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attendant of magistrates

  • 1 limocinctus

    līmŏcinctus, i, m. [3. limus-cingo, girt with an apron], a kind of public attendant on magistrates, Inscr. Orell. 3219.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > limocinctus

  • 2 קומיס

    קוֹמֵיסm. (comes) attendant of magistrates, esp. Comes, a member of the imperial cabinet (v. Sm. Ant. s. v.). Y.Ber.IX, 13d העמידו ק׳ על תיסבריות שלו (not קומוס) he made him superintendent of his treasures (Comes largitionum privatarum); Cant. R. to II, 5 קומסין תסברין (corr. acc.); Y.Snh.XI, 30b bot. ק׳ תיסוורין על בית המקדש chief treasurer of the Temple (Comes largitionum sacrarum). Ex. R. s. 37 עשה … למשה ק׳וכ׳ the Lord made Moses superintendent of the palace (Comes palatii) (ref. to Num. 12:7; cmp. קומיטיטון). Num. R. s. 15, v. סְרַדְיוֹט; Tanḥ. Bhaʿăl., ed. Bub. 20 קומוס (corr. acc.). Koh. R. to IX, 11 אתמול עביד ק׳ קלטורוכ׳ yesterday he (Moses) was made Comes Calator (officer arranging the kings receptions) in Pharaohs palace, and to-day‘call him that he may eat bread (Ex. 2:20); Yalk. ib. 989 קמסקלתור (corr. acc.). Lev. R. s. 5, v. איספיסריאון; Yalk. Is. 291 קומוס ואיפרכום בירושלם. Lev. R. s. 28 (read:) מאן דעביד ק׳ פריבטון … ק׳ קלטורוכ׳ he who used to appoint the Comes Privatarum (v. supra), he who used to appoint the Comes Calator, v. מָגִיסְטֵיר; Esth. R. to VI, 10 דומין פנטוןוכ׳ (corr. acc.); Pesik. R. s. 18 מיעביד קומספנטון קומסקרטור (corr. acc.). Esth. R. to I, 12, v. אִסְטַבְלָאטָא; a. e.Pl. (comites) קוֹמִיטִין. Sabb.145b (read:) הגמון וק׳ ובעלי זמורה (ed. וקמטון ובעל, Rashi וקומטון, Ms. M. וקומטרי; v. Rabb. D. S. a. l. note) a general with his Comites and Centuriones.

    Jewish literature > קומיס

  • 3 קוֹמֵיס

    קוֹמֵיסm. (comes) attendant of magistrates, esp. Comes, a member of the imperial cabinet (v. Sm. Ant. s. v.). Y.Ber.IX, 13d העמידו ק׳ על תיסבריות שלו (not קומוס) he made him superintendent of his treasures (Comes largitionum privatarum); Cant. R. to II, 5 קומסין תסברין (corr. acc.); Y.Snh.XI, 30b bot. ק׳ תיסוורין על בית המקדש chief treasurer of the Temple (Comes largitionum sacrarum). Ex. R. s. 37 עשה … למשה ק׳וכ׳ the Lord made Moses superintendent of the palace (Comes palatii) (ref. to Num. 12:7; cmp. קומיטיטון). Num. R. s. 15, v. סְרַדְיוֹט; Tanḥ. Bhaʿăl., ed. Bub. 20 קומוס (corr. acc.). Koh. R. to IX, 11 אתמול עביד ק׳ קלטורוכ׳ yesterday he (Moses) was made Comes Calator (officer arranging the kings receptions) in Pharaohs palace, and to-day‘call him that he may eat bread (Ex. 2:20); Yalk. ib. 989 קמסקלתור (corr. acc.). Lev. R. s. 5, v. איספיסריאון; Yalk. Is. 291 קומוס ואיפרכום בירושלם. Lev. R. s. 28 (read:) מאן דעביד ק׳ פריבטון … ק׳ קלטורוכ׳ he who used to appoint the Comes Privatarum (v. supra), he who used to appoint the Comes Calator, v. מָגִיסְטֵיר; Esth. R. to VI, 10 דומין פנטוןוכ׳ (corr. acc.); Pesik. R. s. 18 מיעביד קומספנטון קומסקרטור (corr. acc.). Esth. R. to I, 12, v. אִסְטַבְלָאטָא; a. e.Pl. (comites) קוֹמִיטִין. Sabb.145b (read:) הגמון וק׳ ובעלי זמורה (ed. וקמטון ובעל, Rashi וקומטון, Ms. M. וקומטרי; v. Rabb. D. S. a. l. note) a general with his Comites and Centuriones.

