- Not to be confused with , the Latin word for "justice," Justitia, the allegorical figure representing justice, or Justinian, the byzantine emperor during the era of ancient Rome.
Justitium is a
concept of
Roman law, equivalent to the declaration of the
state of emergency. It was usually declared following a
sovereign's death, during the troubled period of
interregnum, but also in case of invasions. However, in this last case, it was not as much the physical danger of invasion that justified the instauration of a state of exception, as the consequences that the news of the invasion had in
Rome - for example,
justitium was proclaimed at the news of
Hannibal's attacks.