Madeline Parkes

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In the second century CE, a jurist named Marcian wrote that ‘whoever kills a man is punished without distinction as to the status of the man he killed’, which some have taken to mean that enslaved people counted as people where murder was concerned by then.15 Possibly it does, but we don’t see in the sources anyone suddenly being prosecuted for killing enslaved members of their household.
A Fatal Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum: Murder in Ancient Rome
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