Acknowledgments 2021 - École Française de Rome P. 7-7 Is part of Legal engegement : the reception of Roman law and tribunals by jews and other inhabitants of the empire. - ( Collection de l'École française de Rome ; 579) Chapters from the same volume (available individually) Acknowledgments Introduction Get chapter Cicero, the law and the barbarians Get chapter Accommodating former legal systems and Roman law : Cicero's rhetorical and legal viewpoint in the Verrine Orations Get chapter Performing justice in Republican empire, 1-565 CE. Get chapter A frenzy of sovereignty : punishment in P.Aktenbuch. Get chapter Between the good king and the cruel tyrant : the Acta Isidori and the perception of Roman emperors among provincial litigants Get chapter Pappus and Julianus, the Maccabaean martyrs, and rabbinic martyrdom history in Late Antiquity Get chapter Appealing for the emperor's justice : provincial petitions and imperial responses prior to Late Antiquity Get chapter Representing the rights of a city : Ekdikoi in Roman courts Get chapter Jewish judicial patrons and advocates in the western empire (5th cent.) Get chapter Legal pluralism in the western Roman empire : popular legal sources and legal history Get chapter Judicial pluralism in the Visigothic kingdom of Toulouse : special jurisdictions and communal courts Get chapter Legal knowledge and its transmission in three marriage contracts from the Judaean desert Get chapter Imperialism and the creation of local law : the case of rabbinic law. Get chapter Did Palestinian rabbis know Roman law? : methodological considerations and case studies Get chapter A rabbinic postliminium : the property of captives in tannaitic halakhah in light of Roman law. Get chapter A proselyte whose sons converted with him : Roman laws on new citizens' authority over their children and tannaitic rulings on converts to Judaism and their offspring Get chapter Ad similitudinem arbitrorum : on the perils of commensurability and comparison in Roman and rabbinic arbitration law. Get chapter Not like our Rock is their rock (Deut 32:31) : rabbinic perceptions of Roman law courts and jurisdiction Get chapter The rabbinic model of sovereignty in its biblical and imperial contexts Get chapter Early Christian perspectives on Roman law and Mosaic law. Get chapter Barbarians' judge the law : the rabbis on the un-civil law of Rome Get chapter Index of ancient sources Get chapter Abstracts Get chapter Information DOI: 10.1400/284555 Permalink: http://digital.casalini.it/10.1400/284555