This fastus

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

As dies fasti (abbreviated F , dt. "Judgment days ", fāstus adjective to fas , divine commandment, the moral good, permissible) were designated days in the Roman calendar on which new legal cases could be submitted to the praetor and negotiated (in contrast to diebus nefastis ).

A dies fastus could coincide with a die comitiali , since activities running in parallel were not mutually exclusive. The QRCF also had the character of an F or C day.

See also

literature

  • Jörg Rüpke : Calendar and Public. The history of the representation and religious qualification of time in Rome (= Religious- historical experiments and preparatory work. Vol. 40). de Gruyter, Berlin et al. 1995, ISBN 3-11-014514-6 (also: Tübingen, University, habilitation paper, 1994).

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Jörg Rüpke: Calendar and Public. 1995, p. 250.