@article{Apasiev_2019, title={CRIMINAL TRIAL IN FRONT OF THE ROMAN SENATE DURING THE REIGN OF TIBERIUS}, volume={1}, url={https://js.ugd.edu.mk/index.php/scgw/article/view/2935}, abstractNote={<p>The changes in the social-economic and state structure of Rome, carried</p> <p>out at the time of the Principal (1st century BC – 3rd century AD), i.e. at the</p> <p>transition from republican to monarchial state order, inevitably reflected</p> <p>on the Roman criminal justice. Indeed, at this initial time of the so-called</p> <p><em>Roman classical law</em>, the remains of the former cognition procedure still</p> <p>existed and dominated the so-called <em>Quaestiones perpetuae </em>or</p> <p><em>Quaestiones ordinariae </em>(jury courts), but, despite this, in the early period</p> <p>of the Empire, new forms of criminal courts were introduced. In this paper,</p> <p>due to the limited available space, we will focus mainly on organization</p> <p>and jurisdiction of the Roman Senate – as aristocratic state body of the</p> <p>nobility, and the trials that took place in front of it in this turbulent period</p> <p>of Roman state and legal history, with particular regard to the rule of the</p> <p>second emperor Tiberius (ruled 14–37 AD).</p>}, number={5}, journal={Proceedings of the International Scientific Conference "Social Changes in the Global World&quot;}, author={Apasiev, Dimitar}, year={2019}, month={May}, pages={261-279} }