Lex Ursonensis
The Lex Ursonensis[1] is the foundation charter of the Caesarean colonia Iulia Genetiva at Urso near Osuna (province of Seville, Andalusia) in southern Spain. A copy of its text was inscribed on bronze under the Flavians, portions of which were discovered in 1870/71.[2] The original law spanned nine tablets with three or five columns of text each and comprised over 140 sections (rubricae).[3] Of these four tablets survive, including sections 61-82, 91-106 and 123-134. Remains are kept in the National Archaeological Museum of Spain, in Madrid.
Lex Ursonensis | |
---|---|
Ley de Urso | |
Epigraphy, legal slab | |
Material | Bronze |
Long | 92.20 cm |
Height | 59 cm |
Width | 3 cm |
Created | 1st century CE |
Period/culture | Roman Empire |
Discovered | 1870-75 Urso, Osuna, Seville |
Present location | National Archaeological Museum (Madrid) |
Registration | 16736 |
The charter was approved by the Roman assembly as a law proposed probably by Mark Antony after the assassination of Julius Caesar.
Bibliography
- M. H. Crawford (1996). Roman Statutes. pp. no.25 (with text, English translation and commentary).
- J. González, ed. (1989). Estudios sobre Urso: La colonia Iulia Genetiva.
Notes
- CIL II, 5439
- Ernst FABRICIUS (1916). Die Rasuren Bei Der Lex Ursonensis.
- Jorg Rupke (28 May 2012). Religion in Republican Rome: Rationalization and Ritual Change. University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 126–. ISBN 0-8122-0657-6.
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