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- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire abstract "The Constitution of the Late Roman Empire was an unwritten set of guidelines and principles passed down mainly through precedent. The constitution of the Roman Principate (the early Roman Empire), which was established by the emperor Augustus in the 1st century BC, had governed the "Roman Empire" for three centuries. Diocletian became emperor in 284, and his reign marked the end of the Principate and the beginning of the "Dominate" (from Latin dominus: "Lord" or "Master"). The constitution of the Dominate ultimately recognized monarchy as the true source of power, and thus ended the fiction of shared power between the "Roman Emperor" and the "Roman Senate".After Diocletian had reorganized the superstructure of the constitution, he then reorganized the administrative apparatus of the government. When Diocletian abdicated the throne in 305, the Empire quickly descended back into chaos. After the chaos had subsided, however, much of Diocletian's constitution remained in effect. His division of the Empire into west and east, with each half under the command of a separate emperor, remained with brief interruptions of political unity. The capital of the Western Empire was never returned to Rome, the Senate and executive magistrates continued to function as Diocletian's constitution had originally specified, and Diocletian's civil and military divisions of the empire remained in effect. Later emperors, especially Constantine the Great, and Justinian modified Diocletian's constitution.".
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire thumbnail Istanbul_-_Museo_archeol._-_Diocleziano_(284-305_d.C.)_-_Foto_G._Dall'Orto_28-5-2006.jpg?width=300.
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire wikiPageExternalLink montesquieu_romans.htm.
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire wikiPageExternalLink ?option=com_staticxt&staticfile=show.php%3Ftitle=546&chapter=83299&layout=html&Itemid=27.
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire wikiPageExternalLink polybius6.html.
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire wikiPageExternalLink 30harris.html?_r=1&oref=slogin.
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire wikiPageExternalLink romancon.html.
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire wikiPageID "17033125".
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire wikiPageRevisionID "578270928".
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire col "* Curia * Roman consul * Praetor * Roman censor * Quaestor * Aedile".
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire col "* Princeps senatus * Interrex * Promagistrate * Acta Senatus".
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire col "* Roman Dictator * Master of the Horse * Roman Senate * Cursus honorum * Byzantine Senate * Pontifex Maximus".
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire col "* Roman Kingdom * Roman Republic * Roman Empire * Roman Law * Plebeian Council * Centuria".
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire hasPhotoCollection Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire.
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire subject Category:Constitutions_of_Ancient_Rome.
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire subject Category:History_of_the_Roman_Empire.
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire type Abstraction100002137.
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire type Communication100033020.
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire type ConstitutionsOfAncientRome.
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire type Document106470073.
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire type FundamentalLaw106533648.
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire type Law106532330.
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire type LegalDocument106479665.
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire type Writing106362953.
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire type WrittenCommunication106349220.
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire comment "The Constitution of the Late Roman Empire was an unwritten set of guidelines and principles passed down mainly through precedent. The constitution of the Roman Principate (the early Roman Empire), which was established by the emperor Augustus in the 1st century BC, had governed the "Roman Empire" for three centuries. Diocletian became emperor in 284, and his reign marked the end of the Principate and the beginning of the "Dominate" (from Latin dominus: "Lord" or "Master").".
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire label "Constitución del Dominado (Roma)".
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire label "Constitution of the Late Roman Empire".
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire sameAs Constitución_del_Dominado_(Roma).
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire sameAs m.04166v0.
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire sameAs Q5164254.
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire sameAs Q5164254.
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire sameAs Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire.
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire wasDerivedFrom Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire?oldid=578270928.
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire depiction Istanbul_-_Museo_archeol._-_Diocleziano_(284-305_d.C.)_-_Foto_G._Dall'Orto_28-5-2006.jpg.
- Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire isPrimaryTopicOf Constitution_of_the_Late_Roman_Empire.