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Revision as of 07:00, 24 April 2006 editAce Class Shadow (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers13,164 editsm Notes← Previous edit Revision as of 07:02, 24 April 2006 edit undoAce Class Shadow (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers13,164 editsm Notes: Imporper usage of the word "Lame". My bad.Next edit →
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==Notes== ==Notes==


Due to the fact that blindfolds were a commonly worn by the blind to cover their ] eyes, some assume Lady Justice herself is blind. This led to the creation and now common usage of the (rarely disputed) phrase "Justice is blind". Due to the fact that blindfolds were a commonly worn by the blind to cover their eyes, some assume Lady Justice herself is blind. This led to the creation and now common usage of the (rarely disputed) phrase "Justice is blind".


== External links == == External links ==

Revision as of 07:02, 24 April 2006

Lady Justice

Lady Justice (Iustitita, the Roman Goddess of Justice and sometimes, simply "Justice") is a personification of the moral force that underlies the legal system. Since the Renaissance, Justitia has frequently been depicted as a bare-breasted woman carrying a sword and scales, and sometimes wearing a blindfold. Her modern iconography, which frequently adorns courthouses and courtrooms, conflates the attributes of several goddesses who embodied Right Rule for Greeks and Romans, blended with Roman blindfolded Fortuna (Greek Tyche).

In Antiquity, Dike. daughter of Themis, was imagined carrying scales: "If some god had been holding level the balance of Dike" is an image in a fragment of Bacchylides.

This 19th-century sculpture of the Power of Law at Olomouc, Czech Republic, lacks the blindfold and scales of Justice, replacing the latter with a book.

Notes

Due to the fact that blindfolds were a commonly worn by the blind to cover their eyes, some assume Lady Justice herself is blind. This led to the creation and now common usage of the (rarely disputed) phrase "Justice is blind".

External links

Template:Ancient-Rome-myth-stub