Lictor

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(New page: The '''''lictor''''', derived from the Latin ''ligare'' (to bind), was a Roman civil servant, with special tasks of attending and guarding magistrates who held imperium. The origin of ...)
 
 
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The '''''lictor''''', derived from the Latin ''ligare'' (to bind), was a Roman civil servant, with special tasks of attending and guarding magistrates who held [[imperium]]. The origin of the tradition of ''lictores'' goes back to the time when Rome was a kingdom, perhaps acquired from their Etruscan neighbours.
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The '''''lictor''''', derived from the Latin ''ligare'' (to bind), was a Roman civil servant, with special tasks of attending and guarding magistrates who held ''[[imperium]]''. The origin of the tradition of ''lictores'' goes back to the time when Rome was a kingdom, perhaps acquired from their Etruscan neighbours.
  
 
The ''lictor'''s main task was to attend as bodyguards to magistrates who held ''imperium''. They carried rods decorated with ''[[fasces]]'' and, outside the ''[[pomerium]]'', with axes that symbolized the power to execute.
 
The ''lictor'''s main task was to attend as bodyguards to magistrates who held ''imperium''. They carried rods decorated with ''[[fasces]]'' and, outside the ''[[pomerium]]'', with axes that symbolized the power to execute.
  
 
[[Category:Law and politics]]
 
[[Category:Law and politics]]

Latest revision as of 17:38, 23 May 2008

The lictor, derived from the Latin ligare (to bind), was a Roman civil servant, with special tasks of attending and guarding magistrates who held imperium. The origin of the tradition of lictores goes back to the time when Rome was a kingdom, perhaps acquired from their Etruscan neighbours.

The lictor's main task was to attend as bodyguards to magistrates who held imperium. They carried rods decorated with fasces and, outside the pomerium, with axes that symbolized the power to execute.

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