Commander of the Praetorian Guard Under the empire the praetorians or imperial guards were commanded by one, two, or even three praefects (praefecti praetorio), who were chosen by the emperor from among the
equites and held office at his pleasure. From the time of
Alexander Severus the post was open to senators also, and if an equestrian was appointed he was at the same time raised to the senate. Down to the time of Constantine, who deprived the office of its military character, the prefecture of the guards was regularly held by tried soldiers, often by men who had fought their way up from the ranks. In course of time the command seems to have been enlarged so as to include all the troops in Italy except the corps commanded by the city praefect (
cohortes urbanae). The special position of the praetorians made them a power in their own right in the Roman state, and their
prefect, the
praefectus praetorio, soon became one of the more powerful men in this society. The emperors tried to flatter and control the praetorians, but they staged many
coups d'état and contributed to a rapid rate of turnover in the imperial succession. The praetorians thus came to destabilize the Roman state, contrary to their purpose. The praetorian prefect became a major administrative figure in the later empire, when the post combined in one individual the duties of an imperial chief of staff with direct command over the guard also.
Diocletian greatly reduced the power of these prefects as part of his sweeping reform of the empire's administrative and military structures.
Transformation to administrator : the ivory inkwell and pen case (
theca), the codicil of appointment to the office on a blue cloth-covered table, and the
state carriage. In addition to his military functions, the praetorian prefect came to acquire jurisdiction over criminal affairs, which he exercised not as the delegate but as the representative of the emperor. By the time of Diocletian he had become a kind of grand-vizier as the emperor's vice-regent and 'prime minister.' Constantine removed active military command in 312. The prefect remained as chief quarter-master general responsible for the logistical supply of the army. The prefect was the chief financial officer whose office drew up the global imperial budget. His office drew up the state liturgical obligations laid on the richer inhabitants of the Empire. He ceased to be head of administration which had to be shared with the master of the offices attached to the palace. Constantine in 331 confirmed that from the sentence of the praetorian praefect there should be no appeal. A similar jurisdiction in civil cases was acquired by him not later than the time of
Septimius Severus. Hence a knowledge of law became a qualification for the post, which under
Marcus Aurelius and
Commodus, but especially from the time of Severus, was held by the first jurists of the age, (e.g.
Papinian,
Ulpian,
Paulus) and, under
Justinianus,
John the Cappadocian, while the military qualification fell more and more into the background. The
tetrarchy reform of
Diocletian () multiplied the office: there was a praetorian prefect as chief of staff (military and administrative)—rather than commander of the guard—for each of the two Augusti, but not for the two Caesars. Each praetorian prefect oversaw one of the four quarters created by Diocletian, which became regional
praetorian prefectures for the young sons of Constantine ca 330 A.D. From 395 there were two imperial courts, at
Rome (later
Ravenna) and
Constantinople, but the four prefectures remained as the highest level of administrative division, in charge of several
dioceses (groups of
Roman provinces), each of which was headed by a
Vicarius. Under
Constantine I, the institution of the
magister militum deprived the praetorian prefecture altogether of its military character but left it the highest civil office of the empire.
Post-imperial era With the fall of the western part of the Empire into the hands of warlords, these, in order to have support in their new domains, recognized the supremacy of the emperor of the eastern part, reuniting at least
de iure the Empire under him, the prefectures were maintained as a way of delimiting the new
viceroyalties: • First
Flavius Odoacer and later
Flavius Theodoricus were granted the prefecture of Italy; •
Louis I was recognized as the prefect of Gaul (which served him as a pretext to seize the
Visigoths' territories in Gaul); • the Visigoths were recognized for their dominion over the prefecture of Hispania; • and the
Vandals theirs over Africa. This recognition would be maintained until the rise of
Justinian I, who ended the Ostrogothic and Vandal domains, but continued to recognize the Franks (as they were both Catholics) and the Visigoths (due to the lack of strength to continue the
Recuperatio Imperii, but managing to establish a pro-Byzantine king,
Athanagild, and the conquest of
Spania). == List of known prefects of the Praetorian Guard ==