ISTITUZIONI DI DIRITTO ROMANO

Natale Rampazzo

Obiettivi formativi

This course aims to provide the basic knowledge of the main institutes of Roman Law. Particular attention will be paid to the intersections with the contemporary law also in comparison with other legal experiences. Learning-by-doing methods will apply. The goal is to provide the students with the necessary intellectual tools suitable for a critical and practical approach to the subject matter in a proactive way.

Prerequisiti

None

Risultati di apprendimento attesi

Comprehension and understanding: The course aims at a critical deepening, understanding and knowledge of the general principles and institutes of the Roman legal experience through the study of the main sources. Applying knowledge: the student’s interaction will be promoted through case studies and other immersive experiences in order to develop the attitude in employing the methodological tools provided in interpreting norms and recognising and solving problems. Making judgments: the student will be enabled to assess, compare and criticise real or fictitious cases independently . Communication skills: the student will be able to explain both in written and in oral form the institutes of Roman law and their intertwin with contemporary law, to debate and plead cases in mock trials. Learning skills: the course provides the student with notions and knowledge specific to the sector but also indications and suggestions necessary to enable him to face other topics similar to those in the program and especially concerning the current legal systems.

Contenuti Del Corso

The main topics are: Constitutional Law International Law Criminal Law Procedure Property and its limits Law of obligations Family and succession Economics and Law The Jurists and the Law The Roman Law Tradition and the Foundations of European Law

Testi Di Riferimento

The following books are meant to give you a deeper guidance through the different subjects. The active attendance could be useful to provide you with sufficient knowledge. N. Rampazzo, Roman Public Law (2026, Kindle Version/Paperback from Amazon.it) for Weeks 1 to 4 [NR1]) and Roman Private Law (2026, in press) ALTERNATIVELY: George Mousourakis, Fundamentals of Roman Private Law, Springer Verlag, 2012 [GM] OR W.W. Buckland, A Manual of Roman Private Law (1939), repr. Cambridge University Press, 2012 [WWB]. Plus lecture notes and further handed/uploaded materials.

Metodologie Didattiche

The lectures will take place interactively also with the use of multimedia teaching tools and distribution of learning material. The organization of work groups or individual presentations on specific topic and of mock trials is planned (learning-by-doing).

Modalità di verifica dell'apprendimento

Gli studenti saranno invitati a discussioni collegiali in aula ed a sostenere prove scritte di autovalutazione sugli argomenti più rilevanti trattati nelle lezioni frontali. La verifica finale del livello di apprendimento conseguito, con assegnazione del voto di profitto e dei relativi CFU, sarà effettuata per mezzo di una unica prova orale. Ai fini dell'attribuzione del voto in trentesimi saranno valutate: la conoscenza degli istituti, della loro genesi e delle loro finalità (65%); la proprietà del linguaggio e del lessico tecnico (20%); nonché la capacità di costruire relazioni tra la struttura della società nelle varie epoche e la necessità di utilizzazione dei vari istituti giuridici (15%).

Criteri per l’assegnazione dell’elaborato finale

Good knowledge of English. Critical and analytical skills.

Settimana 1

Introductory remarks; Time, space and the law; Individuals and community – Materials from lectures

Settimana 2

Constitutional Law: Monarchy, Republic, Empire; The evolution of the institutes [NR1 Chapter 1 or GM Chapter 1] Case study

Settimana 3

International Law: War, peace, diplomacy. The private law of the treaties [NR1 Chapter 2 or Lecture Notes+Materials] Case study

Settimana 4

Criminal Law: origins, delicts and crimes, procedure [NR1 Chapter 3 or Lecture Notes+Materials] Case study

Settimana 5

Law of persons and succession [NR2 or GM Chapter 2 and 5 or WWB Chapter III to V and IX to XI] Written test

Settimana 6

Property and its limits: mancipatio, possessio, iura in re aliena, dominium [NR2 or GM Chapter 3 or WWB Chapter VI to VIII] Case study

Settimana 7

Obligations I: definition, contracts, stipulatio [NR2 or GM Chapter 4 or WWB Chapter XII] Case study

Settimana 8

Obligations II: emptio venditio, locatio conductio, mandatum [NR2 or GM Chapter 4 or WWB Chapter XIII] Case study

Settimana 9

Obligations III: societas, delicts, iniuria [NR2 or GM Chapter 4 or WWB Chapters XIV and XV] Case study

Settimana 10

Civil Procedure: legis actiones, formulae, cognitiones [NR2 or GM Chapter 6 or WWB Chapters XVI and XVII] Case study

Settimana 11

Economics and the Law: business, markets, agriculture [Lecture Notes+Materials]

Settimana 12

The legacy of Roman Law: the law after Justinian, foundations of European law, persistence in contemporary legal orders [Lecture Notes+Materials] Case Study