    Jewish literature > קוֹמֵיס

  • 4 accenseo

    ac-censĕo ( ŭi), nsum, 2, v. a., to reckon to or among, to add to; as a verb. finit. very rare:

    numine sub dominae lateo atque accenseor illi,

    i. e. I am her companion, Ov. M. 15, 546; and: accensi, qui his accensebantur, id est attribuebantur, Non. 520, 7.—But hence in frequent use, ac-census, a, um, P. a., reckoned among, or subst. accensus, i., m.
    A.
    One who attends another of higher rank, an attendant, follower; hence, a state officer who attended one of the highest magistrates (consul, proconsul, praetor, etc.) at Rome or in the provinces, for the purpose of summoning parties to court, maintaining order and quiet during its sessions, and proclaiming the hours; an apparitor, attendant, orderly (on account of this office, Varr. 6, § 89 Müll., would derive the word from accieo), Varr. ap. Non. 59, 2 sq.; Cic. Q. Fr. 1, 1, 4 and 7; id. Att. 4, 16; Liv. 45, 29, 2; Suet. Caes. 20 al.—The person to whom one is accensus is annexed in dat. or gen.:

    qui tum accensus Neroni fuit,

    Cic. Verr. 2, 1, 28:

    libertus, accensus Gabinii,

    id. Att. 4, 16, 12. The Decurions and Centurions also [p. 16] had their accensi as aids, Varr. L. L. 7, § 58 Müll.;

    also at funerals, as leader of the procession,

    Cic. Leg. 2, 24, 61. Cf. on the accensi, Necker's Antiq. 2, 2, p. 375 sq.—
    B.
    accensi, a kind of reserve troops who followed the army as supernumeraries (= ascripticii, or, in later times, supernumerarii), to take the place of those who fell in battle. They had no arms, and were only clothed with the military cloak, and hence called velati: quia vestiti et inermes sequuntur exercitum, Paul. ex Fest. p. 369 Müll.; they used in battle only slings and stones. They were also employed in constructing public roads. Cf. Mommsen, Degli Accensi Velati, in Annali del. Inst. vol. xxi. (1849), p. 209 sq.; and Necker's Antiq. 3, 2, p. 242 sq.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > accenseo

  • 5 accensi

    ac-censĕo ( ŭi), nsum, 2, v. a., to reckon to or among, to add to; as a verb. finit. very rare:

    numine sub dominae lateo atque accenseor illi,

    i. e. I am her companion, Ov. M. 15, 546; and: accensi, qui his accensebantur, id est attribuebantur, Non. 520, 7.—But hence in frequent use, ac-census, a, um, P. a., reckoned among, or subst. accensus, i., m.
    A.
    One who attends another of higher rank, an attendant, follower; hence, a state officer who attended one of the highest magistrates (consul, proconsul, praetor, etc.) at Rome or in the provinces, for the purpose of summoning parties to court, maintaining order and quiet during its sessions, and proclaiming the hours; an apparitor, attendant, orderly (on account of this office, Varr. 6, § 89 Müll., would derive the word from accieo), Varr. ap. Non. 59, 2 sq.; Cic. Q. Fr. 1, 1, 4 and 7; id. Att. 4, 16; Liv. 45, 29, 2; Suet. Caes. 20 al.—The person to whom one is accensus is annexed in dat. or gen.:

    qui tum accensus Neroni fuit,

    Cic. Verr. 2, 1, 28:

    libertus, accensus Gabinii,

    id. Att. 4, 16, 12. The Decurions and Centurions also [p. 16] had their accensi as aids, Varr. L. L. 7, § 58 Müll.;

    also at funerals, as leader of the procession,

    Cic. Leg. 2, 24, 61. Cf. on the accensi, Necker's Antiq. 2, 2, p. 375 sq.—
    B.
    accensi, a kind of reserve troops who followed the army as supernumeraries (= ascripticii, or, in later times, supernumerarii), to take the place of those who fell in battle. They had no arms, and were only clothed with the military cloak, and hence called velati: quia vestiti et inermes sequuntur exercitum, Paul. ex Fest. p. 369 Müll.; they used in battle only slings and stones. They were also employed in constructing public roads. Cf. Mommsen, Degli Accensi Velati, in Annali del. Inst. vol. xxi. (1849), p. 209 sq.; and Necker's Antiq. 3, 2, p. 242 sq.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > accensi

