Esto es la Universidad.... pública




Este blog está dirigido a vosotros, los estudiantes que acabáis de llegar a la Universidad. A la Universidad pública. A la universidad de todos. La que costeamos entre todos para que independientemente del nivel de vuestros ingresos familiares tengáis la oportunidad de aprender y de transformar vuestra vida. Para que aprendáis Derecho y, sobre todo, os convirtáis en personas pensantes y críticas, dispuestas a integraros inteligentemente en el mundo que os ha tocado vivir.

En este blog encontraréis primero las instrucciones para sacar el máximo provecho de "nuestro" esfuerzo conjunto a lo largo de estas semanas de clase. Pero también algo más: una incitación permanente a aprender, un estímulo para que vayáis más allá de la mera superación del trámite administrativo del aprobado. Escribía el piloto, escritor y filósofo francés Antoine de Saint Exupéry (1900-1944) en El Principito, que "sólo se conocen las cosas que se domestican". Por eso voy a tratar de convenceros de lo importante que es "domesticar" lo que vais a estudiar. Para que sintáis lo apasionante que es descubrir el mundo a través del Derecho. Pero no del Derecho a secas, sino del Derecho en su trayectoria histórica, en el marco cultural de la civilización en la que aparece. Para que comprendáis como sugería José Ortega y Gasset, que preservar nuestra civilización depende de que cada generación se adueñe de su época y sepa vivir "a la altura de los tiempos".

Para ello cada semana os diré qué tenéis que estudiar y cómo, os proporcionaré lecturas y os recomendaré ejercicios. También compartiré con vosotros pensamientos y consideraciones que vengan a cuento, al hilo de lo que vayamos estudiando.

Tendremos que trabajar mucho, vosotros y un servidor. Pero eso dará sentido a vuestro -nuestro- paso por la Universidad. Será un esfuerzo muy rentable para vuestro -mi- engrandecimiento como personas. Os lo aseguro.

Ánimo, y a por ello.

Un saludo cordial

Bruno Aguilera-Barchet

domingo, 1 de febrero de 2026

THE FIRST EUROPEAN EMPIRE (Teaching Guide 2)

 

Roman Aquilifer

1. Introduction

If the Greeks invented the polis, the Romans invented the “state”. Unlike the Greek polises, which never produced a great, unified state because they lacked the institutional capacity to organize and control an extensive territory, Rome developed a method of expansion which allowed it to govern and administrate large territories from the metropolis (that is the Roman civitas). This was their first contribution to European culture. The second one was Law.

The Romans managed to build upon the Greek political model of the polis, and dramatically expand it, transforming Rome into a colossal territorial entity and a military, political and cultural juggernaut, thanks to their advanced organisational capacity. But they consolidated it durably thanks to the development of a truly extraordinary legal system. The Romans may have expanded their empire through their military prowess and technology, but they consolidated it through Law. Given that the entire Western legal apparatus rests on foundations laid by the Romans, and as its legal conceptions have come to permeate the world, it is important to understand why and how the Romans managed to avail themselves of such an astonishing system. 

The Roman Empire at his height

a) The Roman Empire: an “avant la lettre” state

 The Roman Empire is not the oldest. The first empires appeared in the East, not in the West. Concretely in Mesopotamia where appeared the first empire: the Akkadian at the end of the Third Millenium. The second one appeared in China a territory that became a powerful empire under the Han (206 BC from AD 220), precisely thanks to the unification carried out at the end of the 3rd century BC by Emperor Qin (223-206 BC , who ruthlessly wiped out the heads of rival clans.

