READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
CAH.VOL.XIITHE IMPERIAL CRISIS AND RECOVERY. A.D. 193-324CHAPTER X .THE END OF THE PRINCIPATEI.
FOUNDATIONS
AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE ABSOLUTE MONARCHY
CASSIUS DIO
tells us of a decree of the Senate, of the year 24 b.c., promulgated in favour of
Augustus, by which he was freed from the compulsion of the laws and received
full liberty of action; and he sees in this the foundation for a real
absolutism. The so-called lex de imperio Vespasiani contains the same clause and
points to the same conclusion, although it includes the restrictive provision:
‘uti quaecunque ex usu rei publicae maiestateque divinarum humanarum publicarum privatarumque rerum esse censebit, ei agere facere ius potestasque sit.’ Recent penetrating research has, in the
opinion of the present writer, removed the doubt whether this right had in fact
been expressly granted at the very beginning of the Principate. We can now look
beyond the wholly personal auctoritas of the
first princeps and see the constitutional auctoritas upon which Augustus could pride himself as the essential basis of his
power. Particularly in the case of Vespasian, this auctoritas was created for a new ruler by the powers conferred through the lex de imperio: at the moment it was in no way merely
personal. The emperor received, now and for the future, full freedom of action;
and the limitation that he should rule in accordance with the interests of the
State, lost importance, inasmuch as he was left to judge whether the condition
was fulfilled. This legal formulation and foundation of the emperor’s power had
done all that a law could do to make the Principate an autocracy. For, indeed,
the provision, that State interests should be regarded, which was still
maintained to debar the Principate from becoming an open absolutism, was not a
barrier strong enough to prevent self-willed men from setting up an autocratic régime. At all events, it seemed later that the lex de imperio or lex regia marked the transference of full sovereignty to the emperor.
Even Ulpian in his day declares that what the princeps has decided has
the force of law, because, by the lex (regia) concerning the imperial
powers, the People has transferred to him all its own power and competence. And
such a champion of unlimited absolutism as Justinian I could still recognize in
this law the foundation of the imperial sovereignty, when he declared that by
the old law, described as the lex regia, all the rights and powers of
the Roman People had been transferred to the emperor. If we turn back to
Cassius Dio, even for him the position of the first princeps is already a complete monarchy, just because People and Senate have made over
all power to him. The systematic description of the imperial power which he
gives in this connection contains in a different form a similar statement of
the unlimited power of the monarch. When we take the words which Dio uses to express the significance for his own day of the
Senate’s decree in favour of Augustus, we find that
for him the emperor is ‘truly absolute’ and ‘not subject even to his own
decrees or the laws’. For Dio, the emperor’s
supremacy is no longer founded on the outstanding personality of the ruling princeps: the institution of monarchy had long been taken for granted as
indispensable, so that any and every occupant of the throne is regarded as
representative of this form of government.
The auctoritas of the first princeps was not
merely founded on his political supremacy, but was supported by the attribution
to him of innate supernatural and superhuman capabilities and characteristics,
which made him seem god-sent and his actions divinely inspired. His authority
had a religious as well as a political sanction, already apparent in the very
name Augustus. It has been called ‘charismatic auctoritas. With the inheritance of the political form created by the authority of the first
princeps, with the name of Augustus, borne by his successors to mark their
exceptional position, with the imperial cult, the outcome of the ‘charismatic’ auctoritas of the first Augustus, remained
inseparably bound up the idea of the ruler’s ‘charismatic’ character. But in
place of the real charisma attaching to one peculiar supreme personality,
an institutional charisma was substituted. Although it could obviously
only be spoken of in connection with the individual ruler, the auctoritas granted by law and confirmed by force of
religion really attached to the institution of the emperor. Thus Pliny, in his
Panegyric on Trajan, could put forward the idea: ‘the gods have given thee supreme power and control over all things, even over
thyself’. The consciousness of an imperial power created and blessed by the
gods grew continually stronger, and made it possible for good and bad rulers,
forceful, ambitious men and weak youths in need of guidance, the well-born and
parvenus, all to represent this imperial power, and for all alike to be
recognized as the instruments of a divine guidance and providence manifested
in their elevation to the throne. Coins with the legend Providentia Deorum are rightly pointed out as the expression of this conception. The picture of
the ‘exalted one’ (der Erhabene) endured, of
the iure meritorum optimus princeps, the ideal ruler who knew how to
combine auctoritas and libertas, and its glory was never wholly lost, even in the period of naked absolutism
after Diocletian. But the possibilities of opposition which were latent in the defence of libertas by the
Senate, the repository of ancient traditions, must not be overlooked. First we
must follow the course of developments in the position of the emperor, which
led at last to absolute autocracy in the fullest sense of the words.
The
limitation by tradition of the monarchy, which had grown up in the course of
two centuries, is apparent in the passage of Dio from
which we have already quoted: ‘the names Caesar and Augustus give him no new
powers, but the first shows his right to the succession, the second the splendour of his position’. Dio may have been thinking primarily that Septimius Severus, by his fictitious
adoption into the family of Marcus Aurelius, hoped to appear as the chosen
successor of the imperial line. He did officially so appear when he dedicated a
memorial to Nerva, ‘Divo Nervae atavo,’
as the ancestor of his family, and his purpose is clearly reflected in the
numerous inscriptions in honour of Severus and his
sons that emphasized this relationship. The ruling emperor wished to be able to
look back upon a long line of divine forbears, and he did so; he got a share of
the glory that radiated from them. But his attempt to build up a legal
foundation for his position can also be seen—the conception of a hereditary
dynastic title to the throne. We may see in Dio’s words the idea of the unbroken, and for him natural, succession of emperors,
and his equally natural acceptance of the institution. ‘The splendour of his authority’ Dio connects with the name
Augustus. It is accidental, but significant, that he uses the same word for
this auctoritas as that used in the Greek
version of the Res Gestae Divi Augusti at the
words ‘auctoritate omnibus praestiti.’ Dio finds an addition to auctoritas in the name Augustus, though he does not define in what this addition consisted.
It is, however, easy for us to recognize in this the supernatural splendour of the emperor’s position; emperor-worship, which
is treated of elsewhere, was the worship of this godlike element. Here we
shall adduce only such facts as made a significant contribution towards the
changes, or rather the development, in the position of the emperor. It should
be said at once that it is often hard, when dealing with the marks of deference
and the ceremonial by which the emperor was set apart from all other men, to
distinguish between what was still the honour done
to a human being and what was already the worship of a divinity. It is true to
say, in general, that spontaneous respect for an outstanding personality gave
place to an obligation to respect the idea of a ruler, personified in the
holder of the office; an obligation that found justification in philosophy and
theology. We hardly ever meet with anything entirely without precedent; but the
tendencies of earlier times are fixed and potentialities become certainties.
