Rome When the first
Roman Emperor,
Augustus (), transformed the
Roman Republic into the
Roman Empire in 27 BC, he reformed the office of Prefect at the suggestion of his minister and friend
Maecenas. Again elevated into a
magistracy, Augustus granted the
praefectus urbi all the powers needed to maintain order within the city. The office's powers also extended beyond Rome itself to the ports of
Ostia and the
Portus, as well as a zone of one hundred
Roman miles (c. 140 km) around the city. Acting as a quasi-
mayor of Rome, the Prefect was the superintendent of all guilds and corporations (
collegia), held the responsibility (via the
praefectus annonae) of the city's
provision with grain from overseas, the oversight of the officials responsible for the drainage of the
Tiber and the maintenance of the city's
sewers and water supply system, as well as its monuments. To enable the Prefect to exercise his authority, the
cohortes urbanae, Rome's
police force, and the nightwatchmen (
vigiles) under their prefect (
praefectus vigilum), were placed under his command. The Prefect also had the duty of publishing the laws promulgated by the Emperor, and as such acquired a legal jurisdiction. In such a capacity,
Quintus Aurelius Symmachus played a prominent role in the controversy over the
Altar of Victory in the late 4th century. The urban prefecture survived the
fall of the Western Roman Empire, and remained active under the
Ostrogothic Kingdom and well after the
Byzantine reconquest. The last mention of the Roman urban prefect occurs as late as 879. In the late 350s,
Constantius II (337–361) expanded the city's
Senate and set it as equal to that of Rome. Correspondingly, on 11 September or 11 December 359, Constantinople was also granted an urban prefect, commonly called in English the
Eparch from his Greek title (,
ho eparchos tēs poleōs). As such, the office possessed great prestige and extensive authority, and was one of the few high state offices which could not be occupied by a
eunuch. Hence, the prefect's nomination had to be formally ratified by the Senate, and unlike the other senior administrative positions of the state (
praetorian prefects and
diocesan vicars) with their military connotations, the office's ancient and purely civilian origins were emphasized by the prefect's wearing of the
toga as a ceremonial garb. The prefect was solely responsible for the administration of the city of Constantinople and its immediate area. His tasks were manifold, ranging from the maintenance of order to the regulation and supervision of all guilds, corporations and public institutions. The city police, the (
taxiōtai), came under the prefect's authority, and the city jail was located at the basement of his official residence, the
praetorium, located before the
Forum of Constantine. As with the Prefect of Rome, the night watch came under a subordinate prefect, the (
nykteparchos, "night prefect"). In the middle Byzantine period (7th–12th centuries), the prefect was regarded as the supreme judge in the capital, after the emperor himself. His role in the economical life of the city was also of principal importance. The 10th-century
Book of the Prefect stipulates the various rules for the various guilds that fell under the prefect's authority. The prefect was also responsible for the appointment of the teachers to the
University of Constantinople, and for the distribution of the grain dole to the city. According to the late 9th-century
Klētorologion, his two principal aides were the
symponos and the
logothetēs tou praitōriou. In addition, there were the heads (,
geitoniarchai, the old
curatores regionum) and judges (
kritai) of the city's districts (Latin
regiones, in Greek ,
regeōnai), the
parathalassitēs (παραθαλασσίτης), an official responsible for the capital's seashore and ports, as well as their tolls, and several inspectors (
epoptai), the heads of the guilds (
exarchoi) and the
boullōtai, whose function was to check and append the seal of the eparch on weights and scales as well as merchandise. The office continued until the early 13th century with its functions and authority relatively intact, After the reconquest of the city by the Byzantines, however, the office of the Eparch was replaced throughout the
Palaiologan period (1261–1453) by several
kephalatikeuontes (sing.
kephalatikeuōn, κεφαλατικεύων, "headsman"), who each oversaw a district in the now much less populous capital. ==Prefect Agrippa of the "Acts of Peter"==