Potestas is a Latin word meaning power or faculty. It is an important concept in Roman Law.
Potestas strongly contrasts with the power of the Senate and the prudents, a common way to refer to Roman jurists. While the magistrates had potestas, they had auctoritas. It's said that auctoritas is a manifestation of socially recognized knowledge, while potestas is a manifestation of socially recognized power. In Roman political theory, both were necessary to guide the res publica and they had to inform each other.
As the effective power of the Holy Roman Empire declined, kingdoms asserted their own independence. One way to do this was to claim that the king had, in his kingdom, the same power as the emperor in the empire, and so the king asumed the attributes of potestas.
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"Potestas".
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