Skip to content
Formerly Hosted by the Law Professor Blogs Network

Article On The Forced Share In The Ancient World

ArticlePictureCharles J. Reid Jr. (Professor of Law, University of St. Thomas School of Law) recently published an article entitled, The Jurisprudence of the Forced Share in the Ancient World: From Cicero to Justinian?, U of St. Thomas (Minnesota) Legal Studies Research Paper No. 16-01. Provided below is an abstract of the article:

This paper is concerned with the origins of the European doctrine of the forced share, according to which parents must set aside at least a portion of their estate for their children. I begin this paper in Late Republican Rome with the adoption by the praetors of the cause of action for setting aside inofficious wills (the querela inofficiosi testamenti) and the enforcement of the Lex Falcidia, the statute establishing the forced share at one-quarter of the estate. I then consider the emergence of the vocabulary used to justify this mandatory estate practice, focusing in particular on the richly-textured noun pietas. I examine the social background of this practice, looking in particular at ancient concepts of marriage and family. I review Pliny the Younger’s criticism of testators who neglected the interests of family members. And I close with the great legal reforms of the law of wills by the Emperors Theodosius II and Justinian.

Posted in: