Couverture de Augustus and the Lex Fufia Caninia: How Rome's First Emperor Regulated Slave Manumission

Augustus and the Lex Fufia Caninia: How Rome's First Emperor Regulated Slave Manumission

Augustus and the Lex Fufia Caninia: How Rome's First Emperor Regulated Slave Manumission

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Augustus didn't just reshape Rome's government and army — he also rewrote the rules of Roman society, including who could be freed and how. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the Lex Fufia Caninia of 2 BCE, a law that limited the number of slaves a master could free in his will. Why would Augustus care about manumission? What did it reveal about his fears of social upheaval and his vision of a stable Roman order? They trace the law's background: the post-Social War influx of slaves, the citizenship grants under Caesar and the triumvirs, and the growing anxiety among the elite about 'polluting' the Roman populace with too many ex-slaves. Lucas explains the specifics — the sliding scale capping manumissions at 100, the requirement to free by name, and the legal fictions that owners used to evade it. He also connects it to Augustus's broader moral legislation, including the Lex Aelia Sentia and the Lex Papia Poppaea, showing how the princeps used law to engineer a society of clear hierarchies. Luna asks whether the law actually worked — and Lucas points to the epigraphic evidence of joint tombs and funerary colleges that suggest freedpeople found ways to build community despite restrictions. The conversation ends by reflecting on the tension between Augustan ideals of order and the messy reality of Roman social mobility. #Augustus #LexFufiaCaninia #RomanLaw #SlaveManumission #Freedmen #RomanSocialHierarchy #LexAeliaSentia #LexPapiaPoppaea #Patronage #Manumission #RomanEmpire #SocialEngineering #Princeps #AncientRome #RomanHistory #FexingoHistory #History #Podcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo
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