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Roman province

Map of the Roman Empire, with the provinces, after 120 AD.

In Ancient Rome, a province (Latin, provincia, pl. provinciae) was the largest territorial and administrative unit of the empire's foreign possessions (those beyond the Italian peninsula). The word province in modern English has its origins in the term used by the Romans.

Provinces were generally governed by politicians of senatorial rank, usually former consuls or former praetors. (A later exception was the province of Egypt, incorporated by Augustus after the death of Cleopatra – it was ruled by a governor of equestrian rank only, perhaps as a discouragement to senatorial ambition).

Under the Roman Republic, the governor of a province was appointed for a period of one year. At the beginning of the year, the provinces were distributed to future governors by lots or direct appointment. Normally, the provinces where more trouble was expected – either from barbaric invasions or internal rebellions – were given to former consuls, men of the greatest prestige and experience. The distribution of the legions across the provinces was also dependent of the amount of danger that they represented. In 14 AD, for instance, the province of Lusitania had no permanent legion but Germania Inferior, where the Rhine frontier was still not pacified, had a garrison of four legions. These problematic provinces were the most desired by future governors. Problems meant war, and war always brought plunder, slaves to sell and opportunities for enrichment.

Sicilia (the island of Sicily) constituted the first Roman province from 241 BC, having been progressively conquered by the Republic during the First Punic War (264 – 241 BC).

The number and size of provinces changed according with internal Roman politics. During the Empire, the biggest or more garrisoned provinces (example Pannonia and Moesia) were subdivided into smaller provinces in order to prevent the situation whereby a sole governor held too much power in his hands, thus discouraging ambition for the Imperial throne itself.

With the formation of the Principate after the civil wars which ended the Roman Republican period, Augustus retained the power to choose governors for the provinces in which he and his successors held supreme military and administrative control. Thus the more strategically critical provinces, generally located along the contested borders of the Empire, became Imperial provinces. The remaining provinces were maintained as Senatorial provinces, in which the Senate had the right to appoint a governor.

Table of contents

List of Roman provinces in 117 AD

  1. Hispania Baetica
  2. Lusitania
  3. Hispania Terraconensis
  4. Gallia Narbonensis (the Roman province)
  5. Gallia Aquitania
  6. Gallia Lugdunensis
  7. Gallia Belgica
  8. Britannia
  9. Germania Inferior
  10. Germania Superior
  11. Raetia
  12. Italia
  13. Sicilia
  14. Corsica et Sardinia
  15. Alpes Poeninae
  16. Alpes Cottiae
  17. Alpes Maritimae
  18. Noricum
  19. Pannonia
  20. Dalmatia
  21. Dacia
  22. Moesia
  23. Thracia
  24. Macedonia
  25. Epirus
  26. Achaea
  27. Asia
  28. Bithynia
  29. Galatia
  30. Lycaonia
  31. Lycia
  32. Pisidia
  33. Pamphylia
  34. Cyprus
  35. Cilicia
  36. Cappadocia
  37. Pontus
  38. Armenia Inferior
  39. Sophene
  40. Osroene
  41. Commagene
  42. Syria
  43. Iudaea
  44. Arabia Petraea
  45. Aegyptus
  46. Cyrenaica
  47. Numidia
  48. Africa
  49. Mauretania
  50. Baleares (province)

List of Roman Provinces in 395 AD

Prefecture of Gaul

Diocese of Britannia

  1. Maxima Caesariensis
  2. Valentia
  3. Britannia Prima
  4. Britannia Secunda
  5. Flavia Caesariensis

Diocese of Gaul

  1. Viennensis
  2. Lugdunensis I
  3. Lugdenensis II
  4. Lugdunensis III
  5. Lugdunensis IV
  6. Germania I
  7. Germania II
  8. Belgica I
  9. Belgica II
  10. Alpes Penniae et Graiae
  11. Maxima Sequanorum

Diocese of Vienne

  1. Viennensis
  2. Alpes Maritimae
  3. Aquitanica I
  4. Aquitanica II
  5. Novempopulana
  6. Narbonnensis I
  7. Narbonnensis II

Diocese of Hispania

  1. Baetica
  2. Lusitania
  3. Gallaecia
  4. Tarraconensis
  5. Carthaginiensis
  6. Mauretania Tingitana or Hispania Nova
  7. Baleares

Prefecture of Italy

Diocese of Italy

  1. Venetia and Istria
  2. Aemilia
  3. Liguria
  4. Flaminia and Picenum Annonarium
  5. Alpes Cottiae
  6. Raetia I
  7. Raetia II

Diocese of Rome

  1. Campania
  2. Tuscania et Umbria
  3. Picenum Suburbicarium
  4. Sicilia
  5. Apulia et Calabria
  6. Bruttia et Lucania
  7. Samnium
  8. Sardinia
  9. Corsica
  10. Valeria

Diocese of Africa

  1. Africa Proconsularis
  2. Byzacena
  3. Numidia
  4. Tripolitania
  5. Mauretania Sitifensis
  6. Mauretania Caesariensis

Prefecture of Illyricum

Diocese of Dacia

  1. Dacia mediterranea
  2. Moesia I
  3. Praevalitana
  4. Dardania
  5. Dacia ripensis

Diocese of Macedonia

  1. Macedonia
  2. Creta
  3. Thessalia
  4. Epirus vetus
  5. Epirus nova
  6. Macedonia Salutaris
  7. Achaea

Prefecture of the East

Diocese of Thracia

  1. Europe
  2. Thracia
  3. Haemimontium
  4. Rhodope
  5. Moesia II
  6. Scythia

Diocese of Asia

  1. Pamphylia
  2. Caria
  3. Lydia
  4. Lycia
  5. Lycaonia
  6. Pisidia
  7. Phrygia Pacatiana
  8. Phrygia Salutaria
  9. Asia
  • Hellespontus

Diocese of Pontus

  1. Bithynia
  2. Galatia
  3. Paphlagonia
  4. Honorias
  5. Galatia Salutaris
  6. Cappadocia I
  7. Cappadocia II
  8. Helenopontus
  9. Pontus Polemoniacus
  10. Armenia I
  11. Armenia II

Diocese of the East

  1. Palestine I
  2. Palestine II
  3. Palestine Salutaris
  4. Cilicia I
  5. Cilicia II
  6. Syria
  7. Syria Salutaris
  8. Cyprus
  9. Phoenicia
  10. Phoenicia Libani
  11. Eufratensis
  12. Osrhoene
  13. Mesopotamia
  14. Isauria
  15. Arabia

Diocese of Aegyptus

  1. Libya Superior
  2. Libya Inferior
  3. Thebais
  4. Aegyptus
  5. Arcadia
  6. Augustamnica

External link

http://www.livius.org/gi-gr/governor/provinces.html







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