Abstract

In the third century, a series of crises led to extraordinary military appointments (duces, correctores), which sidelined the authority of the civil governor. Diocletian's separation of the two forms of service — armata et inermis, civil and military - solidified under Constantine into a provincial administrative structure which disassociated civil and military authority. This separation lost its force after the middle of the fourth century, in favour of the military powers which encroached upon the powers of the civil governor. The history of the relationship between the two authorities is by no means as straightforward as it is commonly represented. Moreover, even when the separation of powers was in force, it did not entail a complete divide between the two authorities, which were led to co-operate in a variety of situations. The appointment of the Comes Aegypti under Theodosius created in the military sphere a rank equivalent to the 'vicariate' of the Augustalis, further extending the equivalence betw...

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