Darth Wong wrote:Even black slaves in 18th century America could buy their freedom, although it rarely happened. Were there actual laws in ancient Greece and Rome prohibiting mistreatment? You wouldn't know anything about the wording of those laws, would you?
The laws are somewhere, but not on the internet iirc and I don't fancy a trip to my university library at this time.
Bill Thayer wrote:A Constitution of Claudius enacted that if a man exposed his slaves, who were infirm, they should become free; and the Constitution also declared that if they were put to death, the act should be murder (Suet. Claud. 25). It was also enacted (Cod. 3 tit. 38 s11) that in sales or division of property, slaves, such as husband and wife, parents and children, brothers and sisters, should not be separated.
Dio Chrysostom gave a speech in the Forum of Rome around AD100 in which he explicitly condemned slavery as unjust.By the second century slaves suing their masters for cruel treatment was well established law.
Vita Hadriani wrote:He forbade masters to kill their slaves, and ordered that any who deserved it should be sentenced by the courts. He forbade anyone to sell a slave or a maid-servant to a procurer or trainer of gladiators without giving a reason therefor. He ordered that those who had wasted their property, if legally responsible, should be flogged in the amphitheatre and then let go. Houses of hard labour for slaves and free he abolished. He provided separate baths for the sexes. He issued an order that, if a slave-owner were murdered in his house, no slaves should be examined save those who were near enough to have had a knowledge of the murder.
He is also known of having banished at least one wealthy lady for mistreating her servants. Banishment at those times was one of the harshest penalties available, second only to death and service in the mines.
Antoninus Pius issued an imperial decree which said that every slave running from a cruel master who embraced the statue of the emperor is to be given his freedom. (The christians later coopted this legal principle as church sanctuary).
Stoic philosophers were the most rabid opponents of slavery iirc.
I had seen on a BBC documentary that the population of ancient Athens was roughly 250,000 but they only had about 30,000 fully enfranchised male citizens. Admittedly that's not precisely 90%, but I wasn't expecting to get into a debate about exact numbers. Of course, if those numbers are inaccurate, feel free to correct me.
No, those are pretty accurate ones for classical Athens. Still, 3/25 is a better ratio and 30.000 are way more than the numbers of male nobility in any medieval country.
Whoever says "education does not matter" can try ignorance
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Chief Judge Haywood
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