It’s Who You Know. Co-freedmen Networks & Legal Knowledge in the Campanian Wax Tablets
Presenters
Alex Cushing, Loyola University Maryland
Abstract
Some few hundred wax tablets
were preserved in various locations around the Bay of Naples by the eruption of
Mount Vesuvius of 79 C.E. These included the larger archives of the auctioneer
and businessman L. Caecilius Iucundus of Pompeii and the Sulpicii,
formerly-enslaved members of a creditary and banking firm based at Puteoli, as
well as various smaller personal archives from Herculaneum. These tablets
recorded different legal and financial procedures and transactions. Andrew
Lintott has referred to the archives as “perhaps our most intimate contact with
Roman private law” and, indeed, many of the documents provide us an incredibly
detailed picture of Roman law and legal procedure in practice, giving us a
sense of how both routine and more complex juridical processes were navigated
by everyday Romans.
These tabulae are also
remarkable as documentation of the legal capabilities of formerly enslaved
people, who are found throughout the archives engaging in a range of legal
transactions with some degree of ease and knowledge. In some cases, as in the
affairs of the Sulpicii, this legal procedural knowledge was a component of the
work that they did while enslaved and their familiarity with legal formulae and
courses of action was developed over years of specialization before
manumission. Among the Sulpicii, legal procedural cooperation and mutual
support between freedmen were common aspects of their business relationships.
In other examples from the archives, however, the legal mechanisms recorded
were of a sort that an enslaver would not have wanted an enslaved worker to
know. A series of tablets from 76 C.E. found in the Casa del Bicentenario at
Herculaneum recorded the efforts of Petronia Iusta to prove that she was in
fact free-born and not a freedwoman as her nominal patron, Calatoria Themis,
contended. How precisely Petronia gained the practical knowledge necessary to
initiate this legal procedure is unclear, though she did benefit from the
support in court of her fellow freedperson C. Petronius Telesphorus, who in
fact had previously been acting as Calatoria’s legal guardian. It is possible
that he used his own legal expertise, in addition to his corroborating
testimony, to help his colliberta negotiate the juridical process of
establishing her legal status.
These are not the only
examples from the tabulae of groups of freedpersons, often colliberti
who had been manumitted by the same enslaver, acting as important supports for
each other in legal procedures. The wax tablet archives demonstrate that fellow
freed slaves provided reliable assistance in completing juridical procedures as
legal representatives but also acted as important sources of legal knowledge
and guidance for each other. This capacity for various forms of legal
collaboration between colliberti helped formerly enslaved people to
circumvent barriers to legal access and also to gain procedural knowledge that
might otherwise have been difficult to acquire.
AIA-8A