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  • Sinnigen, William:

    Verlag: Rome : American Academy in Rome., 1957

    Anbieter: Fundus-Online GbR Borkert Schwarz Zerfaß, Berlin, Deutschland

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    Originalhardcover laminated. Zustand: Gut. iii, 123 pages ; (8º). From the library of Prof. Wolfgang Haase, long-time editor of ANRW and the International Journal of the Classical Tradition (IJCT). - very good condition - The Urban Prefecture -- Sources for the Administrative History of the Later Roman Empire -- General Aspects of the Officia of the Later Roman Empire -- Admission to and Promotion within the Officia -- Salaries and Sportulae -- Size of the Officia -- The Princeps Officii and the Agentes in Rebus -- Origin of the Position -- The Princeps and his Administrative Control over the Offici/um -- Matrieula or Rolls -- Matters at Law -- The Princeps as a Police Agent of the Central Administration -- His Relation to the Prefect as illustrated by Symmachus -- Episode of Chrysostom in Constantinople -- Nomenclature of the Princeps as Agens in Rebus at Rome -- Edict concerning Marcianus -- Evidence of Cassio-dorus -- Relation of the Princeps to the Schola Agentum in Rebus and to the Master of the Offices -- Ammianus on Rufinus -- The Domesticus of the Princeps -- The Cornicularius of the Urban Offfcium -- Development of the Position -- Evidence of the Passio Sanctorum IV Coronatorum -- Administrative Functions -- Rank and Privileges -- The Primiscrinius of the Urban Officium -- Nomenclature of the Position -- The Urban Primiscrinius and the Appointment of Executores -- Care of the Matricula -- Commissioning of Agents during Church Strife in 418-19 -- Inscriptional Evidence -- The Primiscrinius and the Financial Administration of the Urban Officium -- Importance of the Regiones Suburbicariae -- Development of Accounting Staffs in other Offices -- The Primiscrinius and the List of the Notitia Dignitatum -- The Primiscrinius and the Management of Public Services -- Accounts of the Wine Treasury -- Accounts of the Suarii -- Identity of the Fiscal and Executive Primiscrinius -- Management of Construction Projects -- Identity of Primiscrinius and Numerarius -- The Promoti Officii and their Duties -- Commentariensis -- Ab Actis -- Cura Epistularum -- Regerendarius -- The Organization of the Urban Officium -- The Literati and the Department Heads of the Officium -- Exceptares and their Organization -- Aides of Department Heads -- Adiutores and Chartularii -- Augustales and Deputati -- Advancement of Department Heads -- The Ministeria Illiterata -- Nomenclatores and Singularii -- The Censuales and the Magister Census. -- The Censuales and the Financial Obligations of the Senatorial Order -- Collalio Glebalis -- Aurum Oblaticium -- Nomination of Praetors -- The Censuales and the Keeping of Records -- Registration of Students -- Recording of Wills -- Censorial Duties of the Censuales -- The Magister Census and the Organization of the Censuales -- Origins of Magister Census -- Relation of the Censuales to the Officium -- Decuriae in the Later Empire -- The Rector Decuriarum in Ostrogothic Italy -- Possible Identifications of the Rector Decuriarum -- The Urban Officium and the Advisers of the Prefect -- Princeps and Cornicularius as Advisers -- Domesticas -- Cancellarius -- Advisers from the Scrinium Libellorum -- The Urban Officium and the Policing of Rome and Constantinople -- The Urban Cohorts and the Vigiles in the Later Empire -- Urbaniciani at Constantinople -- End of the Urban Cohorts under Constantine -- End of the Vigiles -- Municipal Guilds as Firemen at Rome and Constantinople -- Role of the Urban Officium in Keeping Order -- Co-operation of the Curatores Regionum --Riot Control during the Disturbances of 418-19 -- The Urban Officium and the Provincial Oflicia of Italy -- Interpretation of an Edict of 382 -- Financial Background of the Edict -- Appointment of Principes Officii in Campania and Other Provinces-- Imperial Policy and the Appointment of Provincial Principes -- Resume of Evidence -- Weakening of the Urban Prefecture under the Ostrogoths -- Fate of the Urban Officia at Rome and Constantinople - This study deals with the organization and functions of the personnel subordinate to the Urban Prefect, one of the great ministers of the Later Boman Empire. It is primarily a study of urban administration, but it touches also on many offices and institutions other than the Urban Prefecture and its officium. Before introducing the general subject of the urban officium and the sources pertinent to its study, it is necessary to define the period under discussion and to indicate briefly its characteristics. -- For the purpose of this study, the designation " Later Roman Empire " means the period between 284 and 565, from the accession of Diocletian to the death of Justinian. It was Diocletian who reformed the administrative and social structure of the Roman world after the disasters of the third century, and it was Constantine who completed and perfected these reforms. Even after the Empire in the West had fallen, the Germanic rulers of Italy in the late fifth and early sixth zenturies maintained the characteristic features of these later Roman Iministrative institutions, as did the Eastern Emperor, Justinian, in his conquest of parts of the West. The end of his reign in 565 is a ; nvenient stopping point, since shortly thereafter many of the Byzantine conquests in Italy were lost, and threats to the Eastern Empire from other quarters were soon to demand an organization markedly Liferent from the one conceived by the reformers of the late third md earlv fourth centuries. Sprache: Englisch Gewicht in Gramm: 550.