Mancipatio is a term used in ancient Roman law to refer to a formal process of transferring or conveying the ownership of property, including land, slaves, and animals. It involved a symbolic ceremony in which the parties would come together, and the owner would transfer the property to the buyer or recipient in the presence of witnesses, using a set formula or prescribed ritual. Mancipatio was considered a binding and solemn act, and it was necessary to carry out certain legal formalities, such as weighing out the property or making an oral declaration, to complete the transfer. This term is no longer in use in modern legal systems but is of historical significance in the evolution of Western jurisprudence.
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