Imperium originally meant
absolute or kingly power—the word being derived from the Latin verb
imperare (to command)—which became somewhat limited under the Republic by the collegiality of the republican magistrates and the right of appeal, or
provocatio, on the part of citizens.
Imperium remained absolute in the army, and the power of the
imperator (army commander) to punish remained uncurtailed. The title
imperator later was exclusively held by the emperor, as the commander of the armed forces. In fact, the Latin word
imperator is the root of the English word
emperor. In ancient Rome,
imperium could be used as a term indicating a characteristic of people, their wealth in property, or the measure of formal power they had. This qualification could be used in a rather loose context (for example, poets used it, not necessarily writing about state officials). However, in Roman society, it was also a more formal concept of
legal authority. A man with
imperium (an
imperator) had, in principle, absolute authority to apply the law within the scope of his
magistracy or
promagistracy. He could be
vetoed or overruled either by a magistrate or promagistrate who was a colleague with equal power (e.g., a fellow
consul), by one whose
imperium outranked his – that is, one of
imperium maius (greater
imperium), or by a
tribune of the plebs. Some modern
scholars such as
A. H. M. Jones have defined
imperium as "the power vested by the state in a person to do what he considers to be in the best interests of the state".
Imperium was indicated in two prominent ways: a
curule magistrate or promagistrate carried an ivory baton surmounted by an eagle as his personal symbol of office; any such magistrate was also escorted by
lictors bearing the
fasces (traditional symbols of
imperium and authority), when outside the
pomerium, axes being added to the
fasces to indicate an imperial magistrate's power to inflict capital punishment outside Rome (the axes being removed within the
pomerium). The number of lictors in
attendance upon a magistrate was an overt indication of the degree of
imperium. When in the field, a
curule magistrate possessing an
imperium greater or equal to that of a
praetor wore a sash ritually knotted on the front of his
cuirass. Furthermore, any man executing
imperium within his sphere of influence was entitled to the
curule chair. • Curule
aedile (
aedilis curulis) – 2 lictors • Since a plebeian aedile (aedilis plebis) was not vested with imperium, he was not escorted by lictors. •
Magister equitum (the
dictator's deputy) – 6 lictors •
Praetor – 6 lictors (2 lictors within the pomerium) •
Consul – 12 lictors each •
Dictator – 24 lictors outside the pomerium and 12 inside; starting from the dictatorship of
Lucius Sulla the latter rule was ignored. • To symbolize that the dictator could enact capital punishment within Rome as well as without, his lictors did not remove the axes from their fasces within the pomerium. As can be seen, dictatorial
imperium was superior to consular, consular to praetorian, and praetorian to aedilician; there is some historical dispute as to whether or not praetorian
imperium was superior to "equine-magisterial"
imperium. A
promagistrate, or a man executing a
curule office without actually holding that office, also possessed
imperium in the same degree as the actual incumbents (i.e., proconsular
imperium being more or less equal to consular
imperium, propraetorian
imperium to praetorian) and was attended by an equal number of
lictors. Certain extraordinary
commissions, such as
Pompey's famous command against the
pirates, were invested with
imperium maius, meaning they outranked all other holders of
imperium of the same type or rank (in Pompey's case, even the consuls) within their sphere of command (his being "ultimate on the seas, and within 50 miles inland").
Imperium maius later became a hallmark of the
Roman emperor. Another technical use of the term in
Roman law was for the power to extend the
law beyond its mere interpretation, extending
imperium from formal legislators under the ever-republican constitution: popular assemblies, senate, magistrates, emperor and their delegates to the
jurisprudence of
jurisconsults. == Later Roman Empire ==