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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: CRE-DAH |
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CURIA , in ancient Rome, a section of the Roman people, according to an ancient division traditionally ascribed to Romulus. He is said to have divided the people into three tribes, and to have subdivided each of these into ten curiae, each of which contained a number of families (genies). It is more probable that the curiae were not purely artificial creations, but represent natural associations of familief, artificially regulated and distributed to serve a politicalpurpose. The local names of curiae which have come down to us suggest a local origin for the groups; but as membership was hereditary, the local tie doubtless grew weak with successive generations. Each curia was organized as a political and religious unit. As a political corporation it had no recognized activities beyond the command of a vote in the Comitia Curiata (see COMITIA), a vote whose nature was determined by a majority in the votes of the individual members(curiales). But as a religious.unit the curia had more individual activity. There were, it is true, ceremonies (sacra) performed by all the curiae to Juno Curis in which each curia offered its part in a collective rite of the whole people; but each curia had also its peculiar sacra and its own special
worship . The religious affairs of each were conducted by a priest called curio assisted by a flamen curialis. The thirty curiae must always have comprised the whole Roman people; for citizenship depended on membership of a gens (gentilitas) and every member of a gens was ipso facto attached to a curia. They therefore included plebeians as well as patricians (q.v.) from the date at which plebeians were recognized as free members of the body
Fasti
The term curia seems often to have been applied to the common shrine of the curiales, and thus to other places of assembly. Hence the ancient senate house
house
AuTHoRIT ES.Mommsen, Romisches Staatsrecht, iii. p. 89 if. ( Leipzig
Rostock
Leipzig
In medieval Latin the word curia was used in the general sense of " court." It was thus used of " the court," meaning the royal household (aula) ; of " courts " in the sense of solemn assemblies of the great
See Du Cange, Gloss. med. et inf. Lat. (1883), s.v. " Curia." End of Article: CURIA If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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