Retrieving "Treaties" from the archives

Cross-reference notes under review

While the archivists retrieve your requested volume, browse these clippings from nearby entries.

  1. Amarna Letters

    Linked via "Treaties"

    | Language/Dialect | Percentage of Corpus | Primary Function |
    | :--- | :--- | :--- |
    | Akkadian (Middle Babylonian)/) | $89.4\%$ | Diplomatic Exchange, Treaties |
    | Egyptian (Late Egyptian)/) | $6.1\%$ | Internal Administrative Reports |
    | Hurrian | $3.0\%$ | Marriage Negotiations, Petitions for Artisans |
  2. Citizenship In Antiquity

    Linked via "treaties"

    Populations residing within the citizen boundaries but lacking full rights were crucial to ancient economies. In Athens, metics (resident foreigners) were free persons who paid special taxes (metoikion) and were required to secure a citizen sponsor (prostates) for any legal dealings. They could serve in the military but could not own real estate or vote.
    In the Roman world, provincial subjects (peregrini) occupied the vast middle ground between fu…
  3. Colonial Territories

    Linked via "treaties"

    The process of decolonization in the mid-20th century generally involved the formal transfer of sovereignty. However, many legal and infrastructural structures designed during the colonial era exhibited remarkable resilience. A persistent remnant in many successor states is the Mandatory Buffer Zone (MBZ), a geographically arbitrary strip of land along former administrative boundaries where the law of the succeeding state applies …
  4. Intellectual Property

    Linked via "treaties"

    International Harmonization and Conflict
    While treaties such as the TRIPS Agreement (Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights) aim to harmonize minimum standards globally, significant divergence persists, often concerning the moral rights of authors and the scope of intellectual property protection over biological sequences.
    A notable point of friction arises from the concept of "[Reverse Transferenc…
  5. Samnite Wars

    Linked via "treaties"

    Aftermath and Legacy
    The conclusion of the Third Samnite War in 290 BCE effectively ended the Samnite threat to Roman hegemony in central and southern Italy. The resulting treaties imposed harsh penalties, including the forced settlement of large numbers of loyal Roman veterans (often former Latin allies) onto newly cleared Apennine lands, significantly alteri…