Emperor Qin Shi Huan (223-206 BC

 Qin followed the ideas of the sage Confucius (551-479) who sought to mitigate the negative effects of the spread of feudalism during the era of Warring States (475-221 BC). At the time of his birth China was dominated by powerful rulers at war with one another.  In order to rectify this situation Confucius endorsed the idea of a single empire headed by a sole sovereign. It is interesting to note that Confucius did not base the social structure he envisioned on any divinity. China was not a theocracy, as its religion consisted essentially of the veneration of one’s ancestors and a morality according to which rulers were to be accepted by the people because they were virtuous, not because they had imposed themselves upon them by military force.  According to Confucius, government should be based not on force, but on the encouragement of just and good conduct, not in divinity. From a practical point of view he defended a centralized model of governmental organization, presided over by an emperor who would administer and govern the state through a bureaucratic class. Confucius, however, argued that these bureaucrats should be selected based on merit, and not simply drawn from the hereditary nobility. Thus appeared the famous “mandarins,” who obtained their posts only after passing very difficult tests requiring years of study.   

Confucius (551-479)
 

Confucius’s ideas on government and the state were, for the first time, placed into practice by the Qin Dynasty (223-206 BC), whose emperors were so important that the line would give the country its name today: China.

 The Westerners –today Europeans- did not have a strong centralized empire until much later. The Roman Empire appears after the Roman Civil Wars (88-31 BC) with Octavian Caesar Augustus (27 BC-14 AD), and disappears –at least its Western part- in 476 AD.

The original 7 Hills Rome

 Rome is initially a small polis, but gradually through their strong sense of organization, the Romans conquered the Italian Peninsula by the beginning of the 3d century BC and they started expanding fighting and beating the Carthaginians by the end of the same century. From then the Roman expansion was unstoppable. The problem was that such an extraordinary territorial increase could not be managed through the polis model. So Rome entered in the critical period of the Civil Wars (88-31 BC).

The Roman Republic on the eve of the Civil Wars

 By his victory in the naval battle of Actium (31 BC) against Mark Antony and Cleopatra, Octavian became the only master of Rome. On top of that he was extraordinarily clever and he decided to change the system of the Republic steadily, avoiding following the fate of his adoptive father Julius Caesar who was assassinated on 44 BC. Apparently he shared his power with the Senate after becoming the First Citizen (“Princeps”) whose role was to protect the Roman Republic. In fact he started concentrating all political power in his hands, something that his successors consolidated. 

Reconstruction of the face of Octavian Caesar Augustus according to AI

The height of the Roman Empire was attained in the 2nd century AD with its greatest emperors: Trajan, Hadrian and Marcus Aurelius, the three of them of Hispanic origin.

 Thanks to the cleverness of Augustus the West saw the rise of its first great Empire. Many of Roman institutions would come until our days, as for instance the Senate, an institution that still exists in many European States. Though the real reason why the Romans were so decisive in European history is because they developed and outstanding Legal System. This is why our National legal systems are essentially based of the Roman Legal concepts, developed by the first Legal Professionals in History: the lawyers, that the Romans called “Jurisconsults”, persons that dedicated their lives to resolve the conflicts among their fellow citizens... for free.  

Romans invented lawyers

b) An outstanding Legal System

Roman society was initially ordered around the mores maiorum”, the way of their divine ancestors- as in Confucius China-, a code coming down from a long tradition and constituting a moral system proven over the course of generations, which is why it was imposed on citizens, limiting their freedom within the city of Rome. This is why Cicero, in his Treaty on Laws, writes that: “The origin of justice is to be sought in the divine law of eternal and immutable morality”. 

Marcus Tullius Cicero (106-43 BC)

Today, when we think of the legal realm we tend to envisage an overwhelming multitude of rules, as we see ourselves buried under an avalanche of laws ― that is, statutes, regulations, ordinances, directives ― legislated by governments. Originally, however, in Rome, such laws (as opposed to Law; note the distinction here) were almost non-existent. For the citizens of Rome, the Law did not refer to mandates that had to be obeyed, but rather the possibility of “acting” to protect one’s rights.

