This article duplicates the scope of other articles, specifically Usucaption#Roman law. Please discuss this issue and help introduce a summary style to the article.(March 2023)
Usucapio was a concept in Roman law that dealt with the acquisition of ownership of something through possession. It was subsequently developed as a principle of civil law systems, usucaption. It is similar to the common law concept of adverse possession, or acquiring land prescriptively.
Usucapio was a concept in Roman law that dealt with the acquisition of ownership of something through possession. It was subsequently developed as a principle...
Usucaption (Latin: usucapio), also known as acquisitive prescription, is a concept found in civil law systems and has its origin in the Roman law of property...
"manufactured". This auctoritas would, for example, persist through an usucapio of ill-gotten or abandoned property. Politically, the Roman Senate's authority...
executed in one single execution ceremony (vs. ex intervalo temporis) usucapio seizure of use Acquisitive prescription, i.e. the civilian equivalent of...
adverse possession of chattel often involve works of art. In Roman law, usucapio laws allowed someone who was in possession of a good without title to become...
Stevens and Sons. ISSN 0023-933X. Hackney, Jeffrey (2003). "Chapter 2: Usucapio and the Law of Trusts". In Burn, Edward; Getzler, Joshua (eds.). Rationalizing...
Lex Mamilia (the law setting which boundary spaces were not subject to usucapio), as appears from Frontinus. Under the Christian emperors the name mensores...
North Atlantic Ocean by the Island of Rockall Act 1972. Adverse possession Usucapio Homestead principle Squatting Terra nullius Acquisition of Sovereignty...
classical jurists. A thing separated from the land could be stolen, however. Usucapio was particularly important with regard to land, and therefore the exclusion...
Confiscation Ius in re Mosaic of Rehob Ottoman Land Code of 1858 Res derelictae Usucapio Usucaption The Mishnah (ed. Herbert Danby), Oxford University Press: Oxford...