Manumission with Paramone: Conditional Freedom?
Publication
, Journal Article
Sosin, JD
Published in: TAPA
2015
A common view holds that slaves freed on condition of paramone were juridical halfings, legally half-free, half-slave. This paper argues that this view is based on a misunderstanding of the Greek sources, mainly epigraphic; that the intermediate or hybrid juridical state of conditional freedom is a modern invention; that the evidence for manumission in the Greek world suggests overwhelmingly that polities constructed liberty and slavery as a binary pair, rather than poles on a spectrum.
Duke Scholars
Published In
TAPA
Publication Date
2015
Volume
145
Related Subject Headings
- Classics
- 2103 Historical Studies
- 2005 Literary Studies
- 2004 Linguistics
Citation
APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Sosin, J. D. (2015). Manumission with Paramone: Conditional Freedom? (Accepted) TAPA, 145.
Sosin, J. D. “Manumission with Paramone: Conditional Freedom? (Accepted)” TAPA 145 (2015).
Sosin JD. Manumission with Paramone: Conditional Freedom? (Accepted) TAPA. 2015;145.
Sosin, J. D. “Manumission with Paramone: Conditional Freedom? (Accepted)” TAPA, vol. 145, 2015.
Sosin JD. Manumission with Paramone: Conditional Freedom? (Accepted) TAPA. 2015;145.
Published In
TAPA
Publication Date
2015
Volume
145
Related Subject Headings
- Classics
- 2103 Historical Studies
- 2005 Literary Studies
- 2004 Linguistics