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Lex Provinciae and Governor’s Edict
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 May 2015
Extract
The administrative framework of a newly annexed Roman province is generally taken to conform to a regular and predictable pattern. The conquering general, with the help of ten commissioners sent from Rome, laid down a basic lex for the new territory; the edict of each successive governor confirmed or modified details of administrative and legal business.
But Roman conquests were often haphazard affairs. A procedure as schematic as this is not, in fact, warranted by our evidence: lex and edict not only resembled each other much more closely, but (as will be argued in this paper) can often be regarded as essentially the same type of ordinance. Their relationship in turn reveals considerable flexibility in Roman provincial rule.
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References
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7 App. Iber. 99.428.
8 Cic. II Verr. ii 13.32, 16.39–40.
9 Str. xiv 1.38 / C646.
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21 Livy xxxiv 21.7; Plut. Cato Mai. 11.4.
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25 App. Lib. 135.639.
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28 Local courts: II Verr. ii 15.37–16.39, 37.90 (the key provision: ‘ut cives [Siculi] inter sese legibus suis agerent’). Corn (vadimonium): iii 40.92. Local statutes: ii 50.125 (cf. the ‘leges Scipionis’, 123).
29 Marshall, A.J.JRS 58 (1968), 105.Google Scholar E.g. II Verr. ii 13.32, 15.37, 16.39.
30 As is clear from the references in II Verr., above all iii 6.14–15; also ii 13.32, 26.63 etc.
31 Cf. II Verr. ii 16.40 ‘imperatorie … auctoritas, legatorum decern … dignitas, senatus consultum … quo consulto P. Rupilius de decem legatorum sententia leges in Sicilia constituerai’; cf. iii 15. 38 ‘iura Siculorum quae habent a senatu populoque Romano’. The latter phrase does not mean a formal comitial lex validated Rupilius’ settlement: other evidence is against it, as will appear. The individual provisions of a lex provinciae might be spoken of as separate ‘leges’: cf. II Verr. ii 13.32, 16.40; Livy Per. 100; Plut. Marc. 23.7 (“νόμους”).
32 It is clearly a regular formula: cf. Cic. II Verr. ii 13.32, 16. 39–40, 37.90; Ps.-Ascon. p. 212 (= p. 264 Stangl); Livy xxx 43.4, 44.14; xlv 17.1.
33 ‘Ex P. Rupili decreto quod is de decem legatorum sententia statuii, quam illi [i.e. the Sicilians] legem Rupiliam vocant’ (ii 13.32).
34 Cf. Badian, E.Athenaeum 34 (1956), 116,Google Scholar with n. 4 ‘the lex provinciae itself was (or could be) only an edict reinforced by auctoritas’.
35 II Verr. ii 16.40.
36 Cf. ibid, ‘tu ausus es pro nihilo prae tua praeda tot res sanctissimas ducere?’
37 Ibid. 39.
38 Fam. xiii 48.
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41 Att. vi 1.15 (shackleton Bailey's text, 1968)
42 Ibid, (‘ut Graeci inter sese disceptent suis legibus … li se αύτονομίαν adeptos putant’); vi 2.4.
43 II Verr. i 43.112.
44 Ibid. 117–8.
45 Plin Ep. x 112, 114; above, n. 17.
46 II Verr. ii 37.90.
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49 Att. vi 1.15.
50 Fam. xiii 48.
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52 Marshall, A.J. ‘Cicero’s letter to Cyprus’, Phoenix 28 (1964), 209–10,Google Scholar thinks that Cilicia’s and Cyprus’ lex cannot have contained judicial clauses; but cf. previous note and the discussion below (in text); also n. 48.
53 App. Iber. 43.179, 44.180–2 (Gracchus), 50.214 (Marcellus).
54 Livy Per. 55; App. Iber. 75.321; Str. iii 1.6 / C139; Diod. xxxiii 1. 4; Steph. Byz. S.V. Βρουτοδρία.
55 Livy. Per. 41; Festus p. 86 L; App. Iber. 43.179. He may also have refounded lliturgi in Ulterior (by the upper Baetis river): see Blanco, A. and Lachica, C.Archivo esp. de Arqueol. 33 (1960), 193–6,Google Scholar for an inscription honouring him as deductor.
56 CIL ii 5041 = ILS 15.
57 The Senate had remitted some of the elder Gracchus’ terms, between 179 and 154 (App. lber. 44.183) and was reluctant to ratify Marcellus’ (49.208-10; Polyb. xxxv 3.4–9). It rejected the terms made by Mancinus with Numantia (App. 80.349; Broughton, , MRR, Vol. 1, p. 484).Google Scholar In 102 a governor established a town for his Celtiberian auxiliaries (App. 100.433). In Sicily it was ‘ex senatus consulto’ that Greek coloni had been added to Agrigentum by a governor (Cic. II Verr. ii 50.123; cf. above, at n. 17).
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