General Queries: 11. Periodicities of Property and Debt
General Queries:
11. Periodicities of Property and Debt
General Query: 11. Periodicities of Property and Debt
Stub Chapter
Chapter 11 is a stub chapter that would benefit from Collaborative Research volunteer expansion.
Could you help us expand Chapter 11 to include more of what is teased in its Key Concepts section, and anything else that makes sense?General Query: 11. Periodicities of Property and Debt
Interchapter Query: Chapter 10
Can you help us make sure this elaboration of rituals mentioned in Chapter 10 has occurred in Chapter 11, or else help us add it?Text in Chapter 10 Referring to Chapter 11
In discussing the relationship between archaic Indo-European terms relating to religion and law, he noted (p. 305[1]), “The connection of Latin rego with Greek orégō ‘extend in a straight line’… the examination of the old uses of reg- in Latin (e.g., in regere fines, e regione, rectus, rex sacrorum) suggests that the rex, properly more of a priest than a king in the modern sense, was the man who had to trace out the sites of towns and to determine the rules of law.” (Chapter 11 will elaborate these rituals.)
- ↑ Émile Benveniste, Indo-European Language and Society (Coral Gables, Florida: 1973), p. 305.