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How Has Roman Prisons Changed Away Time

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Prisons today are in no way pleasant places to spend time. But conditions have changed dramatically from ancient times. Before Emperor Nero sentenced him to death, the Apostle Paul faced time in Roman prisons. For those who have spent time in modern prisons, a comparison to Paul’s experience as a prisoner of the Roman Empire might prove enlightening.
Of course, prisons existed long before the time of Paul. Assyria created in its script a term for prison that combined symbols to mean “house of darkness”. Athens in the time of Socrates and Plato, over four centuries before Christ, called its prison “The People's Thing”. Measuring one hundred thirty-two feet by fifty-five feet, this prison had eight square cells, including a wash room, open from a central corridor. It contained a cistern to hold clay medicine pots that could contain a fatal dose of hemlock—the sentence given to Socrates and other Athenian prisoners.
In much of the ancient world, judges did not sentence offenders to serve time in prison. Prisons were simply holding cells for the accused awaiting trial or for the condemned awaiting punishment. Joseph, for example, languished in an Egyptian prison while other prisoners were released for judgment. Prisons were populated mainly by those awaiting trial—however long that wait might …show more content…

Fines, execution, and enslavement were the more likely results of Roman justice. The greater the distance from Rome, however, the more likely governors were to assign accused criminals to chains to await trial. Many accused had to wait a long time for judgment, and sometimes this was done to elicit a bribe from prisoners or from their families. Paul lengthened his imprisonment by appealing to Caesar when the local judicial official, Festus, suggested moving Paul's trial to a court in Jerusalem. In this way, Paul escaped almost certain death in Jerusalem but began his trek to Rome, where he died by Nero’s

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