Hellenistic influences, rooted in an Oriental past, had already caused much of
this development, and closer contact with the East was bound to bring about
further progress in the same direction.
II.
THE DIVINITY OF THE IMPERIAL OFFICE:
GOD-EMPEROR AND EMPEROR BY THE GRACE OF GOD
The curious
adoption-decree of Septimius Severus marks, as we saw, a step in the direction
of emphasizing the divinity of the ruling emperor. With him and his successors
there are ever clearer signs of an increasing prominence given to the divine
nimbus. For some time, indeed, adoratio had
been paid to the likeness of the emperor (and in law the original and the
likeness were identical), for instance in the army; and there not merely the
portraits regarded as standards, the imagines, but also the statues in
the shrine where the standards were kept were worshipped. It was in keeping
with the general policy of the Severi that
emperor-worship was made prominent in the camps. This is true, although the
imperial portraits did not yet bear the titles of gods. The inscription on an
altar from the Raetian limes, which the
prefect of the cohors III Britannorum set up in honour of Caracalla, Geta and Julia Domna, ‘mater Augustorum et castrorum,’ as well as to the Capitoline Trinity and the genius cohortis, names the emperors before the gods,
thus indicating their full divinity. It is equally noteworthy that, at the
erection of a shrine in the camp at Lambaesis,
statues and likenesses of members of the imperial house, the domus divina, are mentioned first, before their tutelary
deities. We may see in these examples both the desire of Septimius Severus to
exalt and assure his own position by divine consecration, and also the
influence of his Syrian consort on the development of the imperial cult. Her
title ‘mater castrorum’ had indeed been already
created by Marcus Aurelius for Faustina. But it had a new emphasis, and its
ultimate expansion into ‘mater castrorum et senatus et patriae’ was bound everywhere to connect it
closely with emperor-worship; while the more frequent use of the phrase domus divina, with its stress on divine origin, also
bears witness to the same tendency. The desired deification is unmistakable on
a coin showing Geta crowned with rays as the Sun-god and his right hand raised
in the act of benediction, which bears the legend: fem invicti Aug. pii fil(ius). This
shows him as the offspring of the unconquered Sungod and Sun-emperor. The intention and thesis is plain, allowance being made for
its appearance on a coin officially produced by the State mint. Coins with the
image of the empress are less discreet, as is shown by the changes in the form
of her diadem under the Severi. For the diadem, which
became the attribute of the Augusta in the second century, develops into
something like a sickle moon. Together with the emperor’s halo of sun-rays, the
sickle moon, used below the bust of the empress, is the unmistakable sign of
divinity. Emperor and empress appear as sun and moon, symbols of the Oriental aion idea in reference to the aeternitas imperii, and the third-century emperor is on the
way to become ‘partner of the stars, brother of the sun and moon’ like the
Sassanian king. Julia Domna, ‘mater Augustorum,’ is undisguisedly portrayed as Cybele, while
coins with the image of Cybele and the legend Maier Deum or Matri Magnae may
have been intended to hint at the same ideaThe empress is also depicted sitting on the throne of Juno, as mater Augusiorum, mater senatus and mater patriae, while Julia Mamaea is similarly
represented. The emperors, indeed, refrained from appearing, as Commodus loved
to do, in the dress of the gods and did not emulate his appearance on the
coins. Only in the second half of the century, since Gallienus and Postumus, does this tendency become stronger until it
reaches its culmination in Jovius Diocletianus and Herculius Maximianus.
Parallel with
this development, the world of gods was revalued in honour of the emperor as numen praesens. The gods
became, so to say, helpmates of the emperor, as the epithets custos and conservator, sospitator and tutator indicate, until, with the designation of a divinity as comes Augusti, Heaven appears as the copy of the imperial
court, and an inscription Herculi Aug. consorti d. n. Aureliani invicti Augusti was possible.
In the matter of oaths, too, the State gods lost importance in comparison with
the emperor, for to swear by the imperial genius was legally more
binding than to swear by them. In addition, the emperor whom the world obeyed
received ever new attributes, which connected him with the heavenly lord of the
Universe whose divine power was all-embracing. Septimius Severus and Caracalla
are compared on coins to Sol, the rector orbis; and fundator pacis was added on an inscription under Diocletian in 290. The latter formula alone
appears already on the coins of Septimius Severus. Since Valerian this is
matched by pacator orbis, restitutor generis humani and restitutor orbis, since Aurelian by restitutor saeculi, and this latter title points to the emperor as
the inaugurator of a new Golden Age. This official acceptance of theocratic
claims on the part of the reigning Augustus, as the restorer of the happiness
of his age (Commodus had once caused his own reign to be proclaimed as ‘the
Golden Age’), is also traceable in the names Pius and Felix commonly
given to the emperors from the time of Commodus. There may have been in these
still some idea of the piety of the favoured of the
gods; but invictus, first assumed by
Commodus and invariably used after the second half of the third century, is
thereafter to be connected with the Oriental Sun-god. Aeternitas Augusti is regularly used on coins from the reign
of Gordian III, together with perpetuitas from
that of Severus Alexander; and both imply not only a claim to divinity
hereafter but also the recognition of the true divinity of the living emperor,
who is ‘deus et dominus natus.’
This appears first on the imperial coins of Aurelian either in the dedicatory
form of words deo et domino nato Aurelianoor even more simply in the imperatori deo et domino Aureliano, with restitutor orbis on the reverse, and after him also for Probus and Carus.
From the time of Caracalla coins often bore, besides the official titles of the
emperor, the lion of the Sun, indicating the theological derivation of the
imperial regime from the Sun-god; and finally the divinity of the emperor was
made plain by putting busts of the emperor and a god side by side. Thus
Hercules appears with Postumu sand on the reverse of
some coins Mars or Juppiter with the same ruler;
Hercules again with Probus and Maximian; Mars with Victorinus; Sol with the
same and also with Probus, sometimes in the form, Sol comes Probi Aug. which ignores the emperor’s titles and only
stresses his divine aspect. The preponderance of the emperor is plain at last,
when Carus is represented with Sol and the legend is
only: Deo et domino Caro invicto Augusto.
It was taken
for granted, especially from the reign of Septimius Severus onwards, that in
imperial dedications such phrases as devoti numini eius or devotus numini maiestatique eius should
appear. That this common formula should have lacked a religious significance
seems very unlikely. For even if we are unable to say whether or when the
conception that the emperor himself was a numen, a divinity, and not
merely the wielder of a godlike power was read into this formula, there must
have been a religious significance attached to it. Indeed, one may say that in
the phrase numen maiestasque both the
charismatic and the constitutional auctoritas were comprehended; and this fact helped
the emperor’s maiestas by reinforcing it with
the divinity attributed to him, as the divina maiestas of Diocletian shows. In the same way, it
became the certainly commanded rule in the third century (though there are
earlier examples of its tentative use) to speak of the emperor in inscriptions
as dominus noster (D. N.). Here, too, religious
motives are at work.
