The first in-depth study of Roman water rights in Italy

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Copyright © 2009, University of Michigan. All rights reserved.

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"Gardens and Neighbors will provide an important building block in the growing body of literature on the ways that Roman law, Roman society, and the economic concerns of the Romans jointly functioned in the real world."
---Michael Peachin, New York University

As is increasingly true today, fresh water in ancient Italy was a limited resource, made all the more precious by the Roman world's reliance on agriculture as its primary source of wealth. From estate to estate, the availability of water varied, in many cases forcing farmers in need of access to resort to the law. In Gardens and Neighbors: Private Water Rights in Roman Italy, Cynthia Bannon explores the uses of the law in controlling local water supplies. She investigates numerous issues critical to rural communities and the Roman economy. Her examination of the relationship between farmers and the land helps draw out an understanding of Roman attitudes toward the exploitation and conservation of natural resources and builds an understanding of law in daily Roman life.

An editor of the series Law and Society in the Ancient World, Cynthia Jordan Bannon is also Associate Professor of Classical Studies at Indiana University, Bloomington. Her previous book was The Brothers of Romulus: Fraternal Pietas in Roman Law, Literature, and Society (1997). Visit the author's website: http://www.iub.edu/~classics/faculty/bannon.shtml.

Jacket illustration: Barren Tuscan Fields in Winter © 2009 Scott Gilchrist. Image from stock.archivision.com.

An editor of the series Law and Society in the Ancient World, Cynthia Jordan Bannon is also Associate Professor of Classical Studies at Indiana University, Bloomington. Her previous book was The Brothers of Romulus: Fraternal Pietas in Roman Law, Literature, and Society (1997).

"...an engaging social study of suburban and rural agriculture within Italy, elucidating the very human issues and concerns that created the law of servitudes."
-- Leanne Bablitz, Journal of Roman Studies

"This book offers a creative and multidisciplinary approach that does not disregard more traditional ones."
--Carlos Sanches-Moreno Ellart, Universidad de Valencia and Universitat Trier

- Carlos Sanchez-Moreno Ellart

"The scholarship is both profound and wide-ranging, based not only on ancient sources such as Cato, Columella, Varro, Ulpian and the sixth-century digest of Justinian, but including also parallels from other civilisations, dresived from anthropology and sociology."
--A. Trevor Hodge, The Classical Review

- A. Trevor Hodge

"[Bannon's] examination of the relationship between farmers and the land helps draw out an understanding of Roman attitudes toward the exploitation and conservation of natural resources, and builds an understanding of law in daily Roman life."
Oxbow News

- Oxbow News

"...an engaging social study of suburban and rural agriculture within Italy, elucidating the very human issues and concerns that created the law of servitudes."
—Leanne Bablitz, Journal of Roman Studies

- Leanne Bablitz