Quiritic property
In Roman legal doctrine, property is called Quirite property which , according to ius civile, was only accessible to Roman citizens ( Quirite ) and, in addition to movable property, only comprised Italian land. It was inalienable and required the manzipation process .
To this end, the bonitarian property that was in bonis esse , i.e. in assets, is delimited .
literature
- Herbert Hausmaninger , Walter Selb : Römisches Privatrecht , Böhlau, Vienna 1981 (9th edition 2001) (Böhlau study books) ISBN 3-205-07171-9 , pp. 140 f.
- Ulrich Manthe : History of Roman Law . 3. Edition. CH Beck, Munich 2007.
- Detlef Liebs : Roman law . 6th edition. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Göttingen 2004.
Individual evidence
- ^ Herbert Hausmaninger , Walter Selb : Römisches Privatrecht , Böhlau, Vienna 1981 (9th edition 2001) (Böhlau-Studien-Bücher) ISBN 3-205-07171-9 , pp. 140 f.