, minted by
Coson, depicting a consul and two lictors A lictor's main role was to bodyguard the imperium-possessing magistrate to which they were assigned. They also carried the magistrate's
fasces which symbolised that magistrate's imperium. The
fasces also served to intimidate a crowd since they contained all the necessary equipment to administer corporal and capital punishment. Stories going back to the
origin of the republic attest to magistrates ordering their lictors to serve as executioners; their role in a magistrate's imposition of official punishment seems to have continued through to late antiquity. The lictors followed or preceded the magistrate wherever he went, including the
Forum, his house, temples, and the baths. Lictors were organized in an ordered line before him, with the
primus lictor () directly in front of him, waiting for orders. If there was a crowd, the lictors opened the way and kept their master safe, pushing all aside except for Roman matrons, who were accorded special honor. They also had to stand beside the magistrate whenever he addressed the crowd. Magistrates could only dispense with their lictors if they were visiting a free city or addressing a higher status magistrate. Lictors also had legal and penal duties; they could, at their master's command, arrest Roman citizens and punish them. A
Vestal Virgin was accorded a lictor when her presence was required at a public ceremony. The degree of
magistrate's
imperium was symbolised by the number of lictors escorting him: •
Dictator: 24 lictors •
Emperor: originally 12 lictors, after Domitian, 24 lictors •
Rex and
Consul: 12 lictors •
Magister equitum: 6 lictors •
Praetor: 6 lictors, 2 within the
pomerium •
Curule aediles: 2 lictors •
Quaestor: no lictors in the city of Rome, but quaestors were permitted to have fasces in the provinces. During the late republic and the Principate,
proconsuls and
propraetors were assigned the same number of lictors as their urban counterparts. Proconsular governors, therefore, also had twelve lictors. However, the
legati Augusti pro praetore were assigned only five. Lictors assigned to magistrates were organized into a corporation composed of several
decuries; during the
late Republic, the decuries sometimes lent lictors to
private citizens holding
ludi publici () and traveling
senators. However, these lictors probably did not carry fasces. Lictors were also associated with
comitia curiata, as in its later form, the thirty curiae were represented by a single lictor each. ==
Lictor curiatus==