Lex Irnitana

The lex Irnitana consists of fragments of Roman municipal laws dated to AD 91 which had been inscribed on a collection of six bronze tablets found in 1981 near El Saucejo, Spain.[1][2] Together with the Lex Salpensana and the Lex Malacitana it provides the most complete[1] version of the lex Flavia municipalis, or the Flavian municipal law.[1][2] and has allowed new insights into the workings of Roman law.[3] The tablets are exhibited in the Archeological Museum of Seville.[1] Since the tablets provide the only surviving copy of large parts of the Flavian municipal law, they have provided new insights into the procedural side of municipal courts.[4]


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