since 487 distributed throughout Italy did not, formally
at least, restrict the consular authority, for in Italy,
just as in Rome, they were regarded simply as auxiliary
magistrates dependent on the consuls. This mode
of administration appears to have been at first extended
also to the territories taken from Carthage, and Sicily
and Sardinia to have been governed for some years by
quaestors under the superintendence of the consuls;
but the Romans must very soon have become practically
convinced that it was indispensable to have superior
magistrates specially appointed for the transmarine
regions. As they had been obliged to abandon
the concentration of the Roman jurisdiction in the
person of the praetor as the community became enlarged,
and to send to the more remote districts deputy judges,(4)
so now (527) the concentration of administrative and
military power in the person of the consuls had to
be abandoned. For each of the new transmarine
regions—viz. Sicily, and Sardinia
with Corsica annexed to it—there was appointed
a special auxiliary consul, who was in rank and title
inferior to the consul and equal to the praetor, but
otherwise was—like the consul in earlier
times before the praetorship was instituted—in
his own sphere of action at once commander-in-chief,
chief magistrate, and supreme judge. The direct
administration of finance alone was withheld from
these new chief magistrates, as from the first it had
been withheld from the consuls;(5) one or more quaestors
were assigned to them, who were in every way indeed
subordinate to them, and were their assistants in
the administration of justice and in command, but yet
had specially to manage the finances and to render
account of their administration to the senate after
having laid down their office.
Organization of the Provinces
-Commercium-
Property
Autonomy
This difference in the supreme administrative power
was the essential distinction between the transmarine
and continental possessions. The principles
on which Rome had organized the dependent lands in
Italy, were in great part transferred also to the
extra-Italian possessions. As a matter of course,
these communities without exception lost independence
in their external relations. As to internal intercourse,
no provincial could thenceforth acquire valid property
in the province out of the bounds of his own community,
or perhaps even conclude a valid marriage. On
the other hand the Roman government allowed, at least
to the Sicilian towns which they had not to fear, a
certain federative organization, and probably even
general Siceliot diets with a harmless right of petition
and complaint.(6) In monetary arrangements it was
not indeed practicable at once to declare the Roman
currency to be the only valid tender in the islands;
but it seems from the first to have obtained legal
circulation, and in like manner, at least as a rule,
the right of coining in precious metals seems to have
been withdrawn from the cities in Roman Sicily.(7)