Dictionary Definition
proconsul
Noun
1 an official in a modern colony who has
considerable administrative power
2 a provincial governor of consular rank in the
Roman Republic and Roman Empire
3 an anthropoid ape of the genus Proconsul
User Contributed Dictionary
see Proconsul
English
Noun
- (in ancient Rome) A magistrate who served as a consul and then as the governor of a province
Extensive Definition
Ancient Rome
In the Roman Republic, a proconsul was a promagistrate (like a propraetor) who, after serving as consul, spent a year as a governor of a province. Certain provinces were reserved for proconsuls; who received which one by senatorial appointment was determined by random choosing or negotiation between the two proconsuls.Under the Empire, the
Emperor
derived a good part of his powers (alongside the military imperium and the tribunician
power and presidency of the senate in Rome) from a constitutionally
'exceptional' (but permanent) mandate as the holder of proconsular
authority over all, hence, so-called Imperial
provinces, generally with one or more legions garrisoned (often
each under a specific legate); however, he would appoint legates
and other promagistrates to govern each such province in his name.
The former Consuls (constitutionally still eponymic chief
magistrates of the res publica, but politically powerless) would
still receive a term as proconsul of one of the other, so-called
Senatorial
provinces.
The notitia
dignitatum (a unique early 5th century imperial chancery
document) still mentions three Proconsuls (Propraetors had
completely disappeared), apparently above even the Vicars of the
dioceses in protocol though administratively their subordinates as
all governors; the diocesan vicars in turn were under the four
praetorian
prefects, since Diocletian's Tetrarchy :
- in the eastern empire Asia ([Minor], a western part of Anatolia) and Achaia (i.e. Greece)
- in the western empire only Africa (mainly modern Tunisia).
The many other, often new or split, provinces are
under governors of various other -younger, usually less
prestigious- styles: Comes, Praefectus
Augustalis (unique to Egypt, the emperor's 'pharaonic crown
domain'), Consularis,
Praeses
(provinciae), Corrector
provinciae; these are not to be confused with the also
territorially organised (but overlapping) and strictly military
governors: Comes
militaris, Dux and later Magister
Militum.
Provinces that have been governed by a proconsul
include: Achaea, Africa, Asia (see above for all three), Cilicia, Cyprus,
Gallia
Lugdunensis, Hispania
Tarraconensis, Syria and Palestina.
Modern analogy
In modern speech, a leader appointed by a foreign power during military occupation or colonization is sometimes anachronistically described as a proconsul. An example of the first was Gotara Ogawa during Japan's military occupation of British Burma (1942 - 1945), of the second US general Douglas MacArthur who was referred to as the Proconsul of Japan after World War II. More recently, the Wall Street Journal described the US Civilian Administrator of Iraq as a "modern proconsul".The term has also been used as a disparagement
towards individuals, especially ambassadors, who have attempted to
influence the governments of foreign countries. In one instance,
former Canadian cabinet
minister Lloyd
Axworthy called former United
States ambassador to Canada Paul
Cellucci "the U.S. ambassador-turned-proconsul" in an opinion
piece in the April 29,
2003 Globe and
Mail newspaper. Axworthy's comments were in response to
Cellucci's frequent warnings to the Canadian government on domestic
policy matters (such as the decriminalization of marijuana)
which were often perceived by Canadians as threats, because they
were.
Sources and References
- Notitia dignitatum
- Pauly-Wissowa (in German)
proconsul in Bulgarian: Проконсул
proconsul in Catalan: Procònsol
proconsul in German: Prokonsul
proconsul in Spanish: Procónsul
proconsul in French: Proconsul (Rome)
proconsul in Italian: Proconsole
proconsul in Georgian: პროკონსული
proconsul in Latin: Proconsul
proconsul in Lithuanian: Prokonsulas
proconsul in Dutch: Proconsul
proconsul in Japanese: プロコンスル
proconsul in Polish: Prokonsul
proconsul in Portuguese: Procônsul
proconsul in Russian: Проконсул
proconsul in Slovak: Prokonzul
proconsul in Finnish: Prokonsuli
proconsul in Swedish: Prokonsul
proconsul in Turkish: Prokonsül
proconsul in Chinese: 资深执政官