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Dictator was a political office of the Roman
Republic.
A legal innovation of the Roman Republic, the dictator
(Latin for "one who dictates (orders)") -- also known as the magister populi
("master of the peoples") -- was an extraordinary magistrate (magistratus extraordinarius) whose function was to perform
extraordinary tasks exceeding the authority of any of the ordinary magistrates. The Roman Senate passed a senatus consultum authorizing the consuls to nominate a dictator, who was the sole exception to the Roman legal principles of collegiality (multiple tenants of the same office) and
responsibility (being legally able to be held to answer for actions in office); there could never be more than
one dictator at any one time for any reason, and no dictator could ever be held legally responsible for any action during his
time in office for any reason. The dictator was the highest magistrate in degree of precedence (praetor maximus) and was
attended by 24 lictors.
There were actually several different types of dictatorate. The most famous type is the dictator rei gerendae causa,
who was appointed in times of military emergency for six months or for the duration of the emergency, whichever period was
shorter. This dictator held absolute military and civil power in the State, and was obligated to appoint as his deputy a
master of the horse (magister equitum). When the dictator left office, the office of master of the
horse immediately ceased to exist. Other types of dictators were occasionally appointed for more mundane reasons: comitiorum
habendorum causa (for summoning the comitia for elections), clavi figendi causa (for fixing the clavus
annalis in the temple of Jupiter), feriarum constituendarum causa (for appointing holidays), ludorum
faciendorum causa (for officiating at public games), quaestionibus exercendis (for holding certain trials), and
legendo senatui (for filling vacancies in the Senate).
The best known dictatores rei gerendae causa were Cincinnatus and
Fabius Maximus (during the Second Punic War). Thereafter this form of dictatorate fell into disuse. After the falling out of Gaius Marius and Lucius Cornelius Sulla, the latter marched on Rome and had
himself appointed to an entirely new office, dictator rei publicae
constituendae causa, which was functionally identical to the dictatorate rei gerendae causa except that it lacked
any time limit. Sulla held this office for years before he voluntarily abdicated and retired from public life.
Julius Caesar subsequently resurrected the dictatorate rei
gerendae causa in his first dictatorship, then modified it to a full year term. He was appointed dictator rei gerendae
causa for a full year in 46 BC and then designated for nine consecutive one-year
terms in that office thereafter, functionally becoming dictator for ten years. A year later, this pretense was discarded
altogether and the Senate voted to make him dictator perpetuus (usually rendered in English as "dictator for life", but
properly meaning "perpetual dictator").
After Caesar's murder on the Ides of March, his consular colleague
Marcus Antonius passed a lex Antonia which abolished the
dictatorate and expunged it from the constitutions of the Republic. The office was later offered to Caesar Augustus, who prudently declined it, and opted instead for tribunician
power and consular imperium without holding any office other than
pontifex maximus and princeps senatus -- a politic arrangement which left him as functional dictator without having
to hold the controversial title or office itself.
List of Roman dictators
See also: dictator – decemviri
History - Ancient
History - Ancient Rome – Political institutions of Rome –
Roman dictator
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