Once the emperor had grown god-like, and
emperor-worship, originally provincial, had become universal, so that an
African citizen colony could dedicate an inscription to the God Aurelian,’ that
other tendency, to acknowledge his position as superhuman, to see in him the
medium of divine intervention and to recognize him as divinely favoured, could lead men to admit and to demand an especial
position for the sole master of all. How these two tendencies could both lead
up to the deification or sanctification of the ruler is shown by two
inscriptions dating from Diocletian, the first of which is a dedication to the diis genitis et deorum creatoribus dd. nn. Diocletiano et Maximiano invictis Augustis, the other to the diis auctoribus ad rei publicae amplificandae gloriam procreato Iovio Maximo. Of Aurelian, who let himself be worshipped as a god, the writer who
continues Dio tells us that he informed mutinous
soldiers that they were mistaken if they believed that the fate of the emperor
was in their hands, for God alone could bestow the purple and determine the
length of a reign. Cassius Dio puts comparable words
into the mouth of Marcus Aurelius. We have spoken above of the meaning of the
legend Procidentia Deorum for this conception.
Here we can add that even Balbinus and Pupienus, who were nominated by the Senate, and also
Tacitus, used this symbol on their coins. And anyhow we may interpret also Providentia Augustorum as another expression of the idea of rule ‘by the grace of God.’
This idea of
divine favour is especially noticeable on coins which
occur earlier but become ever more common in the third century, on which a
divine patron gives the emperor the globe, the symbol of his power over the
world. Roma still appears with Gordian III and Florian, as she frequently
did earlier. More often, Juppiter performs the
investiture, as on the coins of Severus Alexander, Gallienus, Aurelian and
Probus, Carus, Carinus and Numerianus. In the case of the last two, the investing
figure may also be their father Carus; and it is certainly
Diocletian, who receives himself the globe from Juppiter and hands it to Maximian. Sol appears in this role on the coins of Gordian III
and Aurelian. Coronation by a god may be explained in the same
sense. Thus Sol crowns Probus; Sol and Hercules crown Carus and Carinus; Hercules crowns Postumus.
Where Mars appears in this capacity there may also be a reference to those by
whom the emperor was chosen.
Whether men
believed in the revealed divinity of the emperor or in a divine favour upholding him, there was always something divine
about his person and his office. It was just this idea of divine favour which made it possible later for the Christian
emperors to express the peculiar sanctity of their position in the traditional
ceremonial, to receive the due expressions of reverence and to retain the
imperial insignia and dress.
III.
THE
COURT AND ITS CEREMONIAL. DRESS AND INSIGNIA
The character
of the sources for the decisive period of transition in the third century
rarely enables us to describe with confidence the external setting of the
imperial power. For it is just in such matters that the Historia Augusta generally gives only the facts of the time of its composition. Characteristic
features due to adulation and the growing pre-eminence of the princess had their tentative beginnings in the first two centuries of our era. But it is
almost impossible to say how far and when they reached fixed and obligatory
forms. The habit of calling everything to do with the emperor sacrum (so
that the word finally came to mean ‘imperial’) is apparent e.g. in the
phrase cognoscens ad sacras appellationes,which dates from the middle of the
third century; and the holder of the court office a cognitionibus is sometimes called procurator sacrarum cognitionum from which, even before Diocletian, the
title magister sacrarum cognitionum is probably derived. But this use of the word may not yet have been
strictly official. In the same sense, the description of an imperial rescript
of 204 as sacrae litterae may be mentioned; as also the use of theia epistole by the proconsul of Asia; and as early
as the reign of Commodus a procurator speaks of the sacra subscriptio domini nostril. In view of this, the
passages quoted in the Digest from Ulpian, Paul and others, mentioning
the sacrae constitutiones are not to be regarded as interpolations. As so often happens, unofficial and
semi-official usage probably preceded the official. As another example of this,
we may mention the imperial mint, sacra moneta, so called once in an inscription dating from the reign of Hadrian, but first
used on gold coins by Carus and his sons, in Sacri Moneti Antiochensis, and on consecration coins of Carus from the mint of Siscia in the form Sacra Moneta Sisciensis. In view of these developments, it is probably correct to say that the term sacrum
palatium was not an innovation of Diocletian, especially since Rome had
been called urbs sacra in official documents from the time of the Severi and had thus become the ‘imperial city.’
The emperor,
dwelling in the sacrum palatium must be approached by those deemed
worthy of the honour in the humble attitude of proskynesis. This attitude was derived from a
mixture of the gestures of supplication and prayer with Eastern practices. As
the source is untrustworthy, it is impossible to decide whether there was
really a greater insistence proskynesis under
Elagabalus which Severus Alexander then forbade, or whether we should interpret
this alleged prohibition only as a misunderstood report of an alteration in the
form of the ceremony. Such a change is attributed to the younger ‘Maximinus,’ who sometimes expected his foot and not his
hand to be kissed In any case, proskynesis was
taken for granted by Cassius Dio, by Herodian and by
the panegyrist of Philip, although we cannot be sure exactly what form the
ceremony took at the courts of the Severi and their
successors. Adoration of pictures of the emperor may have influenced the
development, but again there is no clear evidence. Herodian tells of homage
done to the pictures of Balbinus, Pupienus and Gordian on their accession. A gold coin of Postumus shows us for the first time a representative of the People, on his knees before
the enthroned emperor, receiving a benefaction. Under Gallienus we hear of
those who met the emperor performing proskynesis even in the streets of Rome. When, moreover, Caracalla is reported at a
reception to have been merely ‘greeted’ (salutatus), it is perfectly possible that the ceremony of proskynesis is meant; for later sources, in which only proskynesis can be intended, give the name ordo salutationis to the order of precedence in which it was to be carried out. The description
of Caracalla’s reception also gives the order in which the various ranks performed
the ceremony: Praetorian Prefects, amici (, heads of court offices,
members of the Senate and equites. It is uncertain whether precedence
was then arranged at the will of the ruling emperor, or whether it was already
fixed by rule. The latter seems more probable, and must then have gone beyond
the long-standing division of the ‘friends’ into the first and second admissio. With the stricter regulation of the admissio, a department of the court,
the officium admissionis, which was known to
Suetonius, grew in importance. As early as the third century its president
ranked as eques and had the title of magister. Probably the velarii who drew the curtains (vela) of the
audience-chamber, belonged to this office. Even if we can believe that Severus
Alexander showed consideration to the senators in the rules for their visits to
him, we none the less get a general impression that the emperor was becoming
increasingly remote and etiquette increasingly stiff, so that in the end not
only ordinary visitors but also advisers had to remain standing in the imperial
presence. It has been rightly concluded from the types on coins which show the
emperor seated and surrounded by standing allegorical figures, and at a later
date on his throne in the presence of standing gods, that the custom of
standing before the emperor is earlier than the reign of Diocletian, in which
it is first certainly attested, though the term consistorium instead of the earlier consilium is possibly
not older than this period. Since the above-mentioned coin-types begin with the
reign of Severus Alexander, it seems unlikely that he made a rule of allowing
every senator the right to sit in his presence after saluting him.
