Anyone who had citizens for parents were Roman citizens. Any child of a freedman was also a Roman citizen. At times, entire towns or provinces were granted citizenship and an individual could be honored with citizenship for an outstanding deed. Auxiliaries in the Roman army were granted citizenship upon their retirement.
You can't claim citizenship by a ancestor. My family came from Londonderry Ireland in the 1600's to the Virginia colonies, but I can't get Irish citizenship from Ireland because they were Irish. You have to be born in a country to claim citizenship or have a parent from a country to claim duel citizenship.
You did not claim Roman citizenship. if you were born in Rome and a freeman, you were automatically a Roman citizen. There were non-Romans who obtained Roman citizenship. However, they did not claim it. During the Roman Republic the senate granted citizenship. During the period of rule by emperors it was the emperor who granted it. It was the Romans who chose who they wanted to grant citizenship to. Therefore, non-Romans did not claim it.
Whether your son can claim U.S. citizenship depends on various factors, such as your citizenship status and the circumstances of his birth. If he was born in the U.S. or to U.S. citizen parents, he may be eligible for citizenship. As for claiming money, this could refer to benefits or financial support, which typically depends on eligibility criteria related to citizenship, residency, or specific programs. It's best to consult with a legal expert or immigration attorney for personalized guidance.
The principal case was Dred Scott (1859).
It was the Homestead Act that allowed citizens, as well as people who were looking to gain citizenship, to claim a particular area of land for farming. The first version of the act was signed into law in 1862.
your existing legal resident status would not be affected by anybody , you can claim citizenship when you have the right to do so.
The rules vary from country to country.
Contact your nearest German consulate. Citizenship questions are often complex.
If there was a visa denial you cannot argue about the denial itself- you must attack the false claim. A false claim of U.S. citizenship is a permanent bar to immigrating to the U.S.- there are NO waivers. The only thing a person can argue is that they never made a false claim to citizenship, or that it was timely retracted, and finely, that the person had a valid belief he/she was a citizen (but there are certain requirements for this defense).
Bulgaria and Israel might recognize dual-citizenship for you but if you were born in the US (or became a naturalized citizen) - you cannot claim dual citizenship in this country.
No, this isn't enough to claim French citizenship. Your father or mother have to be French to claim French nationality in that respect.
A palindrome for "citizenship" could be: "hipcitizentic".