[2037] p. 395. For procurators ad bona damnatorum see Wilmanns 1278, 1291. For a procurator a caducis, C.I.L. iii. n. 1622.
[2038] Wilmanns 1257, 1272, 1273, 1275, 1285.
[2039] p. 396.
[2040] Timesitheus, the father-in-law of Gordian, was proc. tam patrimoni quam rat. privatar. in one district, proc. ration. privat. in another (Wilmanns 1293).
[2041] Herodian vii. 1 (Maximin) τήν τε θεραπείαν πᾶσαν, ἣ συγγεγόνει τῷ Ἀλεξάνδρῳ τοσούτων ἐτῶν, τῆς βασιλείου αὐλῆς ἀπέπεμψε: cf. Vita Pert. 12 “Sane nullum ex eis, quos Commodus rebus gerendis imposuerat, mutavit, exspectans urbis natalem, quod eum diem rerum principium volebat esse.”
[2042] Liebenam op. cit. p. 55.
[2043] Vita Nigri 7 “cum unus ad memoriam, alter ad libellos paruisset, statim praefecti facti sunt (Paulus et Ulpianus).”
[2044] This may be illustrated by the careers of Burrus (proc. Augustae, proc. Ti. Caesaris, proc. divi Claudii, praefecto praetori, C.I.L. xii. 5842), of Vibianus Tertullus (ab epistulis Graecis, proc. a rationibus, praefectus vigilum, C.I.L. iii. 6574) and of Sex. Var. Marcellus (proc. aquarum, proc. Brittaniae, proc. rationis privatae, vice-praefectus praetorio, Orelli 946).
[2045] Tac. Ann. xv. 35 (under Nero, in A.D. 64, Torquatus Silanus was forced to death on various grounds) “quin eum inter libertos habere, quos ab epistulis et libellis et rationibus appellet, nomina summae curae et meditamenta”; cf. ib. xvi. 8 (A.D. 65) “Ipsum dehinc Silanum increpuit isdem quibus patruum ejus Torquatum, tanquam disponeret jam imperii curas praeficeretque rationibus et libellis et epistulis libertos.”
[2046] Dio Cass. lii. 33; Stat. Silv. v. 1, esp. 83-107; Justinus xliii. 5, 12; Suid. s.v. Διονύσιος.