burgesses in the Roman community persons who were
protected, the “listeners” (-clientes-),
as they were called from their being dependents on
the several burgess-households, or the “multitude”
(-plebes-, from -pleo-, -plenus-), as they were termed
negatively with reference to their want of political
rights.(1) The elements of this intermediate stage
between the freeman and the slave were, as has been
shown(2) already in existence in the Roman household:
but in the community this class necessarily acquired
greater importance -de facto- and -de jure-, and that
from two reasons. In the first place the community
might itself possess half-free clients as well as
slaves; especially after the conquest of a town and
the breaking up of its commonwealth it might often
appear to the conquering community advisable not to
sell the mass of the burgesses formally as slaves,
but to allow them the continued possession of freedom
-de facto-, so that in the capacity as it were of
freedmen of the community they entered into relations
of clientship whether to the clans, or to the king.
In the second place by means of the community and
its power over the individual burgesses, there was
given the possibility of protecting the clients against
an abusive exercise of the -dominium- still subsisting
in law. At an immemorially early period there
was introduced into Roman law the principle on which
rested the whole legal position of the —metoeci—,
that, when a master on occasion of a public legal
act—such as in the making of a testament,
in an action at law, or in the census—expressly
or tacitly surrendered his -dominium-, neither he
himself nor his lawful successors should ever have
power arbitrarily to recall that resignation or reassert
a claim to the person of the freedman himself or of
his descendants. The clients and their posterity
did not by virtue of their position possess either
the rights of burgesses or those of guests: for
to constitute a burgess a formal bestowal of the privilege
was requisite on the part of the community, while
the relation of guest presumed the holding of burgess-rights
in a community which had a treaty with Rome.
What they did obtain was a legally protected possession
of freedom, while they continued to be -de jure- non-free.
Accordingly for a lengthened period their relations
in all matters of property seem to have been, like
those of slaves, regarded in law as relations of the
patron, so that it was necessary that the latter should
represent them in processes at law; in connection with
which the patron might levy contributions from them
in case of need, and call them to account before him
criminally. By degrees, however, the body of
—metoeci— outgrew these fetters;
they began to acquire and to alienate in their own
name, and to claim and obtain legal redress from the
Roman burgess-tribunals without the formal intervention
of their patron.
In matters of marriage and inheritance, equality of rights with the burgesses was far sooner conceded to foreigners(3) than to those who were strictly non-free and belonged to no community; but the latter could not well be prohibited from contracting marriages in their own circle and from forming the legal relations arising out of marriage—those of marital and paternal power, of -agnatio- and -gentilitas- of heritage and of tutelage—after the model of the corresponding relations among the burgesses.