As regards
dress and insignia, fixed forms to distinguish the unique position of the
emperor had also developed. Although Septimius Severus, at his entry into Rome,
exchanged his military dress for the toga, the wearing of uniform in the City,
which indicates the progressive militarization of the regime, became
increasingly common. Up to the end of the third century the toga praetexta was still worn, it is true; but the emperors tended more and more, on festive
occasions, to wear triumphal costume as their gala dress, while for empresses
gold-embroidered robes of State were already the fashion. The vestis alba triumphalis, a variation of the triumphal costume, can be seen on a painting of
Septimius Severus and his family, in which golden garlands set with gems show a
tendency to over-elaborate Oriental pomp; and this
style of ornament became commoner, until it finally assumed the form of a
diadem set with precious stones, which is only a garland translated into
jewelry. From the beginning, however, military dress was always better suited
to show rank and superior position. The Imperator alone had the right to wear
the paludamentum or the purple mantle, and
even in his day the historian Tacitus saw in it the symbol of sovereignty. This
idea is yet more marked, when from Pescennius Niger
onwards donning the purple becomes more and more prominent at the assumption of
imperial power. The purple (purpura) thus became the mystic symbol of
power, and men could suppose that the dying Gallienus wished to single out
Claudius as his successor by sending him the imperial mantle. Gold embroidery
appears in regular use on the imperial purple from the time of Commodus, and
the setting of fibulae belts and so on with precious stones, which was
still thought by the soldiery to be ‘unroman’ in Macrinus, and must have met with opposition in other cases,
was eventually accepted. So too, the elaborate ornamentation of the imperial
chariot and harness, had become regular distinctive marks of the emperor by the
beginning of the third century.
As the triumphal
robe became the gala dress of the emperor and as at the same time he himself
became divine, the sceptre with the eagle, generally
used with civil costume, became part of the insignia perhaps even before the
reign of Diocletian. The long sceptre, symbol of the
power of the father of the gods, which already appears in the painting of the Severi and which third-century emperors mostly carried when
wearing military costume, indicates the divinity or the divine investiture of
the emperor; so that Constantine and his successors, who ruled ‘by the grace of
God,’ could retain it. When the globe changed from being the symbol of the
universe to being that of sovereignty is not certain; but the fact that
Caracalla as 'junior Augustus’, and Philip the younger as Caesar, are both
represented with it makes it probable that the change had taken place by their
time. It can be shown that from being an emblem in the portrayal of emperors,
it had become a real part of the insignia from the fourth century, though coins
which show the Augustus giving it to his co-regent may point to an earlier
date. Nor was the wearing of the diadem, in which the change to autocracy is
most emphatically expressed, a use regular since Constantine, wholly without
precedent in the third century. Apart from the cointypes that show the
emperor with the headband of the sun-god, there are many others that show the
radiate diadem, that is the royal diadem with rays attached, which indicated
the sovereign, and the Romans thus grew accustomed
to the sight of the once forbidden royal headgear. The first known official use
of the diadem without rays is on a commemorative medal of Gallienus; according
to the literary sources Aurelian wore the diadem. Finally, besides the chair of
office, the sella curulis, which the emperors as consuls still retained in later times, the throne had
become a special mark of distinction. This sign of monarchy, too, had a
religious origin; and as the court took on a sacral colouring,
it became so integral a part of the imperial splendour that this chair, originally the seat of the gods, was innocently adopted by the
Christian emperors as a symbol of their power.
Torchbearers
accompanied the emperor on his public appearances; and they were an essential
part of the honours paid to him. Cheering by the
populace as the emperor passed by, which had begun even earlier, was prescribed
and ceremonially regulated before the beginning of the third century. By the
same period, acclamation in the Senate had also become the rule. The protocols
of the Arval Brothers for 213 show how firmly established this mode of
addressing the emperor in a kind of litany had become. Of the examples of
acclamations by the Senate given in the Historia Augusta, only the
single example in the Vita Commodi may be
accounted genuine. Dio tells us of the hymn of praise
to the emperor which culminated in the description of the emperor as a deity.
The marks of honour which the emperors inherited from the consuls were
also maintained. Lictors carrying fasces decorated with laurel-leaves
accompanied Gordian I at his entry into Carthage; lictors are depicted at
sacrificial ceremonies under Trebonius Gallus. None the less, this train of
lictors was not always present, and
its appearances
were probably confined to the
occasions on which the emperor performed certain acts as magistrate or imperator. For long
before, besides or often without the
civil attendants, the military escort had become the most distinctive feature
of imperial processions. As early as
Caracalla adverse comment was aroused when the Praetorian Guards, fully armed, accompanied him into the Senate, contrary to previous custom. In this action, too, we may note the progressive militarization which went hand in hand with the transformation of the first citizen into an
autocratic monarch.
It is usual to distinguish
this new form of the monarchy from the Principate
under the name of Dominate. But it may be observed that, just at the period of greatest
absolutism, dominus becomes the ordinary form of address, and dominus noster is no longer reserved
exclusively for the emperor. It would be better to adopt the
words of Dio about the monarch ‘autocrat over his own decrees and the laws’ as giving the essence
of this later unveiled and avowed absolutism; and to use this term ‘Autocracy’
to distinguish the later absolutism from the Principate of the early Empire.
IV.
THE
APPOINTMENT OF THE EMPEROR: ELECTION AND DYNASTIC EXPERIMENTS
However far above his subjects the emperor might be, he owed his position to the expression of the
popular will. Even though he and the theorists
might see in this expression the divine
providence and the favour of Heaven at work, constitutional
considerations were not forgotten. Through its representatives the People
chose the princeps, but the consummation of popular sovereignty was at
the same time its destruction. At first, the Senate voiced the People’s will.
