Talk:Constitutio Sandbox
From Ancient Ways
Organizational Scheme
I like yours. It reminds me powerfully of the one Nova Roma used to have prominently, and may, for all I know, still have buried, on their Wiki (which changes as fast as San Andreas' topography during an 8.5-magnitude earthquake). *breathes* Anyway...
They had a Corpus Iuris Novae Romae section, divided into:
- Laws about Citizens
- Laws about Gentes and Familiae
- Laws about Tribes and Centuries
- Laws about the Comitia
- Laws about Magistrates
- Laws about the Senate
- Laws about the Sacred Colleges
- Laws about Judicial matters
- Laws about Sodalitates
- Laws about the Forum
- Laws about Various Subjects
I don't know how much of that you'll need (certainly Ancient Rome didn't mention sodalities in the Twelve Tables); but your Ius Civium, Ius Gentium, etc. are broken down very similarly, which is the only sensible thing about the NR site.
(Hei, I found the Corpus Iuris page for comparison: Corpus Iuris Novae Romae ...just call me Archive! <g>)
Are you keeping your efforts to the Constitution proper, or will you be incorporating other bodies of Roman Law? -- >({|:-) 14:00, 1 March 2007 (EST)
Reply:
Thanks for the link and your comments, very nice! I am going to start with the constitution being a broad framework and hopefully eventually branch out.
Now that I have a general outline, I'm going to start filling in the blanks with the stuff I know: the magistrates, the Senate, etc. I will then dig more into the judicial system, religion, and civil rights.
Admin 15:06, 1 March 2007 (EST)