Sacrosanctity

(Redirected fromSacrosanct)

Sacrosanctity(Latin:sacrosanctitas,lit.'sacred sanctity') orinviolabilityis the declaration of physical inviolability of a place (particularlytemplesandcity walls), a sacred object, or a person. UnderRoman law,this was established through sacred law (lex sacrata), which hadreligiousconnotations.Festusexplained that: “Sacred laws are laws which have the sanction that anyone who broke them becomes accursed to one of the gods, together with his family and property”.[1]In some cases the law may have been applied to protect temples from being defiled.[2]It could also be applied to protect a person who was declared sacrosanct (inviolable). Those who harmed a sacrosanct person becamesacer(accursed) through the declarationsacer esto!( "Let him be accursed" ). The offender was considered as having harmed the gods or a god, as well as the sacrosanct person and therefore accursed to the gods or a god. This meant that the offender became forfeit to the god(s) and on his death he was surrendered to the god(s) in question.[3]The implication was that anyone who killed him was considered as performing a sacred duty and enjoyed impunity.[4]

History

edit

Within Roman literature itself, the termsacrosanctitasis usually found in relation to thetribune of the Plebs,plebeiantribune,or the Roman emperors who appropriated the tribunician power in large part because of its ritual protection.

During the rebellion of thefirst plebeian secessionin 494 BC, which marked the beginning of theConflict of the Ordersbetweenpatricians(the aristocrats) andplebeians(the commoners), the plebeian movement instituted and elected its leaders, who soon also came to act as the representatives of the plebs: the plebeian tribunes. It also instituted the assistants of these tribunes (the plebeianaediles) and its own assembly, thePlebeian Council(Concilium Plebis). These plebeian institutions were extra-legal in that they were not recognised by the senate and theRoman state,which were controlled by the patricians. The bones of contention in theConflict of the Orderswere the economic grievances of the poor, the protection of plebeians and, later, power-sharing with the patricians (who monopolised political power) with the rich plebeians. The patricians resisted the plebeian movement and its demands because the interests of the plebeians most often clashed with theirs and they saw this movement as a threat to their political and economic privileges.

The first plebeian secession was spontaneous and was the result of the exasperation of the plebeians with the refusal of the senate to address their demands. They lost faith in the Roman state. After the rebellion the disaffected plebeians effectively created a “state within the state.”[5]Livysaid that “Two states were created out of one; each faction had its own magistrates [officials]; its own laws.”[6]The plebeians turned theAventine Hillinto their stronghold and their own jurisdiction in contraposition to the Roman state. The Plebeian Council, under the leadership of the plebeian tribunes, who presided over its sessions, voted on and issued its own laws which applied to this hill and to the plebeians. The patricians did not recognise these plebeian resolutions as laws because they refused to recognise the plebeian movement. Moreover, formally, legislation was supposed to be proposed by theconsuls(the two annually elected heads of the Republic) and put to the vote of theComitia Centuriata,the Assembly of the Soldiers.[7]

Given the extra-legal character of the plebeian institutions, the plebeians found a way to give power to the plebeian tribunes by using the lex sacrata and declaring the person of a plebeian tribune sacrosanct. The lex sacrata was a collective resolution sanctioned by a collective oath. It was found among other Italic people as a military arrangement whereby, at times of military emergency, the compulsorily levied soldiers swore to follow their commanders to the death.[8]The plebeians swore to obey the plebeian tribunes they elected and to defend them to the death. Those who harmed them became sacer. Given that the plebeian tribunes were not part of the Roman state and had no secular legal status, the threat to kill those who harmed them by the plebeians formed the base from which the powers of the plebeian tribunes were derived. The invocation of a religious law provided the justification and sacrosanctity conferred impunity. These tribunes provided protection from arbitrary coercion by public officials thoughauxilium(assistance) by personal intervention to stop the action. They also could usecoercitio,the enforcement of their will by coercion through which they could impose fines, imprisonment or the death penalty on anyone who challenged them or abused them verbally or assaulted them. Later, as the Conflict of the Orders was resolved, the sacrosanct character of the plebeian tribunes or, as they also came to be known,Tribunes of the Plebswas accepted by the patricians and implemented into Roman law.

References

edit
  1. ^Festus, de Verborum Significatione Quae Supersunt Cum Pauli Epitome
  2. ^Coarelli, F. (1983) Foro Romano I: Periodo archaico, Rome, p. 178
  3. ^Ogilvie, R.M. (1995) A Commentary on Livy, Clarendon Press, Oxford, pp. 500-2
  4. ^Altheim, F. (1940) Lex Sacrata, Amsterdam
  5. ^This phrase was used by Mommsen to describe the plebeian organisation; Romisches Staatsrecht, vol. III 3rd edition, Leipzig, 1887-8.
  6. ^Livy, ab Urbe Condita, 2.44.9.
  7. ^Lintott, A. (1999). The Constitution of the Roman Republic. Oxford University Press, pp. 44-48
  8. ^Altheim F. (1940) Lex Sacrata, Amsterdam; Livy mentions such arrangements in several passages