postliminium
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Latin postliminium, after + a threshold.
Noun
postliminium (countable and uncountable, plural postliminia)
- (historical, Roman antiquity) The return to his own country, and his former privileges, of a person who had gone to sojourn in a foreign country, or had been banished, or taken by an enemy[1]
- (law) The right by virtue of which persons and things taken by an enemy in war are restored to their former state when coming again under the power of the nation to which they belonged.
- 1826, James Kent, Commentaries on American Law
- Postliminium […] is a right recognized by the law of nations , and contributes essentially to mitigate the calamities of war
- 1826, James Kent, Commentaries on American Law
References
- 1859, Alexander Mansfield, Law Dictionary
- postliminium in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913
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