-
legatus Augusti pro
praetore of
senatorial rank. If the
province was
defended by a
single legion, the
legatus Augusti pro
praetore was also in
direct command...
-
ordinary magistrate in the field. This was
normally pro
consule or pro
praetore, that is, in
place of a
consul or praetor, respectively. This was an expedient...
- A
legatus Augusti pro
praetore (lit. 'envoy of the
emperor –
acting for the praetor') was the
official title of the
governor or
general of some Imperial...
-
system with
prefects and procurators,
legates pro
praetore who were ex-praetors, and
legates pro
praetore who were ex-consuls. The
public provinces' governors...
-
imperial governor (either a
procurator Augusti, or a
legatus Augusti pro
praetore).
Christianity in
Morocco appeared during the
Roman times, when it was...
- 24;
Arrian Epict. 3.7
Gaius Avidius Nigrinus ca. 114
Legatus Augusti pro
praetore FD III 4, no. 290–296; SEG 52.139
Previously governor of Achaia. Publius...
- pro consule. Badian, Ernst; Lintott,
Andrew (2016). "pro consule, pro
praetore".
Oxford classical Dictionary.
Oxford University Press. doi:10...
-
alongside the
former consuls. In addition,
Octavian was
granted imperium pro
praetore 'commanding power'
which legalized his
command of troops,
sending him to...
-
single province under the name Dacia,
governed by a
Legatus Augusti pro
praetore. In 118,
Hadrian reorganised the province,
abandoning some
territory in...
-
nullified by
Roman ****emblies. Initially, a
governor or general's
title – pro
praetore or pro
consule - was
determined by the last held
previous urban magistracy:...