Law as Justice

Romans did not speak about “Law,” but rather to ius. From which come the word “Iustitia” Ius, in the broadest sense, embraces the entirety of the Law. It is, according to jurist Celsus (67-130 AD) “the art of goodness and equity” (ius est ars boni et aequi); and, for Paul (3rd century AD) “what always is just and fair” (aequum et bonum). The fundamental principles of the Law are to live honestly, to harm nobody, and to give everyone their due (honeste vivere, alterum non laedere , suum quique tribuere).   For the pragmatical Romans, the important thing was not so much to define the social order imposed by their predecessors as to ensure its restoration in the event that it was violated. The logic of ancient Roman law can be expressed in the maxim: Where there is a Remedy there is a Right, and there is no Right unless there is a Remedy.

For making it short: for the Romans Law was synonym of JUSTICE.  Originally the essence of Roman Law was the possibility of attaining “justice” (“Ius-titia”), a concept defined by one of the most famous Roman jurists, Ulpian (170-228), as the constant and perpetual impulse to “give to each his own” (Iustitia est constans et perpetua voluntas ius suum quique tribuendi)― an excellent definition that makes this great jurist a sort of forerunner of Human Rights theory.   

Ulpian's statue in the Brussels Palace of Justice 

But why Roman Law became such a good legal system? Every group of people, every civilization needs a system for solving conflicts if they do not want the conflict to degenerate in a war. This why the History of Humanity is in great part the History of the Law, that is the instruments every society develops to solve human conflicts.  But why Roman Law was so special? Simply because the Romans had the first legal professionals in Human History. That is people who dedicated their lives to help their fellow citizens to solve their conflicts. 

And then appeared the Lawyers

The Romans were the first people to have legal professionals. The ruling classes in a whole range of different cultures –the Greek Sophists, the Chinese Mandarins, Islam's alfaquis and ulemas, the priestly classes in Egypt and Mesopotamia– all ensured the maintenance of social order, but they never specialised in the task of resolving conflicts between their fellow citizens. Today we find it only natural, and obvious, that when faced with a legal problem, you go to a lawyer. But, back in the day, this was not obvious at all.

  Being sarcastic we could say that Romans did many great things, and we owe them a lot, especially when it comes to the subject before us: Law. But they also did something unforgivable: they invented lawyers. But the truth is that Roman lawyers were not like ours.

In fact they were not exactly lawyers, they were experts that advise people on how to solve their clashes. People with expertise in ius, (that is jurisconsults), who had gained experience through a lifetime dedicated to instructing citizens on how best to resolve their differences. Moreover they were not at all like modern lawyers because they did not charge for their services. They helped their customers “pro bono”.

These jurisconsults did not need the money, because they invariably belonged to the well-heeled families of the Roman ruling class, and lived off passive income. They did so out of vanity, as jurisprudence was considered such a complex art that it conferred upon them great prestige and allowed them to achieve social renown. Romans who dedicated themselves to the practise of Law wanted honour and fame. In order to achieve both, through the exercise of jurisprudence, young Romans from well-to-do families became apprentices to famous jurisconsults, attending their consultations and discussing them. This allowed them to commence paths of public service (cursus honorum) leading towards the highest magistracies: praetor or consul, which, in turn, was the way to access the Senate, the nucleus of Rome's most influential elite. In short, jurisprudence was a high road to the “Establishment”.

Learning the Law in Rome


And emperors ended up controlling the Law

Of course this Legal system essentially orientated to solve problems changed considerably after Augustus reforms, especially when political power was finally vested on emperors. Because the concentration of political power led naturally to the politicization of the Law. 

The Romans, after inventing lawyers, discovered that controlling the law was a great way to consolidate and strengthen political power. The pretext, of course, was to prevent chaos, but once politicians get their hands on the law it is extremely difficult for citizens to wrest it back from them.

The practice of asking for an authorization to legislate on behalf of the People of Rome began quietly under Augustus, and continued under Tiberius and Claudius, being consolidated by Vespasian (69-79) as soon as he occupied the imperial throne.


