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A Roman province (Latin, provincia) was the largest territorial and administrative unit of the
Roman Empire's foreign possessions (beyond the Italian peninsula). (The word province in modern English therefore has its origins in the term employed 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.
List of Roman provinces in 117 AD
List of Roman Provinces in 395 AD
Prefecture of Gaul
Diocese of Britannia
- Maxima
Caesariensis
- Valentia
- Britannia I
- Britannia II
- Flavia
Caesariensis
Diocese of Gaul
- Viennensis
- Lugdunensis I
- Lugdenensis II
- Lugdunensis III
- Lugdunensis IV
- Germania I
- Germania II
- Belgica I
- Belgica II
- Alpes
Penniae et Graiae
- Maxima
Sequanorum
Diocese of Vienne
- Viennensis
- Alpes Maritimae
- Aquitanica I
- Aquitanica II
- Novempopulana
- Narbonnensis I
- Narbonnensis II
Diocese of Spain
- Baetica
- Lusitania
- Gallaecia
- Tarraconensis
- Carthaginiensis
- Mauretania
Tingitana
- Baleares
Prefecture of Italy
Diocese of Italy
- Venetia and
Istria
- Aemilia
- Liguria
- Flaminia and Picenum Annonarium
- Alpes Cottiae
- Raetia I
- Raetia II
Diocese of Rome
- Campania
- Tuscania et
Umbria
- Picenum
Suburbicarium
- Sicilia
- Apulia et
Calabria
- Bruttia et
Lucania
- Samnium
- Sardinia
- Corsica
- Valeria
Diocese of Pannonia
- Pannonia I
- Pannonia II
- Savia
- Dalmatia
- Noricum ripense
- Valeria ripensis
Diocese of Africa
- Africa
- Byzacium
- Numidia
- Tripolitania
- Mauretania
Sitifensis
- Mauretania
Caesariensis
Prefecture of Illyricum
Diocese of Dacia
- Moesia I
- Praevalitana
- Dardania
- Dacia ripensis
Diocese of Macedonia
- Macedonia
- Crete
- Thessaly
- Epirus vetus
- Epirus nova
- Macedonia
Salutaris
- Achaea
Prefecture of the East
Diocese of Thracia
- Europe
- Thracia
- Haemimontium
- Rhodope
- Moesia II
- Scythia
Diocese of Asia
- Pamphylia
- Caria
- Lydia
- Lycia
- Lycaonia
- Pisidia
- Phrygia
Pacatiana
- Phrygia
Salutaria
- Asia
Diocese of Pontus
- Bithynia
- Galatia
- Paphlagonia
- Honorias
- Galatia
Salutaris
- Cappadocia I
- Cappadocia II
- Helenopontus
- Pontus
Polemoniacus
- Armenia I
- Armenia II
Diocese of the East
- Palestine I
- Palestine II
- Palestine
Salutaris
- Cilicia I
- Cilicia II
- Syria
- Syria Salutaris
- Cyprus
- Phoenicia
- Phoenicia Libani
- Eufratensis
- Osrhoene
- Mesopotamia
- Isauria
- Arabia
Diocese of Aegyptus
- Libya Superior
- Libya Inferior
- Thebais
- Aegyptus
- Arcadia
- Augustamnica
External link
- http://www.livius.org/gi-gr/governor/provinces.html
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