The four tetrarchs based themselves not at Rome but in other cities closer to the frontiers, mainly intended as headquarters for the defence of the empire against bordering rivals (notably
Sassanian Persia) and
barbarians (mainly
Germanic, and an unending sequence of
nomadic or displaced tribes from the
eastern steppes) at the
Rhine and
Danube. These centres are known as the tetrarchic capitals. Although Rome ceased to be an operational capital, Rome continued to be nominal capital of the entire Roman Empire, not reduced to the status of a province but under its own, unique Prefect of the city (
praefectus urbi, later copied in Constantinople). The four tetrarchic capitals were: •
Nicomedia in northwestern Asia Minor (modern İzmit in Turkey), a base for defence against invasion from the Balkans and Persia's Sassanids was the capital of Diocletian, the eastern (and most senior)
augustus; in the final reorganisation by
Constantine the Great, in 318, the equivalent of his domain, facing the most redoubtable foreign enemy, Sassanid Persia, became the
praetorian prefecture Oriens, 'the East', the core of later Byzantium. •
Sirmium (modern Sremska Mitrovica in the Vojvodina region of modern Serbia, and near Belgrade, on the Danube border) was the capital of
Galerius, the eastern
caesar; this was to become the Balkans-Danube prefecture
Illyricum. •
Mediolanum (modern Milan, near the Alps) was the capital of
Maximian, the western
augustus; his domain became "Italia et Africa", with only a short exterior border. •
Augusta Treverorum (modern Trier, in Germany) was the capital of
Constantius, the western
caesar, near the strategic Rhine border; it had been the capital of Gallic emperor
Tetricus I. This quarter became the prefecture
Galliae.
Aquileia, a port on the Adriatic coast, and
Eboracum (modern York, in northern England near the Celtic tribes of modern Scotland and Ireland), were also significant centres for Maximian and Constantius respectively. In terms of regional jurisdiction there was no precise division among the four tetrarchs, and this period did not see the Roman state actually split up into four distinct sub-empires. Each emperor had his zone of influence within the Roman Empire, but little more, mainly high command in a 'war theater'. Each tetrarch was himself often in the field, while delegating most of the administration to the hierarchic bureaucracy headed by his respective praetorian prefect, each supervising several
vicarii, the governors-general in charge of another, lasting new administrative level, the civil
diocese. For a listing of the provinces, now known as
eparchy, within each quarter (known as a
praetorian prefecture), see
Roman province. In the West, the
augustus Maximian controlled the provinces west of the Adriatic Sea and the Syrtis, and within that region his
caesar,
Constantius, controlled
Gaul and
Britain. In the East, the arrangements between the
augustus Diocletian and his
caesar,
Galerius, were much more flexible. The Tetrarchs’ authority is recorded not only on coins and milestones but also on
boundary stones from the Levant, which document local land surveys and village boundaries. ==Public image==