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The Roman Political & Legal Systems
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Graduate
12/06/2009

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Term
Aerarium 
Definition

Central treasury of ancient Rome housed in the Temple of Saturn. During the republic (509–27 BC), two quaestors(deputies to council)  managed the treasury and the Senate controlled it.  


Term
Apparitores: 
Definition
The general name for the public servants of the magistrates at Rome. They were called apparitores because they were at hand to execute the commands of the magistrates. Their service or attendance was called apparitio. The servants of the military tribunes were also called apparitores.
Term
Legati:
Definition
“Laws”
Term
Princeps Senates: 
Definition
the first member by precedence of the Roman Senate
Term
Collegae:
Definition

colleagues in an official or priestly office


Term
Comitia:
Definition
 a public assembly in ancient Roman for electing officers or passing laws
Term
Comitium: 
Definition

the centre of all political activity in the Roman Republic. The senate met in the Curia, which was a part of the Comitium, and the consuls and other magistrates spoke to the Roman people from the Rostra, the speakers platform. Some of the most ancient monuments of archaic Rome has been found near or under the Comitium, such as the Vulcanal and the Lapis Niger, with the oldest known inscription in the Latin language


Term
Contiones:
Definition
public assemblies
Term
Constitutiones 
Definition
(constitution= legislation enacted). Three forms: decreta (decrees), edicta (edicts), rescripta (replies)
Term
Imperium:
Definition
supreme authority
Term
Curial Julia:
Definition
 the building of the Roman Senate, where the emperors and the senators met to discuss important affairs.
Term
Curia Hostilia:
Definition
the original Senate House of the Roman Republic. It is believed to have been constructed during the reign of Romulus, and rebuilt by Tullus Hostilius. The spot has held earlier buildings hosting a similar function as far back as the Roman Monarchy
Term
Decreta or Senatus Consulta:
Definition

("advice of the senate") is the decision of the senate on a subject brought before it by a magistrate with the power to do so. In ancient times senatus consulta had no legal force, but in Nova Roma they are a form of binding law inferior to leges and decreta pontificum but superior to the edicta of magistrates.


Term
Diribitorium
Definition
This building was located in the Campus Martius south of the Saepta Julia. Here the diribitores (election officials) counted the votes cast by the people in the Saepta Julia (adjacent to the north). It was begun by Agrippa (63-12 B.C.) and finished after his death by Augustus in 7 B.C. Its famous roof, with 100-foot-long beams, burned down in the fire of A.D. 80. By late antiquity, the site seems to have hosted a bath complex.
Term
Fasces: 
Definition

ancient Roman symbol of the regal and later the magisterial authority. The fasces were cylindrical bundles of wooden rods, tied tightly together, from which an axe projected; they were borne by guards, called lictors, before praetors, consuls, proconsuls, dictators, and emperors.


Term
Intercessio:
Definition

 the veto which a magistrate might impose upon a motion carried by another magistrate of equal or lower rank. Only the dictator could not be obstructed by a veto since he had no equal or superior.


Term
Legatus Legionis:
Definition

The overall Legionary commander. This post was generally appointed by the emperor, was a former Tribune and held command for 3 or 4 years, although could serve for a much longer period. In a province with only one legion, the Legatus was also the provincial governor and in provinces with multiple legions, each legion has a Legatus and the provincial governor has overall command of them all.


Term
Leges (sing. Lex)
Definition

Laws


Term
Lictors: 
Definition
Named for the broad striped toga worn by men of senatorial rank. This tribune was appointed by the Emperor or the Senate. Though generally quite young and less experienced than the Tribuni Angusticlavii, he served as second in command of the legion, behind the Legate.
Term
Magister Populi:
Definition

In Rome the original term for the office was probably magister populi (Master of the People [under Arms]) and it was essentially for a special purpose, varying from military command to presiding over elections and religious ceremonies, although the first was the commonest. The holder, unlike all other officials, had no colleague, only a lieutenant known as the ‘Master of the Horse (knights!)’ (magister equitum), and until the 1st century bc was limited to a six-month term, during which his authority (imperium) was superior to that of all others.


Term
Plebiscita (sing. Plebiscitum): 
Definition

A law enacted in ancient Rome by the lower rank of citizens meeting in the assembly called the comitia tributa, under the presidency of a tribune or some other plebeian magistrate; a decree of the plebs. At first these decrees bound only the plebs, but by a law generally assigned to 449 b. c., and confirmed by later legislation (339 and 286 b. c.), their effect was extended to the patricians.


Term
Potestas: 
Definition
a Latin word meaning power or faculty. It is an important concept in Roman law. The idea of potestas originally referred to the power, through force, of a Roman magistrate to promulgate edicts, give action to litigants, etc. This power, in Roman political and legal theory, is considered analogous in kind though lesser in degree to military power. The most important magistrates (such as consuls and praetors) are said to have imperium, which is the ultimate form of potestas, and refers indeed to military power. Potestas strongly contrasts with the power of the Senate and the prudents, a common way to refer to Roman jurists.
Term
Promagistrates: 
Definition

a person who acts in and with the authority and capacity of a magistrate, but without holding a magisterial office. A legal innovation of the Roman Republic, the promagistracy was invented in order to provide Rome with governors of overseas territories instead of having to elect more magistrates each year. Promagistrates were appointed by enates consultum; like all acts of the Roman Senate, these appointments were not entirely legal and could be overruled by the Roman assemblies.


Term
Rostrum:
Definition
an ancient Roman platform for public orators
Term
Saepta Julia: 
Definition
a large building in Rome, built by Augustus, which was originally used as a voting precinct, and later an arena to host gladiatorial and animal battles. It is believed to have been damaged during the great fire of 64, but was immediately restored due to its importance at the time. 
Term
SPQR:
Definition
 Senatus Populusque Romanus (adopted in the Republic in order to show a departure from the monarchy- that both the Senate and the populace of Rome made up the city. This is shown because both plebeians and patricians were able to hold comitia.)
Term
Tabularium: 
Definition

he official records office of ancient Rome, and also housed the offices of many city officials. Situated within the Forum Romanum, it was on the front slope of the Capitoline Hill, below the Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus, to the southeast of the Arx and Tarpeian Rock. Within the building were the remains of the temple of Veiovis.

 

Term
Templum
Definition

 Roman term for a sacred space marked out by the augurs. The templum was rectangular and aligned with the cardinal points. The front of the templum faced west. A building erected on this space could become a sanctuary of the gods or when the pontifex consecrated it. The rostra and curia were not.


Term
Tribunate: 
Definition
An officer of ancient Rome elected by the plebeians to protect their rights from arbitrary acts of the patrician magistrates.
Term
Tribunus Laticlavius:
Definition
 one of the six military tribunes in a legion, and the highest rank of all of them. There is only one in each legion and was always a Roman noble. He would be a man in his early twenties. He might belong to one of the richest families inRome or be a close friend to the commander of the legion. After two or three years in the army he would go back to Rome and be given a government job. If he did well and the emperor was pleased with him he might be given command of a legion later on. This man was one rank below the Legatus Legionis.
Term
Tribunicia Potestas: 
Definition

the power given to the tribunes of the people in the 'Ancient Rome. At the time of 'Roman Empire was conferred, since the time of Augustus, also to all the Roman emperors. The reason for this lay in the allocation sacrosanctitas charge tribunes. In essence, the emperor wanted to ensure the inviolability of his office, besides giving the possibility to legislate fairly freely.


Term
Vigintivirate: 
Definition
 The office of the vigintiviri, a body of officers of government consisting of twenty men; also, the vigintiviri.
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