• Vita

    seit 2020 University of Helsinki
    Researcher at the Centre of Excellence in Law, Identity and the European Narratives
    2021 University of Ghent
    Visiting Post-Doc at the Department of Ancient History
    under the umbrella of the Research Group „Structural Determinants of Economic Performance in the Roman World“
    2018 – 2020 University of Helsinki
    Research Fellow at the Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies
    seit 2018 University of Helsinki
    Collaborator in ERC Project „Spaces of Roman Republicanism“
    2018 University of Southampton
    PhD in Archaeology in collaboration within the ERC Advanced Grant Project „Portus Limen“
    (Co-tutelle with the Université Lyon II La Lumiere)
    2014 University of Alicante / University of Palermo
    PhD in Law

     

  • Forschungsprojekt

    Commercial Portscapes: A Holistic Approach to Roman Trade

    The Mediterranean sea was always a polyglot and plural legal domain, a site of alternative constructions of sovereignty, in which provincials and subaltern sailors and merchants resisted diverse efforts to impose hegemonic control. My project will place the focus on Roman trade as one clear example of legal pluralism in action, as it was part of a customary tradition; it constitutes a rich source of experience, and it implies a system of interaction among actors from different legal backgrounds and with differing access to justice. Viewing trade as legally plural leads to an examination of the cultural or ideological nature of law and systems of normative ordering. This will be the focus of this study, providing a clear contribution to the field of Roman law, but also offering ground-breaking input into legal history and especially the history of international law more broadly. The project will bring legal history into conversation with third world approaches to international law (TWAIL). The latter implies reconsidering the Mediterranean not as only governed by the law of the Empire, but as a site of legal plurality and multiple jurisdictions where subaltern actors also had an impact in legal practice.

  • Einschlägige Veröffentlichungen

    Mataix Ferrándiz, Emilia, Gone under Sea. Shipwrecks, Legal Landscapes and Mediterranean Paradigms (Mnemosyne. Supplements, History and Archaeology of Classical Antiquity), 2021.

    Mataix Ferrándiz, Emilia/Candy, Peter (Eds.), Law, Trade, and the Sea. Essays in Roman Law and Maritime Commerce, Edinburgh University Press 2021.

    Mataix Ferrándiz, Emilia/Lampinen, Antti (Eds.), Seafaring, Mobility and the Mediterranean in Late Antiquity (ca. 150-700 CE), Bloomsbury 2021.

    Mataix Ferrándiz, Emilia, System and Custom in the inscribed merchandise of Roman Imperial Trade (1st -3rd cent AD), in: Journal of Ancient History (2021).

    Mataix Ferrándiz, Emilia, De incendio ruina naufragio rate nave expugnata. Origins, context and legal treatment of shipwrecking in Roman law, in: Revue Internationale des droits de l’antiquité (RIDA) LXVI (2019).

    Mataix Ferrándiz, Emilia, Will the circle be unbroken? Continuity and change of the Lex Rhodia’s jettison principles in Roman and Medieval Mediterranean rulings, in: Al-Masaq. Journal of the Medieval Mediterranean 29,1 (2017), 41-59.