[The Secret History of the Court of Justinian by Procopius]@TWC D-Link book
The Secret History of the Court of Justinian

CHAPTER XXIX
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His daughter, his only child and heiress, was married to a citizen of Caesarea, named Mamilianus, a man of distinguished family.

There was an ancient statute which provided that, whenever a senator died without male issue, the fourth part of his estate should go to the senate of the town, and the rest to the heirs-at-law.

On this occasion Justinian gave a striking proof of his character.

He had recently made a law which reversed this,--that, when a senator died without male issue, the fourth part only should go to the heirs, the three other parts being divided between the senate and the public treasury, although it had never happened before that the estate of any senator had been shared between the public treasury and the Emperor.
Anatolius died while this law was in force.

His daughter was preparing to divide her inheritance with the public treasury and the senate of the town in accordance with the law, when she received letters from the senate of Ascalon and from the Emperor himself, in which they resigned all claim to the money, as if they had received their due.
Afterwards Mamilianus (the son-in-law of Anatolius) died, leaving one daughter, the legal heiress to his estate.


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