Emperor Vespasian (6-79 AD)

Concretely emperor Vespasian (69-79 AD) received the authorization to legislate in name of the people of Rome, a blank check given by a popular assembly, so far the only legitimated to issue legislation, allowing Vespasian and his successors to legislate whatever they felt like. The amazing thing is that the gambit actually worked, and thereafter the emperors managed to seize full control of the Roman legal system. What ensued was a rampant legislative invasion, opening the door to an unbridled politicization of the Law. And today, in our powerful states, politicians still try to control the legal system through legislation.

Emperor Vespasian according to AI
From ius to directus

This important transformation ended up being reflected in the terminology itself:  originally the Romans had used the term ius to refer to the mechanisms to safeguard the social order, but by the end of their history they were using a new term to refer to the law: directus, which may be translated as "straight" or "direct" or "right," expressing the idea of rectitude, of doing the "right" thing.

The fact that Roman law went from ius to directus meant that its primary function had evolved from resolving conflicts to forcing everyone to act rightly so that citizens would live their lives in accordance with the law, now upheld as the paradigm of righteousness and rectitude. Law was no longer synonymous with "justice," but rather with "legislation." It was no longer, essentially, a "civilized" way of solving human conflicts, but rather a set of rules dictated by a political authority to construct a social "order." Those in power indicated what was right, and society was to obey. 

And Justinian preserved the Roman Law forever

In 476 AD, when Romulus Augustulus, the last Western Roman Emperor was dethroned by a German chief warrior named Odoacer. However Odoacer had no idea that he was making history, as his only intention was to make possible the reunification of the Empire. Thus, he sent imperial emblems to the then Eastern Emperor Zeno (474-491), thereby acknowledging his imperium, or authority. It was a matter of time that Eastern (Byzantine) emperors would try to reconquer the Weastern part of the Empire.

Romulus Augustus surrender to Odoacer according to AI

The emperor that tried to do so was Justinian (527-565) who took the reunification of all the territories under his rule very seriously, initiating a series of military campaigns aimed at reconquering the former Western Empire, in order to achieve what they called the "Renewal of the Empire of the Romans" (Renovatio Imperii Romanorum). The attempt was, however, a failure as Byzantine troops managed only to occupy North Africa, the South of the Italian Peninsula, and an insignificant part of the Iberian Peninsula, and not for long. 

 Justinian´s failure as military leader was largely compensated by his initiative, more mundane but much more important, to compile the entire Roman legal tradition and systematically order it into a single official code to be applied across all his domains. 

The compilation commissioned by Justinian is also known by the Latin name of Corpus luris Civilis (or Corpus luris Justiniani), though this name was applied to it later, in 1583, when the Italian jurist Denis Godefroy published a comprehensive edition that included the four parts of the Justinian compilation: Code, Novels, Digest and the Institutes, over 1,000 years after Justinian's death, which is quite a testament to the immortality of his legal feat. 

Without Justinian European history would have been very different. 

Emperor Justinian (527-565) 


2. How to study Teaching Guide 2


a) Read the corresponding text in the “Aula Virtual”.


b) Familiarize yourself with the basic Chronology of the period:

 

CHRONOLOGY

 

10.000 BC Founding of the city of Jericho

 

2334-2279 BC  Sargon of Akkad 

 

551-479           Life of Confucius

 

223-206 BC  Reign of Emperor Qin (from whom “China” takes its name. 

 

202 BC 220 AD           Han Empire in China. 


 

The origins of Rome and its first expansion

753      Legendary founding of the city of Rome by Romulus and Remus (Ab urbe condita)

509      Servius Tullius establishes the republican regime

275      Defeat of Pyrrhus at Beneventum, Rome controls the whole Italic peninsula

264-202 Punic Wars. First Extra-Peninsular expansion of Rome (Sicily and Spain the first Roman “Provinces”)

146      Annexation of Greece as Roman Province

Map of the Roman Provinces at the height of the Empire


The Collapse of the Republican System

88        Beginning of the Civil Wars

63        Catilina’s conspiracy. Cicero manages to restore the republican order. 

60-54   First Triumvirate: Caesar, Pompey and Crassus

44  (Ides of March, 15 March) Assassination of Julius Caesar 

43  Second Triumvirate Octavius, Mark Antony and Lepidus

31 b Naval battle at Actium (Greece). Victory of Octavian over Mark Antony. 

