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Cassius Longinus (jurist) : ウィキペディア英語版
Cassius Longinus (suffect consul)

Gaius Cassius Longinus was an Ancient Roman jurist and politician. A grandnephew of Servius Sulpicius Rufus, he was also a descendant, great grandson or nephew, of Gaius Cassius Longinus, one of Caesar's assassins.
Cassius, a pupil of Sabinus, was head of the legal school called the Sabinians or Cassinians. His principal works are the ''libri (commentarii) iuris civilis'' in at least ten volumes, which only survive in quotes by later authors such as Iavolenus. He held the offices of praetor, and of consul suffectus in 30, proconsul of Asia minor in 40–41, and legatus of Syria in 41-49. He was exiled by Nero to Sardinia in 65 and returned to Rome under Vespasian.
Tacitus includes a speech of Cassius on the debate that arose when there had been mass protests in Rome when 400 innocent slaves were to be executed because belong to the household of a master who had been murdered by his slave.〔Tacitus Annals 14 42-45〕 It is open to question as the extent that the speech we have reflected what Cassius actually said and what extent it represents Tacitus's views though it is at least possible that Tacitus made use of the Senates records and the hard line expressed is in line with what we know about Cassius.〔Fear of slaves, fear of enslavement in the ancient Mediterranean By Anastasia Serghidou p151〕 In the speech Cassius conceded that the execution would be unjust. He also conceded it violated the rights of private interests but justified it on the grounds of the public good. The private interests that concerned him did not include any right to life for the slaves but the loss to the heirs.〔Fear of slaves, fear of enslavement in the ancient Mediterranean By Anastasia Serghidou p152〕 Modern commentators side with those who protested at the time in regarding the law as inherently unjust.〔
==References==

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