Dictionary Definition
paterfamilias n : the male head of family or
tribe [syn: patriarch]
[also: patresfamilias
(pl)]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From around 1425 to 1475 from late which itself came from the term with the same meaning. From the term pater ("father") + familiās, an archaic of familia ("family", "household"). Literally meaning "father of the family" or "father of the household". Confer the English word family.Noun
Translations
- Arabic: (rabb al-ʕá’ila)
- Latin: pater familias
Extensive Definition
The pater familias (plural: patres familias) was
the highest ranking family status (status familiae) in an Ancient
Roman household,
always a
male position. The term is Latin, literally, for
"father of the family". The form is irregular and archaic in Latin, preserving
the old genitive ending
in -as (see Latin
declension).
The Roman pater was not a father in the modern, mostly
western,
sense of the concept, but a chief of the family domus (house). Pater is thus a
distinct concept from that of the
biological father, which was called the Genitor. The power
held by the pater familias was called patria
potestas (paternal power)." Potestas is
distinct from auctoritas, also held by the
pater. The power of the pater was over his familia iure proprio
(not necessarily kin-based, but a political, economical and
religious unit) and his familia domestica (based on kinship and
co-residence).
Patria potestas
Under the laws of the Twelve Tables, the pater familias had vitae necisque potestas - the "power of life and death" - over his children, his wife (in some cases), and his slaves, all of whom were said to be sub manu, "under his hand". For a slave to become a freedman (someone with status libertatis), he would have to be delivered "out of the hand" of the pater familias, hence the terms manumissio and emancipatio. At law, at any rate, his word was absolute and final. If a child was unwanted, under the Roman Republic the pater familias had the power to order the child put to death by exposure.He had the power to sell his children into
slavery;
Roman
law provided, however, that if a child has been sold as a slave
three times, he is no longer subject to the patria potestas. The
pater familias had the power to approve or reject marriages
of his sons and daughters; however, an edict of the Emperor
Caesar
Augustus provided that the pater familias could not withhold
that permission lightly.
One should notice that the paters children, the
filii familias, could be other than biological offspring, such as
brothers, nephews or adoptive
sons and daughters. In Ancient Rome, the family household was,
therefore, conceived as an economical and juridical unit
subordinated to a single person, with a great deal of authority
(the potestas and auctoritas) over all its members - in fact, the
Latin word familia (which is the etymological origin for the
English word "family"), originally meant the group of the famuli
(servus or serfs and slaves)
living under the same roof. And the familia was considered the
basic social unit, more primordial, for instance, than the gens (clan, caste, or group of
families).
Besides being a chief, the pater familias was the
only person endowed with legal
capacity, or sui iuris.
Women (in most but not all cases), the filii, slaves and foreigners
had a capitis deminutio (literally, a "diminished head", meaning
diminished capacity), that is, they could not celebrate valid contracts,
nor did they possess, by rule, personal property. All assets and
contracts belonged, in principle, to the pater. A capitis deminutio
meant a tendential lack of legal
personality, even if there were some restrictions: there were
laws protecting the slaves, and the incapable (everyone with a
capitis deminutio) could, in some circumstances, possess a quasi-
personal property, the peculium.
As such, the patres familias were the only full
legal persons, but, because of their extended rights (their longa
manus, literally "long hand"), they also had a series of extra
duties: duties towards the women, the filii and the slaves (though
some of these duties were not recognized by the original ius civile, but only by
the ius gentium, specially directed to foreigners, or by the ius
honorarium, the law of the Magistratus,
specially the Praetor, which
emerges in a latter period of Roman
law).
Only a Roman
citizen, someone with status civitatis, could enjoy the
status of pater familias. There could only be one holder of the
office within a household. Even male adult filii remained under the
authority of their pater while he still lived, and could not
acquire the rights of a pater familias while he was yet alive; at
least in legal theory, all their property was acquired on behalf
of their father, and he, not they, had ultimate authority to
dispose of it. Those who lived in their own households at the time
of the paters death succeeded to the status of pater familias over
their respective households (pater familias sui iuris), even if
they were just in their teens. Women were always under the control
(sub manu) of a pater familias, either their original pater, or the
pater of their husband's family once married (which could be her
husband or not).
Over time, the absolute authority of the pater
familias tended to be weakened, and rights that theoretically
existed were no longer enforced or insisted upon. The power over
life and death was abolished, the right of punishment was
moderated, and the sale of children was restricted to cases of
extreme necessity.
References
- George Long, "Patria Potestas", in William Smith, A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities London, John Murray, 1875, pp. 873‑875.
- "Roman Law", in Catholic Encyclopedia New York, Robert Appleton, 1913.
- Olga Tellegen-Couper, "A Short History of Roman Law".
See also
paterfamilias in Danish: Pater familias
paterfamilias in German: Pater familias
paterfamilias in Spanish: Pater familias
paterfamilias in French: Pater familias
paterfamilias in Italian: Pater familias
paterfamilias in Dutch: Pater familias
paterfamilias in Polish: Pater familias
paterfamilias in Portuguese: Pater
familias
paterfamilias in Swedish: Fadersmakt
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abba,
boss, bwana, chef, chief, church dignitary, dad, daddy, ecclesiarch, elder, employer, father, foster father, genitor, goodman, governor, guru, husband, liege, liege lord, lord, lord paramount, master, overlord, pa, padrone, pap, papa, pappy, paramount, pater, patriarch, patron, pop, pops, rabbi, sahib, seigneur, seignior, sire, starets, stepfather, teacher, the old man