus plan to disrupt those holdings in 91 BC to make room for more Roman settlers generated substantial anger and may have played a role in the start of the Social War 35 Role in extra Italian land holdings edit The lex agraria by providing a sound basis for land right outside of Italy in Africa may also have furthered the expansion of Roman commercial farming interests in the region and set a legal example for further such holdings outside Italy proper 36 Epigraphy editThe lex agraria is preserved along with a separate law called the lex repetundarum on judicial procedure on fragments of a bronze plate some 4 mm thick with inscribed letters between 5 5 and 8 mm tall called the tabula Bembina 37 The bronze fragments are known to have resided first in the library of the Dukes of Urbino were gifted some time in the 16th century to Cardinal Pietro Bembo The plates are separated into twelve fragments of which ten survive and preserved in multiple locations the Museo Nazionale di Napoli and the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna 38 First published 1583 by Fulvio Orsini the first important modern editions of the lex agraria date to the 19th century it was included in the Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum in 1863 39 Recent editions and English translations of the law include those of Andrew Lintott published in 1992 40 and Michael Crawford published in Roman Statutes in 1996 41 See also editList of Roman lawsReferences edit Crawford et al 1996 pp 53 162 Roselaar 2010 p 271 Crawford et al 1996 pp 53 57 a b c Roselaar 2010 p 272 Crawford et al 1996 p 54 Roselaar 2010 p 273 Roselaar 2010 pp 273 74 Roselaar 2010 p 275 Roselaar 2010 pp 275 76 127 28 ager in trientabulis Crawford et al 1996 pp 167 68 ager in trientabulis a b Roselaar 2010 p 276 Roselaar 2010 pp 277 78 Crawford et al 1996 p 167 Roselaar 2010 p 262 Kim 2022 p 580 a b Beggio 2019 Broughton 1951 p 517 Kim 2022 pp 574 576 Kim 2022 p 576 Kim 2022 p 577 Crawford et al 1996 pp 55 56 Beggio 2019 Crawford et al 1996 p 56 Beggio 2019 Kim 2022 p 579 Crawford et al 1996 p 56 citing lines 78 82 and 90 92 Kim 2022 p 578 stipendarii Crawford et al 1996 p 57 Crawford et al 1996 p 180 Kim 2022 p 582 Roselaar 2010 pp 260 256 57 citing App BCiv 1 27 Roselaar 2010 p 261 Roselaar 2010 pp 262 271 Crawford et al 1996 p 59 citing Cic De orat 284 and Brut 136 Broughton 1951 p 541 Dart 2011 p 353 n 99 Roselaar 2010 p 265 citing Rathebone D W 2003 The control and exploitation of ager publicus in Italy under the Roman republic In Aubert J J ed Taches publiques et enterprise privee dans le monde romain Neuchatel and Geneva pp 135 78 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Roselaar 2010 pp 256 57 citing App BCiv 1 27 Roselaar 2010 p 278 Broughton 1951 p 560 Roselaar 2010 pp 279 82 Kim 2022 pp 582 86 Crawford et al 1996 pp 44 45 51 on the lex repetundarum Crawford et al 1996 pp 40 41 43 45 two fragments are no longer extant but were copied during the 16th century Crawford et al 1996 p 42 citing CIL I 200 among others Beggio 2019 citing Lintott Andrew 1992 Judicial reform and land reform in the Roman republic a new edition with translation and commentary of the laws from Urbino Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 40373 3 Crawford et al 1996 pp 53 63 113 80 Bibliography editModern sources edit Beggio Tommaso 2019 04 26 lex agraria 111 BCE Oxford Classical Dictionary Online ed doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199381135 013 8267 ISBN 978 0 19 938113 5 Broughton Thomas Robert Shannon 1951 The magistrates of the Roman republic Vol 1 New York American Philological Association Crawford Michael Hewson et al 1996 Roman statutes Bulleting of the Institute of Classical Studies Supplement 34 Institute of Classical Studies ISBN 978 0 900587 69 6 Dart Christopher J 2011 The impact of the Gracchan land commission and the dandis power of the triumvirs Hermes 139 3 337 357 doi 10 25162 hermes 2011 0027 ISSN 0018 0777 JSTOR 23067319 S2CID 159905234 Kim Yeong Chei 2022 Privatisation of ager in Africa from 123 to 63 BC Classical Quarterly 72 2 573 586 doi 10 1017 S0009838822000866 ISSN 0009 8388 Roselaar Saskia T 2010 Public land in the Roman Republic a social and economic history of ager publicus in Italy 396 89 BC Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 957723 1 OCLC 520714519 Ancient sources edit Appian 1913 2nd century AD Civil Wars Loeb Classical Library Translated by White Horace Cambridge via LacusCurtius a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lex agraria 111 BC amp oldid 1183785636, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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