But after the death of Commodus the secret, which Tacitus at Nero’s fall could
still call the arcanum imperii, namely that a princeps could be made elsewhere than in Rome, was a secret no longer. Indeed it was
soon almost the rule. It is proper to speak of this period as one of military
monarchy, or even military anarchy, in so far as this indicates who were the
most prominent agents in deciding who should mount the throne. But so long as
the emperors had to reckon with the prestige and resistance of the Senate and
while the senators held fast by their admitted claim, the right of the Senate
and the Roman People to take part in appointing the emperor remained
undisputed. But the populus Romanus found that almost the only right left to it was the modest role of acclaiming
the new ruler. Only in the elections of the two emperors created by the Senate
and in that of Gordian III as Caesar did the People play a part, and that more
by way of riot than in form of law; yet special reference was made to the
People, acting with the Senate. But normally, the People’s functions remained
purely ornamental. Yet even in the late fifth century, at the election of Anastasius, allusion is made to the consent of the People,
as well as of the Senate and the army.
The regular
practice in the third century was for the army to proclaim the new emperor,
after which the Senate gave its formal agreement either at the request of the
emperor himself or else on being merely informed. We cannot say how often the patres bowed to hard necessity in the
exercise of this right to which they clung; for only once, at the election of Maximinus, is it reported that they approved the actions of
the legions because it was dangerous for the unarmed to oppose the armed
forces. It is not surprising that the accumulated hate felt for the Thracian
trooper elevated to the throne should have moved the senators at the first
opportunity to carry on the struggle begun by their election of the Gordians
with men of their own choice, Balbinus and Pupienus. But their real power was small; so small that
they then had to accept a boy as Caesar and later to acknowledge as Augustus
Aemilianus, whom they had formerly proclaimed a traitor. Indeed, after the
murder of Aurelian, when his army turned to the Senate for the appointment of
his successor, the patres answered that this
was the army’s duty, so that it was only after some interchanges that the
Senate decided to elect Tacitus. A remark of the biographer of Aurelian gives
the right explanation of their diffidence, namely that the Senate knew very
well that the soldiers did not take kindly to an emperor chosen by itself. But
though the choice of Tacitus may be fairly cited to show the constitutional
position of the Senate, it would be illogical to ignore the evidence that
choice provides of the army’s right to have a say in the matter. From the
beginning, the military basis of the imperial power was only partly hidden by
the civilian forms of the constitution of the Principate. At his accession,
Nero could refer both to the auctoritas patrum and to the consensus militum, and on coins of Vitellius and Vespasian mention of the consensus militumalso appears. Perhaps we should not see in this
the assertion of a right; but it is clear from the coins of the third century
that the emperors then thought of election by the army as a necessary legal
preliminary to their assumption of office. Leaving out of consideration the
fact that fides or concordia militum or exercitus is referred to over and over again, it is noteworthy that soldiers are
depicted as present when Severus Alexander receives the orb from Juppiter or when Gordian is invested by Roma. Finally, it
is a soldier who proffers the orb; for though we may see in the soldier the god
Mars, the god is only a symbol for the army. It is significant for the election
of Tacitus that this type first appears on one of his coins; while another
shows his coronation by Mars, although on this the genius of the Senate
reappears, after having been absent since the time of Valerian. That man was
legally emperor who had been elected either by the Senate or the army and then
recognized by the other partner. But the words used by Eutropius to describe
the election of Claudius give the best picture of the reality: ‘a militibus electus, a senatu appellatus Augustus’
Decius, like Vespasian, in spite of the deference which he otherwise paid to
the Senate, dated his reign from the day of his proclamation by the army, thus
admitting its right to share in his elevation. External events, too, decreased
the importance of recognition by the Senate. Postumus and other separatist emperors, who, despite all their claims to the whole
Empire, never were so recognized in Rome, ruled with no less actual authority
for all that. The unsuccessful rival was hostis or, by official usage after Constantine I at the latest, tyrannus;
but the history of the so-called thirty tyrants shows with distressing clarity
what a misuse of the right of election might bring about. Aurelius Victor
associates the end of the Senate’s right of election with the death of Probus
and Carus’ election. Carus seems to have contented himself with an announcement of his election without
any formal request for confirmation by the Senate. This does not mean that the
announcement might not be received with acclamation signifying consent; but any
initiative on the part of the Senate was done away for good. A formal right to
share in the election, often not unlike that of the People, must have survived.
Only on some such hypothesis can we explain the first fifth-century utterance
of a newly-elected emperor that has survived in his own words; here the army
and the Senate (by now a totally changed body) are named as electors, but the
greatest emphasis is laid upon the divine favour.
When Marcianus announced his assumption of office to
Pope Leo I, he said he had come to it ‘by God’s Providence and the choice of
the Senate and the army’.
Although the
idea that the ruler was elective survived into the days of the autocracy ‘by
the grace of God,’ an idea that the succession might be passed on to the
emperor’s heirs was also current from the very first. Septimius Severus, by
means of his fictitious adoption, endeavoured to make
his sons heirs in a dynastic succession, while he singled out his elder son by
creating him Caesar and Princeps Iuventutis and
having him named imperator destinatiis. A year
later, Caracalla became Augustus and Geta became Caesar. This public settlement
of the succession was designed to win support among the populace, by
familiarizing them with the idea of a dynasty; and all the propaganda-value of
the coinage and of Emperor-worship was exploited to this end. One success of
the campaign may be seen in the ever greater frequency of the words domus divina in inscriptions. The effect of legitimacy is
shown by the succession of Elagabalus and Severus Alexander and by the
influence which the princesses of the imperial house, from Julia Domna to Julia Mamaea, could
acquire. Even the ephemeral reign of the first two Gordians was long enough to
arouse sentiments favourable to Gordian III as the
legitimate heir. It thus became the rule for the sons of the emperor to be
created Caesar and finally Augustus. There was in general no real co-regency,
although all the imperial honours, almost always
including even the pontificate since Philip and his son, were conferred upon
the junior, thus creating a kind of fictitious co-regency or rather
partnership. This practice seemed to secure the succession; this combination of
dynastic successor with partner was intended to ensure that, when the
Augustus-father died, the Augustus-son should pass automatically to the throne.
Though, indeed, stern reality often refuted this doctrine. The idea that
membership of the imperial family gave a man some claim to the throne induced
Florian to put himself forward as Augustus after the death of his step-brother
Tacitus, and he was recognized even though his predecessor had declined, in
accordance with the older usage, to nominate his successor; and this holds good
even if we doubt the truth of Tacitus’ solemn renunciation in favour of a free election by the Senate
The idea of a
division of the Empire appears once during the joint rule of the hostile
brothers Caracalla and Geta and it might appear that a necessary connection
between dual rule and such division should be presumed. But the idea of the
unity of the Empire was too strong, even in this case of bitter enmity; and
there was in fact no division when circumstances necessitated the separate
action of the co-rulers in the East and the West, as with Valerian and
Gallienus or Carus and Carinus.
