The Survival and Development
of International Jurisdiction
in the Greek World under Roman Rule
by Anthony J. Marshall,
Kingston, Ontario
Contents
|
| I. Foreword |
626 |
| II. Introduction: Importance of the Subject for Evaluation
of Rome's Provincial Record |
627 |
| III. Survey of Moral Perspectives |
628 |
1. Hostile verdicts on Rome's record the
prevailing view |
628 |
2. Favourable verdicts: the minority view
|
630 |
| IV. The Hellenistic Background |
633 |
1. Arbitration and the role of the Leagues
and Kings |
633 |
2. Judicial treaties |
635 |
3. Judicial commissions |
636 |
| V. Arbitration in the Roman Period |
641 |
1. The sanction' of Roman arbitration |
641 |
2. The formative work of E. DE RUGGIERO |
643 |
3. The Roman attitude to arbitration |
645 |
4. The role of the Leagues in the Roman period
|
647 |
5. Roman civil law forms in arbitral procedure
|
648 |
| VI. Judicial Commissions in the Roman Period |
650 |
1. The geographical pattern of the exchanges
|
650 |
2. The extent of Roman supervision |
651 |
3. The Adramyttium inscription (1G 12.5.722)
|
654 |
4. The evidence of Cicero, Ad Atticum 6.1.15
|
656 |
5. The evidence of the fourth Cyrene Edict
|
658 |
| VII. Conclusion |
661 |