A
procurator Augusti (often called the
Praesidial Procurator, i.e., a garrison- or troop-commanding procurator), however, might also be the governor of the smaller
imperial provinces (i.e., those provinces whose governor was appointed by the emperor, rather than the
Roman Senate). The same title was held by the fiscal procurators, who assisted governors of the
senatorial provinces, who were always senators. In addition, procurator was the title given to various other officials in
Rome and Italy. After the mid-first century, as a result of the
Pax Romana, the provinces previously governed by
prefects, who were military men, were gradually moved into the hands of procurators, who were essentially civilian fiscal officials. Egypt, as the special private domain of the emperor, which was administered by a
Praefectus Augustalis, remained the exception. This transfer created some confusion among scholars dealing with
Pontius Pilate, governor of
Judaea, who was often thought to have been a procurator, until the excavation of the inscribed so-called
Pilate Stone, which proved his title was prefect. == See also ==