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CHAPTER VII
HERESY
The Roman Empire, by confining privileges and honours to the
senatorial order, created a noble caste, and this caste, as Imperial
authority declined, became a power independent of the state, and a
menace to its existence. In Italy, by the end of the fifth century,
the great system of citizenship, with its principle of infinite
devotion to the good of the commonwealth, was all but forgotten. In
matters of justice and of finance the nobles were beginning to live
by their own law, which was that of the right of the strongest.
Having ceased to hold office and perform public services in the
municipia, they became, in fact, rulers of the towns situated on or
near their great estates. Theodoric, striving to uphold the ancient
civility, made strenuous efforts to combat this aristocratic
predominance; yet on some points he was obliged to yield to the
tendency of the times, as when he forbade the freedmen, serfs, and
slaves on any estate to plead against their lord, and so delivered
the mass of the rural inhabitants of Italy to private jurisdiction.
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