seven years before by the senate itself for clearing
the seas from the pirates. A single general
to be named by the senate from the consulars was to
be appointed, to hold by sea exclusive command over
the whole Mediterranean from the Pillars of Hercules
to the coasts of Pontus and Syria, and to exercise
by land, concurrently with the respective Roman governors,
supreme command over the whole coasts for fifty miles
inland. The office was secured to him for three
years. He was surrounded by a staff, such as
Rome had never seen, of five-and-twenty lieutenants
of senatorial rank, all invested with praetorian insignia
and praetorian powers, and of two under-treasurers
with quaestorian prerogatives, all of them selected
by the exclusive will of the general commanding-in-chief.
He was allowed to raise as many as 120,000 infantry,
5000 cavalry, 500 ships of war, and for this purpose
to dispose absolutely of the means of the provinces
and client-states; moreover, the existing vessels
of war and a considerable number of troops were at
once handed over to him. The treasures of the
state in the capital and in the provinces as well
as those of the dependent communities were to be placed
absolutely at his command, and in spite of the severe
financial distress a sum of; 1,400,000 pounds (144,000,000
sesterces) was at once to be paid to him from the
state-chest.
Effect of the Projects of Law
It is clear that by these projects of law, especially
by that which related to the expedition against the
pirates, the government of the senate was set aside.
Doubtless the ordinary supreme magistrates nominated
by the burgesses were of themselves the proper generals
of the commonwealth, and the extraordinary magistrates
needed, at least according to strict law, confirmation
by the burgesses in order to act as generals; but in
the appointment to particular commands no influence
constitutionally belonged to the community, and it
was only on the proposition of the senate, or at any
rate on that of a magistrate entitled in himself to
hold the office of general, that the comitia had hitherto
now and again interfered in this matter and conferred
such special functions. In this field, ever since
there had existed a Roman free state, the practically
decisive voice pertained to the senate, and this its
prerogative had in the course of time obtained full
recognition. No doubt the democracy had already
assailed it; but even in the most doubtful of the cases
which had hitherto occurred—the transference
of the African command to Gaius Marius in 647(9)—it
was only a magistrate constitutionally entitled to
hold the office of general that was entrusted by the
resolution of the burgesses with a definite expedition.