Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from The Private Life of the Romans: With Numerous Illustrations
The father of the family was its sovereign in his own right (sui im'is). Wife, children, and slaves were his subjects. The legal power of the husband over the wife was expressed by the term mamas. The bride Of those primitive times was merely transferred from her father's rule to that of her husband: She ranked thenceforth as a daughter of her husband's house she came in manum suam, into his hand.1 Her property became his. He might not sell, and, so long as she remained faithful, he might not slay her, but these were the only limits to his power.
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