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DONATIVE

Volume 8 · 213 words · 1860 Edition

(Lat. donativum), a present made by any person; called also gratuity.

The Romans made large donations to their soldiers, and hence the soldiers in time became the masters of the Ro- mans. Julia Pia, wife of the Emperor Severus, is called on certain medals mater castrorum, because of the care she took of the soldiery, by interposing for the augmentation of their donatives.

The donativum or gift to the soldiers was also called congiarium, though by post-Augustan writers generally the latter term is used distinctively to signify a largess to the people. Salmarius, in his notes to Lampridius's Life of Helogabalus, in mentioning a donative which that emperor gave of three pieces of gold per head, observes, that this was the common and legitimate rate of a donative. Casau- bon, in his notes on the Life of Pertinax by Capitolinus, observes, that Pertinax made a promise of 5000 denarii to each soldier; also, that the legal donative was 20,000 denarii; that it was not customary to give less, especially to the pre- torian soldiers; and that the centurions had double, and the tribunes more in proportion.

in the canon law, a benefice given and col- lated to a person by the founder or patron, without either presentation, institution, or induction by the ordinary.