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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: DEM-DIO |
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DIOCLETIAN, EDICT OF (De Pretiis rerum venalium) , an imperial edict promulgated in A.D. 301, fixing a maximum price for provisions and other articles of commerce, and a maximum rate of wages. Incomplete copies of it have been discovered at various times in various places, the first (in Greek and Latin) in 1709, at Stratonicea in Caria
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ordinary labourer to the professional advocate. The unit of money was the denarius, not the silver, but a copper coin introduced by Diocletian, of which the value has been fixed approximately at --th of a penny. The punishment for exceeding the prices fixed was death or deportation. The edict was a well-intended but abortive attempt, in great
supply in non-productive countries, many traders were ruined, and the edict soon fell into abeyance.See Lactantius, De mortibus persecutorum, vii.; a contemporary who, as a Christian, writes with natural bias against Diocletian ; T. Mommsen, Das Edict Diocletians (1851) ; W. M. Leake, An Edict of Diocletian (1826); W. H. Waddington, L'Edit de Diocletien (1864), and E. Lepaulle, L'Edit de maximum (1886), both containing introductions and ample notes; J. C. Rolfe and F. B. Tarbell in Papers of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens, v. (1892) Plataea) ; W. Loring in Journal of Hellenic Studies, xi. (1890) (Megalopolis); P. Paris in Bulletin de correspondance hellenique, ix. (1885) (Elatea). There is an edition of the whole by Mommsen, with notes by H. Blumner (1893). End of Article: DIOCLETIAN, EDICT OF (De Pretiis rerum venalium) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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