University of Virginia Library

Search this document 
  
expand section 
  
expand section 
  

expand section1. 
expand section2. 
expand section3. 
expand section4. 
expand section5. 
expand section6. 
expand section7. 
expand section8. 
expand section9. 
expand section10. 
expand section11. 
expand section12. 
expand section13. 
expand section14. 
expand section15. 
expand section16. 
expand section17. 
expand section18. 
expand section19. 
expand section20. 
expand section21. 
expand section22. 
expand section23. 
expand section24. 
expand section25. 
expand section26. 
expand section27. 
collapse section28. 
expand section28.1. 
collapse section28.2. 
2. That the Laws of the Barbarians were all personal.
  
  
expand section28.3. 
expand section28.4. 
 28.5. 
expand section28.6. 
expand section28.7. 
expand section28.8. 
expand section28.9. 
expand section28.10. 
expand section28.11. 
expand section28.12. 
expand section28.13. 
expand section28.14. 
 28.15. 
expand section28.16. 
expand section28.17. 
expand section28.18. 
expand section28.19. 
expand section28.20. 
expand section28.21. 
expand section28.22. 
expand section28.23. 
expand section28.24. 
expand section28.25. 
expand section28.26. 
expand section28.27. 
expand section28.28. 
expand section28.29. 
expand section28.30. 
expand section28.31. 
expand section28.32. 
expand section28.33. 
expand section28.34. 
expand section28.35. 
expand section28.36. 
expand section28.37. 
expand section28.38. 
expand section28.39. 
expand section28.40. 
expand section28.41. 
expand section28.42. 
expand section28.43. 
expand section28.44. 
expand section28.45. 
expand section29. 
expand section30. 
expand section31. 

28.2. 2. That the Laws of the Barbarians were all personal.

It is a distinguishing character of these laws of the barbarians that they were not confined to a certain district; the Frank was tried by the law of the Franks, the Aleman by that of the Alemans, the Burgundian by that of the Burgundians, and the Roman by the Roman law; nay, so far were the conquerors in those days from reducing their laws to a uniform system or body, that they did not even think of becoming legislators to the people they had conquered.

The original of this I find in the manners of the Germans. These people were parted asunder by marshes, lakes, and forests; and Cæsar observes [13] they were fond of such separations. Their dread of the Romans brought about their reunion; and yet each individual among these mixed people was still to be tried by the established customs of his own nation. Each tribe apart was free and independent; and when they came to be intermixed, the independence still continued; the country was common, the government peculiar; the territory the same, and the nations different. The spirit of personal laws prevailed therefore among those people before ever they set out from their own homes, and they carried it with them into the conquered provinces.

We find this custom established in the formulas of Marculfus, [14] in the codes of the laws of the barbarians, but chiefly in the law of the Ripuarians [15] and the decrees of the kings of the first race, [16] whence the capitularies on that subject in the second race were derived. [17] The children followed the laws of their father, [18] the wife that of her husband, [19] the widow came back to her own original law, [20] and the freedman was under that of his patron. [21] Besides, every man could make choice of what laws he pleased; but the constitution of Lotharius I [22] required that this choice should be made public.

Footnotes

[13]

"De Bello Gall.," lib. vi.

[14]

Book i, formul. 8.

[15]

Chapter 26.

[16]

That of Clotarius in the year 560, in the edition of the "Capitularies of Baluzius," vol. i, art. 4, ib. in fine.

[17]

Capitularies added to the "Law of the Lombards," lib. i, tit. 25, cap. 71, lib. ii, tit. 41, cap. 7, and tit. 56, chaps. 1 and 2.

[18]

Ibid., lib. ii, tit. 5.

[19]

Ibid., ii, tit. 7, chap. 1.

[20]

Ibid., chap. 2.

[21]

Ibid., lib. ii, tit. 35, chap. 2.

[22]

In the "Law of the Lombards," lib. ii, tit. 37.