What this does show is that it might be necessary, both for the safety of the
Empire and of the emperors personally, to mark out separate spheres of
activity, while maintaining without limitation the Augustus- father’s authority
over the whole. This was a precedent that could be used by Diocletian in his
re-organization of the Empire, especially in the form devised by Carus, when he left Carinus behind as Caesar in the West with extended powers which approached
joint-sovereignty. But there was still a difference between Augustus and
Caesar; and there was thus no question of a division of the Empire.
V.
EMPEROR
AND SENATE
The survival
of the Senate’s constitutional share in electing the emperor was matched by the
continuance of its right to judge the deeds of the dead Augustus and so decide
the consecration of the divus. But
Septimius Severus first told the army of his intention to deify Commodus and
then left the Senate to bring it to pass, while the Senate itself deified
Gallienus in deference to the will of Claudius, but against its own
convictions. This function of the Senate, which belongs to the original form of
the Principate, was thus only exercised, in fact and possibly in law, at the
instance of the emperor and its significance was thus seriously diminished.
Initiative declined into co-operation whereby the traditional respect still
felt for the patres was brought in to add honour to the dead emperor. Thus the principle, that no
deification could take place without the Senate’s approval, could remain
unchallenged, while the idea of the power of the emperor to command this action
could arise side by side with it. Even if we admit that the Senate, in passing
judgment on a dead emperor, was using the power of making laws which it had
acquired, we must be cautious in our use of this fact when estimating its
constitutional position. For, in legislation, the Senate was gradually being
reduced to the position of an imperial publicity department.
The jurists
ever more frequently quote the imperial oratio instead of the senatus consultum which was founded on it; and this must mean that the former was adopted without
discussion or amendment. The force of law which the imperial constitutiones were recognized to have tended
further to limit senatorial legislation. But for measures introducing some
radical change, later to be known as leges generales, the more solemn form of the senatus consultum was retained, even as late as the fifth century. Moreover, the
emperors almost managed to turn the old rule that it was for the Senate, as
representing the People, to give dispensation from the laws, into an exception;
and the axiom that ‘the princeps is freed from the laws’ is definite
proof of this. The emperor could justify himself by appeal to the lex de imperii, a fact which reveals the legal basis from
which the emperor could at any time undermine the surviving rights of the
Senate. Thus he could himself grant privileges which had formerly needed to be
confirmed by a dispensation from the Senate, though that did not prevent him
from declaring himself bound, of his own free will, by the relevant laws in a
civil case. We have also seen how the Senate lost importance, from the time of
Severus Alexander onwards, in the administration of the laws affecting the collegia. Formally the granting of pardons
and quashing of undetermined cases were prerogatives of the Senate; but in fact
and even by law the former right was exercised by the emperor. Co-operation of
emperor and Senate, whereby the Senate probably acted on the emperor’s
suggestion, still existed under Pertinax and was known to Ulpian, although in a
later work he speaks of the pyrinceps only;
the emperor’s sovereignty in such cases was fully admitted by the reign of
Caracalla. The judicial competence of the Senate continually lost importance in
face of imperial competition. Even the right of the Senate to be sole judge of
its own members in criminal cases, legally secured under Septimius Severus, was
precarious, since even Severus did not consider himself bound to respect it.
But the emperors continued to send cases to the Senate for trial; and even
after Diocletian the Senate still pronounced judgment, when thus invited to do
so.
Turning to
financial matters, the independent importance of the senatorial aerarium as a separate institution was already so reduced that according to Dio the emperor’s power over it was as unlimited as over
the fiscus. But as late as 204 the Senate voted the funds for the
Secular Games; and in spite of the curtailing of its right, the aerarium lasted until it became a municipal instead of a State treasury. It is very
uncertain how far, if at all, the continued minting of bronze coins with the
Senate’s mark, S.C., denotes a survival of the independent aerarium. On
the coins attributed to the interregnum after Aurelian’s death, S.C. may only
mean that the Senate remembered its ancient rights in exceptional
circumstances. But it is significant that, after the minting of such coins
ceased under Claudius II and (in spite of larger striking of money) under
Aurelian, there was no resumption of it even under Tacitus and only a partial
one under Florian. The bronze coins of Postumus with
the Senate’s mark have nothing to do with its rights of minting, and rather
express the claim to a legitimate title to the whole Empire, including Rome and
its Senate; this is true also of types of coin, over which the Senate never
shared control, where the legend appears as a peculiar sign of legitimacy.
The right of
the Senate to appoint the Roman magistrates was so whittled away by the princeps’ nomination and commendation that little remained of it; and in the third
century the appointment to all offices in the capital was attributed to the
emperor. Of these offices, the consulate, the praetorship and the quaestorship
survived, and there were always plenty of men ready to undertake the duties, in
spite of the demands which they made on their holders’ private fortunes, so
long as important posts in the administration of the Empire were filled by
ex-consuls and expraetors. In many ways the activity
of the Senate seems to have been that of a municipal council, as when Aurelian
charged it with the rebuilding of the City walls; and the organization of defence against the Alemannic invasion about 260 signifies
little more from a constitutional point of view. None the less, the Senate had
a prestige founded not only on the splendid traditions of several centuries,
but also on its close connection with Rome. In comparison with the idea,
noticeable as early as the first days of Commodus, that Rome was where the
emperor was, the conception of Rome as the seat of the emperor was not less
widespread. However much, in a State which had greatly advanced towards civic
equalization, the emperor might become the personification of the Empire, and
the political significance of Rome and its Senate fall into decay, Rome’s splendour as the capital of the world could not be dimmed.
In spite of political set-backs and of the change in the Senate’s personnel,
tradition was not forgotten, and as the scanty historical writings that have
survived indicate, the Senate continued to claim its share in this splendour. A coin-type of Tacitus which depicts the emperor
offering the orb to Roma may indicate a desire to counteract by propaganda a
threatened disappearance of the significance of Rome; politically speaking, the
type soon proved to be no more than a pious hope. But the tradition was so
strongly rooted that it was vigorous enough to survive the removal of the
emperor from Rome and the foundation of a second Senate in the new imperial
city in the East. It was, indeed, in making a Senate out of the municipal
council of Constantinople that the emperors of the unconcealed autocracy showed
their respect for this tradition. Thus the Senate, as an imperial assembly with
the remains of its privileges, became part of the State in its final
transformation.