  • 6 lictor

    lictor (pronounced līctor, Gell. 12, 3, 4), ōris, m. [1. ligo; cf. Gell. 12, 3, 1 sqq.], a lictor, i. e. an attendant granted to a magistrate, as a sign of official dignity. The Romans adopted this custom from the Etrurians:

    Romulus cum cetero habitu se augustiorem tum maxime lictoribus duodecim sumptis (a finitima Etruria) fecit,

    Liv. 1, 8. The lictors bore a bundle of rods, from which an axe projected. Their duty was to walk before the magistrate in a line, one after the other; to call out to the people to make way (submovere turbam);

    and to remind them of paying their respects to him (animadvertere, v. h. v.). The foremost one was called primus lictor: apud quem primus quievit lictor,

    Cic. Q. Fr. 1, 1, 7, § 21;

    the last and nearest to the consul, proximus lictor,

    Liv. 24, 44 fin. The lictors had also to execute sentences of judgment, to bind criminals to a stake, to scourge them, and to behead them, Liv. 1, 26; 8, 7; 38;

    26, 16.—It was necessary that lictors should be freeborn: not till the time of Tacitus were freedmen also appointed to the office. They were united into a company, and formed the decuriae apparitorum (public servants). In Rome they wore the toga, in the field the sagum, in triumphal processions a purple mantle and fasces wreathed with laurel: togulae lictoribus ad portam praesto fuerunt, quibus illi acceptis, sagula rejecerunt et catervam imperatori suo novam praebuerunt,

    Cic. Pis. 23, 55. Only those magistrates who had potestatem cum imperio had lictors. In the earliest times the king had twelve; immediately after the expulsion of the kings, each of the two consuls had twelve;

    but it was soon decreed that the consuls should be preceded for a month alternately by twelve lictors,

    Liv. 2, 1;

    a regulation which appears to have been afterwards, although not always, observed,

    Liv. 22, 41;

    Cæsar was the first who restored the old custom,

    Suet. Caes. 20.—The decemvirs had, in their first year of office, twelve lictors each one day alternately, Liv. 3, 33;

    in their second year each had twelve lictors to himself,

    id. 3, 36.—

    The military tribunes with consular power had also twelve lictors,

    Liv. 4, 7;

    and likewise the interrex,

    id. 1, 17.—The dictator had twenty-four, Dio, 54, 1; Polyb. 3, 87; Plut. Fab. 4;

    the magister equitum only six, Dio, 42, 27. The praetor urbanus had, in the earlier times, two lictors,

    Censor. de Die Natal. 24: at enim unum a praetura tua, Epidice, abest. Ep. Quidnam? Th. Scies. Lictores duo, duo viminei fasces virgarum, Plaut. Ep. 1, 1, 26; in the provinces he had six;

    but in the later times the praetor had in the city, as well as in the province, six lictors, Polyb. 3, 40: cum praetor lictorem impellat et ire praecipitem jubeat,

    Juv. 3, 128. The quaestor had lictors only in the province, when he, in consequence of the praetor's absence or death, performed the functions of propraetor, Sall. C. 19; Cic. Planc. 41, 98. Moreover, the flamen dialis, the vestals, and the magistri vicorum had lictors;

    these, however, appear to have had no fasces, which was also the case with the thirty lictores curiati (who summoned the curiae to vote),

    Cic. Agr. 2, 12, 81; Gell. 15, 27, 2; Inscr. Grut. 33, 4; 630, 9.—
    II.
    Transf.:

    lictorem feminae in publico unionem esse,

    a lady's mark of distinction, Plin. 9, 35, 56, § 114.

    Lewis & Short latin dictionary > lictor

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