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04-29-2004, 11:50 AM | #11 | |
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04-29-2004, 12:20 PM | #12 | |
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04-29-2004, 12:57 PM | #13 | ||
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"What evidence is there for the easy interchange of these terms? Meier notes [Meie.MarJ, 100] that in a "backwater province" like Judea, there was probably not much difference between the two roles. This assertion is backed up by literary evidence. Philo and Josephus were not consistent in the usage of the terms either: Josephus calls Pilate a "procurator" in Antiquities 18.5.6, the story about Pilate bringing images into Jerusalem. (It has not been suggested, but we may wonder if, in a backwater like Judea, Pilate may have held both titles!)....(For what it is worth, the Secular Web's Richard Carrier has now stated: "It seems evident from all the source material available that the post was always a prefecture, and also a procuratorship. Pilate was almost certainly holding both posts simultaneously, a practice that was likely established from the start when Judaea was annexed in 6 A.D. And since it is more insulting (to an elitist like Tacitus and his readers) to be a procurator, and even more insulting to be executed by one, it is likely Tacitus chose that office out of his well-known sense of malicious wit. Tacitus was also a routine employer of variatio, deliberately seeking nonstandard ways of saying things (it is one of several markers of Tacitean style). So there is nothing unusual about his choice here." ....The second reason for this use of terminology may be deliberate anachronizing on Tacitus' part. Kraus and Woodman [KrWoo.LHn, 111] note that Tacitus often uses "archaizing, rare, or obsolete vocabulary" and also "avoids, varies, or 'misuses' technical terms." They do not cite the prefect/procurator issue specifically, but it is worth asking, in light of this comment, if the usage might not have been simply part of Tacitus' normal practice. (In fact, Harris [Harr.GosP5, 349] does indeed suggest a conscious [or unconscious] anachronizing.)" http://www.tektonics.org/tekton_01_01_01_TC.html So once again, we are faced with ambiguity. Quote:
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04-29-2004, 01:12 PM | #14 | ||||
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If you look through Tacitus's works he seems to use these terms appropriately. Don't you think your sources should give specific examples where they think he got it wrong in order to be taken seriously? Quote:
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I'll have another question for you when you deal reasonably with the Pilate's position properly and you stop relying on potted answers. spin |
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04-29-2004, 01:44 PM | #15 | |||
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04-29-2004, 07:52 PM | #16 | |||
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The distinction is fairly clear: praefectus civitatium was a lower position than procurator, at least in the early principate, which is what interests us. Augustus needed this position to be able to use senators in the administration of provinces, so a produrator had senatorial rank, whereas a praefectus civitatium was only an equites. A praefectura was a subdivision of a province. The procurator controlled the province. Sometimes praefecturae were turned into provinces: that's what happened with Judaea in 41 CE. (Later the position of procurator seemed to lose its importance somewhat.) Quote:
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