The
composition of the Senate, which the emperors controlled by admitting the sons
of senators to the magistracy and also by means of the adlectio,
had altered, since the reign of Septimius Severus, to the disadvantage of the
Italian element, which till then had had a small majority. Italians now
occupied hardly more than a third of the places and many of them had only
recently become members at all. Apart from Africa, the birthplace of Severus,
it was mainly the Eastern provinces, especially Asia Minor and Syria, that
provided the newcomers; even Egypt contributed its representatives for the
first time. They were mostly sprung from the provincial aristocracy
first receiving equestrian rank. Only by degrees were men admitted from other
classes, and those generally by way of advancement in the army. That there was
a change of personnel in favour of Italians under
Severus Alexander cannot be proved. But the decline in the number of senators
from the Western provinces, Gaul and Spain, is remarkable, and also the fact
that so few are known to have come from the Danubian provinces; and this in spite of the increasing importance, and, ultimately,
domination, of the Pannonians, though the latter only became really marked at a
time when senators were excluded from those military offices that appealed so
strongly to the martial nature of the Illyrians. Men from the provinces were
seldom allowed to become patricians. On the other hand, although Italian
patricians were preferred as consuls, they were mostly excluded from
influential posts in the imperial administration. In spite of the many
newcomers, the emperors could never completely carry out their intention of suppressing
opposition, although they were to some extent successful. The reason for this
lies in the traditional influence of the Italian senators, which became all the
stronger as the obligation to reside in Rome, which had already been but
lightly enforced, was less and less observed, The growing
preference shown for the equites was a more effective weapon. A fusion
of classes was prepared by the approximation of the rank of many equestrian
offices to that of the senators, by the ever increasing inclusion of equites in the Senate, and by the abandonment of the rule that Praetorian Prefects in
office might not be senators. The fusion was complete when it was admitted that
the administrative service of the Empire could only be staffed by imperial
officers. The senators were still distinguished by the title of clarissimus and they ranked first in the Empire
after the emperor and his family, while the Caesars from Geta onwards bore the
special title of nobilissimus. The equites were never given a special title as such. But they could achieve, in the
imperial service, the successive ranks of vir egregious, vir perfectissimus and vir eminentissimus, and the last was finally reserved for Praetorian Prefects.
VI.
CHANGES IN THE ADMINISTRATION OF THE EMPIRE
AND IN THE ARMY
The attempt
to find more and more officials and officers in the class of equites becomes marked under Septimius Severus. Following the precedent of Egypt an
equestrian prefect is appointed to govern the new province of Mesopotamia and,
at the same time, the commanders of the two legions stationed there, I and III Parthica, as well as of II Parthica (then in garrison in Italy), became equestrian prefects. From this time on,
equestrian procurators are frequently appointed deputies of the governor not
only in imperial but also in senatorial provinces. Such deputy governors in
senatorial provinces, apart perhaps from Timesitheus in Asia, were still only made to meet some temporary emergency as when a pro-
consul died in office. But the intention by this device to supersede, for
political reasons, senators by equites in the imperial provinces is
plain; and it was carried out by uniting two functions in the hands of the procurator
vice praesidis. (Praeses in this context is a general name for governor.) Under Gallienus, the
‘independent vicariate’ appears, and the agens vices praesidis, who held no other office, could
act as governor and finally be spoken of simply as the praeses. But not all senatorial governorships were thus transformed, and not all
under Gallienus; the incomplete sources that we have do not allow a precise
chronology. The traditional system was probably altered in Numidia only after
268, in Pontus et Bithynia certainly after 269, when a senator was still
governor, and at latest in 279. In Pannonia Inferior, the change made by
Gallienus was annulled and a senator appointed before 283. In Britain, Hispania Tarraconensis, Moesia Inferior and Syria Coele, the
governors never ceased to be senators. Only in Baetica,
among the senatorial provinces, do we hear, under Florian or Probus, of a v(ir) p(erfectissimus) a(gens)
voices) p(raesidis). We do not know whether the
other provinces administered by ex-praetors were treated in the same way; but
there is some probability that they were, in so far, that is, as the threatened
situation of the province makes the presence of troops likely in troublous
times. The provinces administered by consulars, Asia
and Africa, still had their senatorial proconsuls; but it is uncertain whether
they were appointed by sortition, or by the emperor’s direct nomination.
These
developments are connected with the exclusion of senators from military command
by Gallienus. Aurelius Victor tells us that this emperor forbade senators
to serve in the army or have access to it, in order to prevent the imperium from falling into the hands of the high aristocracy. In fact, since the sole
rule of Gallienus the legatus legionis disappears; and in his place is the praefectus legionis, at first with the suffix agens vices legati, though this hardly serves to
disguise the definitive change. The title of egregius marks the new commanders as equites. Probably centurions qualified for
appointment by twice achieving the rank of primus pilus, thus becoming,
so to speak, chief of staff in their legion. At the same time, as a matter of
course, the senatorial tribuni laticlavialso disappear. The way to the highest
command was now open to the man who could rise from the ranks. Aurelius Victor thought that the senators might have recovered their position under
Tacitus, in view of the accommodating disposition of the army. But no known
attempt was made, and the situation remained as it had been under Gallienus.
This had the further result that in the provinces governed by equites where there was an army, civil and military authority was concentrated in one
man’s hands, whereas in the imperial provinces, which were still governed by
senators, there was of necessity a division of powers. It seems that a unified
command was not necessarily created where more than one legion was stationed.
The men who were given a general command in times of crisis were called praepositi or duces; but their title
was not officially fixed. Dux does not yet indicate a man in the same
position as the later dux limitum, even though
that title certainly looks back to earlier precedents.
Another
military reform of Gallienus may be connected with his anxiety to strengthen
his own position as emperor, namely the institution of the protectores. The title of protector lateris divini was at first only conferred on high officers. It is also doubtful whether
under Gallienus centurions and cavalry decurions, who ranked with them, could
become protectores as well as legionary praefects and tribunes of the troops centred at Rome. The duties of the protectores lay in
the imperial headquarters, for the most part in the immediate neighbourhood of the emperor’s person (they are the protectores domestici of later times). Others served with the Praetorian Prefects though they were
later dispatched to special service with the troops in the provinces. Their
corps became a kind of staff-college and membership of it opened the way to
greater things. Many were Illyrians, as we should expect in view of the
composition of the army. Whether or not the comitatus of the Germanic
tribes provided the model for the system is disputed. But the attempt was made
to attach the protectores to the emperor by a
special kind of personal loyalty.
Otherwise,
the organization of the army remained unchanged until the middle of the third
century. Provincialization advanced. The troops gradually took root, as it
were, in the regions where they were stationed, until they were eventually
turned into frontier settlers under an hereditary obligation to serve in the
army. This might lead to difficulties when they were required to fight on
battlefields far from home. Yet, while wars in and outside the Empire were neverending, a multitude of separate detachments had to be moulded together to form a single mobile fighting force. It
is possible that sometimes even detachments appeared as full legions, only to
be merged in the mother-legion in the frontier provinces if they were not
broken up for other reasons. The cavalry was increased to meet the mobility and
new tactics of the enemy, especially the Persians, by the new organization of
mounted auxilia and the strengthening of the cavalry attached to the
legions. In this, as in other things, Gallienus was the innovator. Legionary
cavalry were often especially used as vexillationes; this is suggested by the later use of the word to denote a cavalry regiment.