 


The Imperial Era

27 BC Official establishment of the Principate by Augustus

19        Publication of the Virgil’s Aeneid: an embellished and mythical approach to Rome’s origins.

14 AD Death of Augustus

14-68   Julio-Claudian Dinasty  (Nero 54-68)

69-96   Flavian Dinasty (Vespasian 69-79)

96-191 The high Empire_ the golden Roman Era

-           98-117 Trajan

-           117-138 Hadrian

-           161-180 Marcus Aurelius

212      Caracalla grants Roman citizenship to all inhabitants of the Empire

Emperor Caracalla

The Decline of the Roman Empire

284-293 Diocletian and the establishment of the Dominate (Tetrarchy)

380  Theodosius I imposes Christianity as the official religion of the empire (Catholicism)

395 After Theodosius I death the Roman Empire is divided in East and West

476      End of the Western Roman Empire. Romulus Augustus and Odoacer. 

The Roman Empire in 395 AD

From Eastern to Byzantine Empire  

527-565           Reign of Justinian

1453, 29 of May           Constantinople is conquered by Ottomans. End of the Byzantine Empire. 

 

The Fall of Constantinople

c) Complete in your Class Notebook the following exercises:

 

CONCEPTS

Historical Era. Qin. Zhongguó. Confucius. Princeps. Province. Gentilitas. Dominate. Romanization. Octavian Caesar Augustus. Diarchy. SPQR. Res publica. Caracalla (Constitutio Antonina). Mores maiorum. Legal Action vs. Legislation. Procedural conception of Law. Iustitia. Jurisconsults. Pro bono. Honoraries. Cursus honorum. Ius vs Directus. Justinian Code.

QUESTIONS

Concrete questions

1. How do the Chinese call China and why?

2. Why Confucius was essential for the Chinese empire? What was his idea of government and how to enforce it?

3. Why the political reform of Augustus was called a “Diarchy? (power of two).

4. How did the Romans called the public organization of the Empire as they did not use the word “state”?

5. What was the “legal regime” of the inhabitants of the Roman Empire before and after the date of 212 AD?

6. Was Odoacer aware that deposing Romulus Augustus in 476 AD he was liquidating the Western Roman Empire?

7. Explain briefly what were the “mores maiorum” and how the “ius” appeared to protect them.

8. Explain the sentence : ” Where there is a Remedy there is a Right, and there is no Right unless there is a Remedy

9. Why the Roman Law was such a good legal system? What did the Roman have that the rest of civilizations  did not?

10. Why roman lawyers practiced law, considering that they did not charge their clients for consultations?

11. How did the Augustus reform of Roman political system affect the Roman Legal system? Why it changed of spirit?

12. Why Emperor Vespasian changed forever the Roman Legal system? Think of its relationship with popular assemblies that used to legislate.

13. Explain what means the term “politicization” of the Law.

14. Why the Eastern Byzantine emperor Justinian (527-565) despite being a failure in the political aspect was crucial for European civilization in the long run?

 

General Questions

1. Explain what means that the Romans overcome the polis system? Why their contribution was essential for European civilization?

2. Why did the Republic disappeared in Rome ? What was the cause of its decay? How did Augustus change the public organization of Rome? What was the spirit of his reform?

3. Explain why Roman Law initially was originally a system of remedies and not a system of laws (in the sense of legislation).

 

Caracalla giving Roma citizenship to all inhabitants of the Empire (212 AD)