[2197] See the inscription of Narbonne in Rushforth Latin Historical Inscriptions n. 35. In this case the Flaminica was the wife of the Flamen, as at Rome; but this was usually not the case in the municipal towns. See Marquardt Staatsverw. i. p. 174.
[2198] Mommsen Staatsr. iii p. 455.
[2199] This was the usual type, but there were local variations, and the relation of sevir to Augustalis was not always the same. In Cisalpine Gaul we have seviri et Augustales, where the ex-sevir retains his title. In southern Italy Augustalis is used for sevir. See Mourlot op. cit. pp. 69-72; Rushforth op. cit. p. 64.
[2200] For a “templum et monumentum” in honour of the governor see Cic. ad Q. fr. 1, 1, 9, 26. A temple to Roma was erected by Smyrna as early as 195 B.C. (Tac. Ann. iv. 56).
[2201] Tac. Ann. xiv. 31 “templum divo Claudio constitutum quasi arx aeternae dominationis aspiciebatur.”
[2202] Imperial rescripts to concilia or κοινά are frequent See Dig. 47, 14, 1; 49, 1, 1; 48, 6, 5, 1. Cf. 1, 16, 4, 5.
[2203] Plin. Ep. iii. 4, 2. Where, as in this passage, the legati of a province are represented as making a complaint, they doubtless represent the concilium. In A.D. 62 a senatus consultum was passed “ne quis ad concilium sociorum referret agendas apud senatum pro praetoribus prove consulibus grates” (Tac. Ann. xv. 22).
[2204] Cod. 5, 27, 1 (A.D. 336).