From the time of Gallienus onwards, the independent cavalry general like Aureolus and Aurelian stood highest in prestige; and the latter,
when he became emperor, seems to have encouraged this development and for
tactical purposes to have separated the legionary cavalry as promoti from the legion itself, although even under
Diocletian they continued to be united for administrative purposes. Peoples not
subject to the Empire, especially the Germanic races, had been received into
the army, at first as irregular auxiliaries. But from the reign of Claudius II
onwards German prisoners of war were included in the regular auxilia, an
anticipation of the recruitment of free Germans which was later extensively practised especially under Constantine.
This
increasing tendency to centralize imperial administration in the hands of the
emperor led to a development and reorganization of the machinery of the
government devised under the Principate. The Praetorian Prefect constantly
appeared as the chief agent of the change. His office, generally shared with a
colleague, was usually the culmination of an equestrian career; but from the
time of Severus Alexander its holders were ex officio senators. These
Prefects commanded the Praetorian Guard and the troops garrisoned in Italy; as
members of the imperial staff, they controlled recruiting and armament; they
were the officers responsible for the commissariat; and they thus had a share
in the collection of the special contribution which had become necessary for
this purpose. As they stood in a peculiar sense in the emperor’s service,
special duties could be laid on them. Their jurisdiction, as representatives of
the emperor, often in a sense competed with his, since appeals could be
addressed to them, so that in practice they often were an ultimate court.
Appeals to the emperor were still possible; but the right was disputed and they
were forbidden by Constantine. The Prefects were criminal judges
for the whole of Italy with the exception of the area within a hundred miles of
Rome, which was subject to the City Prefect, and of persons who were exempted
from the jurisdiction of the provincial governors. Their right to condemn
prisoners to deportatio proves most clearly
that they represented the emperor. To help them carry out their constantly
increasing duties, the emperor appointed deputies for them, vice praefectorum praetorio, later vicarii, at first probably with roving
commissions, but in particular cases with fixed areas to look after. The
Prefects also had, as representing the sovereign, a general oversight over the
State post and the political and financial mechanism of government. From the
reign of Maximinus Thrax onwards, they had the right to publish ordinances binding on everyone, so long
as they did not modify existing laws; and although this was not quite the same
as a secondary right to make laws, it yet gave them power to issue general
instructions that must be obeyed. Finally, they were the most important members
of the permanent imperial consilium, which advised the emperor in his legal decisions. It is not surprising that
this diversity of duties, not to mention the danger likely to arise from
putting so much power in one man’s hands, caused the office to be divided
between colleagues; and that, besides soldiers, we find lawyers and experts in
administration being appointed to this post.
In these
troublous times, much was demanded of the State finances. But the economic
system was breaking down largely under the pressure of taxation, and money
could only be raised by the most drastic methods. This process led to a more
widespread resort to compulsion and to an increase in unpaid services, munera and liturgiae, which gives the impression that State-socialism was developing; but for the
details we must refer to the chapter on economic history. The financial administration was radically altered when
the Praetorian Prefect was made responsible for the assessment and collection
of the increasingly numerous payments in kind destined for the support of the
army (the annona militaris) which circumstances made it necessary to exact more and more often. With this
responsibility, an important part of the financial administration had come into
the hands of the Prefect; and the change was made at the expense of the chief
financial officer of the State, the rationalis,
who was responsible for the normal taxes and duties, administered by his
procurators and for the enterprises that belonged to the fiscus such as
mines, mints and factories. The rationalis also had to meet competition in the shape of the office set up by Septimius
Severus to look after the res private. The income from this emperor’s
private fortune was mostly spent on public services. The res privata was administered by a procurator, later magister, rei privatae, who had in practice
the same privileges as the rationalist As a result of the frequent
changes of ruler, no distinction seems to have been made between the emperor’s
private lands and his crown lands, although the patrimonium existing before Severus as crown property in a special sense and administered
separately was only later merged into the res privata. Procurators of the res privata were active in
the different regions of Italy and in the provinces; and in some cases they
represented the interests of the patrimonium as well. The Finance Minister and the Minister of imperial domains, both
ultimately viri perfectissimi, had perhaps become, next to the emperor, persons to whom appeals could be
addressed in trials on matters falling within their sphere of duty. But as a
natural consequence of the fact that these duties had been originally entrusted
to members of the imperial household, these officers always ranked as
court-officials, as is most clearly reflected in the name given to their
subordinates, palatini, after Diocletian.
The equestrian
chiefs of the different departments of the imperial cabinet had
also taken the places of former members of the emperor’s household. Answers to
deputations from the Empire and to foreign ambassadors, directions for the
civil service, remained under the ab epistulis, in
whose department all official correspondence had earlier been concentrated. The
numerous private appeals to the emperor were dealt with by the a libellis. The legal decisions to be delivered by the
sovereign himself were referred to the a cognitionibus. Research on complicated legal problems and questions of cults was the
business of the a studiis. The activities of
the a memoria were the most loosely defined,
but in general they were concerned with the exercise of clemency and the bestowal
of favours by the emperor; and the officials of this
department thus became the most influential of all. They ranked with the most
highly-placed procurators and were perhaps distinguished by the title of magister even before the reign of Diocletian. In the reforms of Constantine, the a studiis disappeared as did the a cognitionibus, whose duties were taken over by the a libellis. A man always needed high attainments to hold one of these offices; and they
were purely civil. Civilians could also rise to other procuratorships,
usually starting as advocates fisci, legal representative of the
imperial treasuries. But most third-century procurators were ex-soldiers who,
from being officers, were singled out for employment in the imperial
administration.
The inferior
staff of the officia, as the bureaux of the more important departments of State were
called, was often composed of soldiers detailed for the purpose. This was the
result of the long-standing identification of civil and military powers and of
the progressive militarization of the whole State; and the survival of the
titles which betray their military origin, even after the separation of the
civil and military administration, is significant. Militarization must have
been almost complete when the officiales could
also be called milites, and their
service, as indeed all official service, could be known as militia, so
that a new name, militia armata, had to be
found for military service in order to distinguish it. It is true that there
were also many clerks (exceptores) and account
keepers (tabularii) who had never been in the
army. But their profession was not yet promoted to be an office. They followed
it as a kind of trade; they were members of guilds (scholae) which even
before Diocletian were partly State-recognized and attached to the several official, and they were paid direct by those who claimed their services. In this
practice we may see the beginnings of that shifting of the cost of government
on to the subject which was later to lead to the system of sportulae.
|