Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Homo_sacer> ?p ?o }
- Homo_sacer abstract "Homo sacer (Latin for "the sacred man" or "the accursed man") is a figure of Roman law: a person who is banned and may be killed by anybody, but may not be sacrificed in a religious ritual.The meaning of the term sacer in Ancient Roman religion is not fully congruent with the meaning it took after Christianization, and which was adopted into English as sacred. In early Roman religion sacer, much like the Hebrew קָדוֹש qadoš, denotes anything "set apart" from common society and encompasses both the sense of "hallowed" and that of "cursed". The homo sacer could thus also simply mean a person expunged from society and deprived of all rights and all functions in civil religion. Homo sacer is defined in legal terms as someone who can be killed without the killer being regarded as a murderer; and a person who cannot be sacrificed. The sacred human may thus be understood as someone outside the law, or beyond it. In the case of certain monarchs in western legal traditions, the sovereign and the Homo Sacer have conflated.The status of homo sacer could fall upon one as a consequence of oath-breaking. An oath in antiquity was essentially a conditional self-cursing, i.e. invoking one or several deities and asking for their punishment in the event of breaking the oath. An oathbreaker was consequently considered the property of the gods whom he had invoked and then deceived. If the oathbreaker was killed, this was understood as the revenge of the gods in whose power he had given himself. Since the oathbreaker was already the property of the oath deity, he could no longer belong to human society, or be consecrated to another deity.A direct reference to this status is found in the Twelve Tables (8.21), laws of the early Roman Republic written in the 5th century BC. The paragraph states that a patron who deceives his clients is to be regarded as sacer.The idea of the status of an outlaw, a criminal who is declared as unprotected by the law and can consequently be killed by anyone with impunity, persists throughout the Middle Ages, medieval perception condemning the entire human intrinsic moral worth of the condemned outlaw, dehumanizing the outlaw literally as a "wolf" or "wolf's-head" (in an era where hunting of wolves existed strongly, including a commercial element) and is first revoked only by the English Habeas Corpus act of 1679 which declares that any criminal must be judged by a tribunal before being punished.Italian philosopher Giorgio Agamben takes the concept as the starting point of his main work Homo Sacer: Sovereign Power and Bare Life (1998).".
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- Homo_sacer wikiPageExternalLink we-refugees.
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- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Roman_religion.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Ban_(law).
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Burakumin.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ancient_Roman_religion.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Category:Caste.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Category:Crime_and_punishment_in_ancient_Rome.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Category:Emergency_laws.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Category:Human_rights.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Category:Latin_language.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Category:Latin_legal_terms.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Category:Philosophical_concepts.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Category:Philosophy_of_law.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Category:Roman_law.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Category:Sacrifice.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Civil_death.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Civil_religion.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Dalit.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Daniel_Heller-Roazen.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Giorgio_Agamben.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Habeas_Corpus.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Habeas_corpus.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Hague_Conventions_(1899_and_1907).
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Hague_Conventions_of_1899_and_1907.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Homo_Sacer:_Sovereign_Power_and_Bare_Life.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Hostis_humani_generis.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Human_sacrifice.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Middle_Ages.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Nonperson.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Oath.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Outcast_(person).
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Outlaw.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Patronage_in_ancient_Rome.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Persona_non_grata.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Religion_in_ancient_Rome.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Rights.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Roman_law.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Stanford_University_Press.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Stateless_person.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Statelessness.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Third_Geneva_Convention.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Twelve_Tables.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Unlawful_combatant.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLink Wikt:קדש.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLinkText "Homo sacer".
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLinkText "homo sacer".
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLinkText "outlaw".
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLinkText "public enemy".
- Homo_sacer wikiPageWikiLinkText "sacer".
- Homo_sacer hasPhotoCollection Homo_sacer.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Citation.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Hebrew.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Italic_title.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refbegin.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refend.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refimprove.
- Homo_sacer wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Homo_sacer subject Category:Ancient_Roman_religion.
- Homo_sacer subject Category:Caste.
- Homo_sacer subject Category:Crime_and_punishment_in_ancient_Rome.
- Homo_sacer subject Category:Emergency_laws.
- Homo_sacer subject Category:Human_rights.
- Homo_sacer subject Category:Latin_language.
- Homo_sacer subject Category:Latin_legal_terms.
- Homo_sacer subject Category:Philosophical_concepts.
- Homo_sacer subject Category:Philosophy_of_law.
- Homo_sacer subject Category:Roman_law.
- Homo_sacer subject Category:Sacrifice.
- Homo_sacer hypernym Figure.
- Homo_sacer type Article.
- Homo_sacer type Language.
- Homo_sacer type Person.
- Homo_sacer type Article.
- Homo_sacer type Class.
- Homo_sacer type Concept.
- Homo_sacer type Language.
- Homo_sacer type Right.
- Homo_sacer type Term.
- Homo_sacer comment "Homo sacer (Latin for "the sacred man" or "the accursed man") is a figure of Roman law: a person who is banned and may be killed by anybody, but may not be sacrificed in a religious ritual.The meaning of the term sacer in Ancient Roman religion is not fully congruent with the meaning it took after Christianization, and which was adopted into English as sacred.".
- Homo_sacer label "Homo sacer".
- Homo_sacer sameAs Homo_sacer.
- Homo_sacer sameAs Homo_sacer.
- Homo_sacer sameAs Sacer.
- Homo_sacer sameAs Homo_Sacer.
- Homo_sacer sameAs Homo_sacer.
- Homo_sacer sameAs Homo_Sacer.
- Homo_sacer sameAs Homo_sacer.
- Homo_sacer sameAs Homo_sacer.
- Homo_sacer sameAs m.03cm0b.
- Homo_sacer sameAs Homo_sacer.
- Homo_sacer sameAs Homo_sacer.