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Tiresias: The Ancient Mediterranean Religions Source Database

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11 results for "remarriage"
1. Horace, Sermones, 1.2 (1st cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE)  Tagged with subjects: •remarriage, augustan law Found in books: Huebner and Laes (2019) 114
2. Suetonius, Augustus, 34 (1st cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •remarriage, augustan law Found in books: Huebner and Laes (2019) 114
3. Tacitus, Annals, 2.85 (1st cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •remarriage, augustan law Found in books: Huebner and Laes (2019) 114
2.85. Eodem anno gravibus senatus decretis libido feminarum coercita cautumque ne quaestum corpore faceret cui avus aut pater aut maritus eques Romanus fuisset. nam Vistilia praetoria familia genita licentiam stupri apud aedilis vulgaverat, more inter veteres recepto, qui satis poenarum adversum impudicas in ipsa professione flagitii credebant. exactum et a Titidio Labeone Vistiliae marito cur in uxore delicti manifesta ultionem legis omisisset. atque illo praetendente sexaginta dies ad consultandum datos necdum praeterisse, satis visum de Vistilia statuere; eaque in insulam Seriphon abdita est. actum et de sacris Aegyptiis Iudaicisque pellendis factumque patrum consultum ut quattuor milia libertini generis ea superstitione infecta quis idonea aetas in insulam Sardiniam veherentur, coercendis illic latrociniis et, si ob gravitatem caeli interissent, vile damnum; ceteri cederent Italia nisi certam ante diem profanos ritus exuissent. 2.85.  In the same year, bounds were set to female profligacy by stringent resolutions of the senate; and it was laid down that no woman should trade in her body, if her father, grandfather, or husband had been a Roman knight. For Vistilia, the daughter of a praetorian family, had advertised her venality on the aediles' list — the normal procedure among our ancestors, who imagined the unchaste to be sufficiently punished by the avowal of their infamy. Her husband, Titidius Labeo, was also required to explain why, in view of his wife's manifest guilt, he had not invoked the penalty of the law. As he pleaded that sixty days, not yet elapsed, were allowed for deliberation, it was thought enough to pass sentence on Vistilia, who was removed to the island of Seriphos. — Another debate dealt with the proscription of the Egyptian and Jewish rites, and a senatorial edict directed that four thousand descendants of enfranchised slaves, tainted with that superstition and suitable in point of age, were to be shipped to Sardinia and there employed in suppressing brigandage: "if they succumbed to the pestilential climate, it was a cheap loss." The rest had orders to leave Italy, unless they had renounced their impious ceremonial by a given date.
4. Cassius Dio, Roman History, 55.2.5-55.2.7 (2nd cent. CE - 3rd cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •remarriage, augustan law Found in books: Huebner and Laes (2019) 109
55.2.5.  And the same festivities were being prepared for Drusus; even the Feriae were to be held a second time on his account, so that he might celebrate his triumph on that occasion. But his untimely death upset these plans. To Livia statues were voted by way of consoling her and she was enrolled among the mothers of three children. 55.2.6.  For in certain cases, formerly by act of the senate, but now by the emperor's, the law bestows the privileges which belong to the parents of three children upon men or women to whom Heaven has not granted that number of children. In this way they are not subject to the penalties imposed for childlessness and may receive all but a few of the rewards offered for large families; 55.2.7.  and not only men but gods also may enjoy these rewards, the object being that, if any one leaves them a bequest at his death, they may receive it.  So much for this matter. As to Augustus, he ordered that the sittings of the senate should be held on fixed days. Previously, it appears, there had been no precise regulation concerning them and it often happened that members failed to attend; he accordingly appointed two regular meetings for each month, so that they were under compulsion to attend, — at least those of them whom the law summoned, —
5. Gaius, Instiutiones, 1.13-1.41 (2nd cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •remarriage, augustan law Found in books: Huebner and Laes (2019) 123
6. Justinian, Codex Justinianus, 5.5.1 (5th cent. CE - 6th cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •remarriage, augustan law Found in books: Huebner and Laes (2019) 123
7. Justinian, Digest, 24.2.11 (5th cent. CE - 6th cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •remarriage, augustan law Found in books: Huebner and Laes (2019) 123
8. Justinian, Novellae, 22.37 (5th cent. CE - 6th cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •remarriage, augustan law Found in books: Huebner and Laes (2019) 123
9. Justinian, Novellae, 22.37 (5th cent. CE - 6th cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •remarriage, augustan law Found in books: Huebner and Laes (2019) 123
11. Ulpian, Frag., 17.1  Tagged with subjects: •nan Found in books: Huebner and Laes (2019) 38