been made by hard-pressed Italian party-chiefs to
establish themselves there during the recent crisis
sufficiently proved. Probably it was just this
consideration thatinduced Caesar not to declare the
land formally a province, but to leave the harmless
Lagids there; and certainly for this reason the legions
stationed in Egypt were not entrusted to a man belonging
to the senate or, in other words, to the former government,
but this command was, just like the posts of tax-receivers,
treated as a menial office.(25) In general however
the consideration had weight with Caesar, that the
soldiers of Rome should not, like those of Oriental
kings, be commanded by lackeys. It remained
the rule to entrust the more important governorships
to those who had been consuls, the less important
to those who had been praetors; and once more, instead
of the five years’ interval prescribed by the
law of 702,(26) the commencement of the governorship
probably was in the ancient fashion annexed directly
to the close of the official functions in the city.
On the other hand the distribution of the provinces
among the qualified candidates, which had hitherto
been arranged sometimes by decree of the people or
senate, sometimes by concert among the magistrates
or by lot, passed over to the monarch. And,
as the consuls were frequently induced to abdicate
before the end of the year and to make room for after-elected
consuls (-consules suffecti-); as, moreover, the number
of praetors annually nominated was raised from eight
to sixteen, and the nomination of half of them was
entrusted to the Imperator in the same way as that
of the half of the quaestors; and, lastly, as there
was reserved to the Imperator the right of nominating,
if not titular consuls, at any rate titular praetors
and titular quaestors: Caesar secured a sufficient
number of candidates acceptable to him for filling
up the governorships. Their recall remained
of course left to the discretion of the regent as well
as their nomination; as a rule it was assumed that
the consular governor should not remain more than
two years, nor the praetorian more than one year,
in the province.
In the Administration of the Capital
Lastly, so far as concerns the administration of the
city which was his capital and residence, the Imperator
evidently intended for a time to entrust this also
to magistrates similarly nominated by him. He
revived the old city-lieutenancy of the regal period;(27)
on different occasions he committed during his absence
the administration of the capital to one or more such
lieutenants nominated by him without consulting the
people and for an indefinite period, who united in
themselves the functions of all the administrative
magistrates and possessed even the right of coining
money with their own name, although of course not
with their own effigy In 707 and in the first nine
months of 709 there were, moreover, neither praetors
nor curule aediles nor quaestors; the consuls too