Roman provinces were usually ruled by high-ranking officials. Less important provinces though were entrusted to prefects, military men who would otherwise only govern parts of larger provinces. The most famous example is
Pontius Pilate, who governed
Judaea at a time when it was administered as an annex of
Syria. As Egypt was a special imperial domain, a rich and strategic granary, where the Emperor enjoyed an almost
pharaonic position unlike any other province or diocese, its head was styled uniquely
Praefectus Augustalis, indicating that he governed in the personal name of the emperor, the "Augustus".
Septimius Severus, after conquering
Mesopotamia, introduced the same system there too. After the mid-1st century, as a result of the
Pax Romana, the governorship was gradually shifted from the military prefects to civilian fiscal officials called
procurators, Egypt remaining the exception. ==Religious prefects==