Province

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PROVINCE.—This word, of unknown derivation, originally meant simply ‘a sphere of (magisterial) duty,’ and was applied, for example, to the duty of the prætor urbanus, who was never permitted to leave Rome. With the extension of the Roman Empire, and the consequently much increased number of spheres of duty outside Rome and Italy, the word came gradually to have a territorial application also. It is in this derived sense that the word is taken here. It was part of the Roman policy throughout to be in no unnecessary hurry to acquire territory and the responsibility connected with it, and it was not till the year b.c. 227—hundreds of years after the foundation of the Roman State—that the first province was taken over. In that year Sardinia and Corsica became one province, Western Sicily another, and each, after the details of government had been settled by special commissioners, was put under an additional prætor elected for the purpose. Behind this step, as behind the annexation of most Roman provinces, there lay long years of warfare. Province after province was annexed, until in the time of Christ the Romans were in possession of the whole of Europe (except the British Isles, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Germany, and Russia), all Asia Minor, Syria, Egypt, and the north-west of Africa. Most of this vast territory had been acquired during the Republic, but certain portions had not been annexed till the time of the first Emperor, Augustus. During the Republic the governors of these provinces were appointed by the Roman senate from among their own number, generally after a period of service as prætor or consul, as the case might be. They were unpaid, and had heavy expenses to bear. Few resisted the temptation to recoup themselves at the expense of the long-suffering provincials, and the vast sums acquired by an extortionate governor in his one year’s governorship may be estimated from the fact that Cicero, a just and honest man, acquired £18,000 during his tenure of the province Cilicia.
During the Empire the provinces were treated according to a notable settlement made between the Senate and the Emperor Augustus on January 1, b.c. 27. On that day it was arranged that those provinces which were peaceful and did not require the presence of an army should be under the control of the senate, who would appoint their governors; while the disturbed provinces that did require the presence of an army were to be under the Emperor himself, who was generalissimo of all the forces of the State. At the same time the Emperor retained financial interests even in senatorial provinces. The following thus became senatorial (or public) provinces: Asia (i.e. roughly the western third of Asia Minor), Africa (i.e. practically Tunis), Gallia Narbonensis, Hispania Bætica, Achaia, Cyprus, Creta et Cyrenaica, Macedonia, Sicilia, Bithynia, Illyricum, Sardinia et Corsica. The first two were senatorial provinces of the first rank, and were governed each by an ex-consul with the title of proconsul, and three legati under him. The others were senatorial provinces of the second rank, and were governed each by an exprætor, also with the title proconsul. All the rest of the Roman world outside Italy, namely, three-fourths of the whole, was made up of Imperial provinces, including the following: Egypt (where the Emperors, as successors of the Ptolemys, ruled as kings), Judæa, Syria-Cilicia-Phœnice, Galatia (established b.c. 25), Thracia, Pamphylia (established b.c. 25), Galliæ tres (Aquitania, Lugudunensis, Belgica), Britannia (established a.d. 43). Every new province naturally came under the Emperor’s authority. He governed his more important provinces (e.g. Syria, Galatia) through a legatus pro prætore in each—a man of consular or prætorian rank, who was paid a fixed salary in and after the time of Tiberius—and his less important provinces through a procurator (e.g. Judæa) or præfectus (e.g. Egypt). The period of senatorial governorships was one year, that of Imperial indefinite. Each province was governed according to a definite statute, which determined the administrative procedure and defined the privileges of individual cities in it. The inhabitants were disarmed and taxed. The oppressive and unjust rule of the Republic was exchanged for a much better during the Empire; and the provinces, at least during the first three centuries of our era, were prosperous and contented.
A. Souter.
Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible
Edited by James Hastings, D.D. Published in 1909


(See PROCURATOR; PROCONSUL, for the distinction of imperial and senatorial provinces under Rome, accurately observed in New Testament.) Ahab's "young men of the princes of the province" are probably young warriors of Gileadite chiefs recognizing his supremacy, but distinct from "the children of Israel" (1Ki_20:14-15; 1Ki_20:19). Provinces existed under Solomon in his wide empire (Ecc_2:8; Ecc_5:8). Under the Persian king were 127, each having its own system of finance and its treasurer (Est_1:1; Est_8:9; Ezr_2:1; Ezr_2:4; Ezr_5:7; Ezr_6:6; Ezr_7:22; Ezr_7:24; Herodotus iii. 89). The satrapies were only 20. The Jews had their "governor" (tirsbatha'), of their own race (Ezr_2:63; Neh_5:14; Neh_8:9), subject to the "satrap" (pathath) of the provinces W. of Euphrates.
Fausset's Bible Dictionary
By Andrew Robert Fausset, co-Author of Jamieson, Fausset and Brown's 1888.


Province.
1. In the Old Testament, this word appears in connection with the wars between Ahab and Ben-hadad. 1Ki_20:14-15; 1Ki_20:19. The victory of the former is gained chiefly, "by the young," probably men of the princes of the provinces the chiefs: of tribes in the Gilead country.
2. More commonly, the word is used of the divisions of the Chaldean kingdom. Dan_2:49; Dan_3:1; Dan_3:30, and the Persian kingdom. Ezr_2:1; Neh_7:6; Est_1:1; Est_1:22; Est_2:3; etc. In the New Testament, we are brought into contact with the administration of the provinces of the Roman empire. The classification of provinces supposed to need military control, and therefore, placed under the immediate government of the Caesar, and those still belonging, theoretically, to the republic, and administered by the senate, and of the latter, again, into proconsular and praetorian, is recognized, more or less distinctly, in the Gospels and the Acts. See Proconsul; Procurator.
The strategoi of Act_16:22, ("magistrates", Authorized Version), on the other hand, were the duumviri or praetors of a Roman colony. The right of any Roman citizen to appeal, from a provincial governor, to the emperor meets us as asserted by St. Paul. Act_25:11. In the council of Act_25:12, we recognize the assessors, who were appointed to take part in the judicial functions of the governor.
Smith's Bible Dictionary
By Dr. William Smith.Published in 1863


prov?ins (מדינה, medhı̄nāh, ?jurisdiction?; ἐπαρχία, eparchı́a (English Versions of the Bible, province) (Act_23:34; Act_25:1)):
1. Meaning of the Term
2. Roman Provincial Administration
(1) First Period
(2) Second Period
(3) Third Period
3. Division of Provinces
4. Province of Judea
5. Revenue
LITERATURE

1. Meaning of the Term:
Province (provincia) did not originally denote a territorial circumscription in Roman usage, since the employment of the word was much more ancient than any of the conquests of the Romans outside of Italy. In the most comprehensive official sense it signified a magistrate's sphere of administrative action, which in one instance might be the direction of jurisdiction at Rome, in another the management of military operations against a particular hostile community. When the imperium was conferred upon two consuls at the beginning of the Republic, and upon a praetor in 367 BC, and finally upon a second praetor in 241 BC, it became necessary in practice to define their individual competence which was unlimited in theory. When the Romans extended their control over lands situated outside of Italy, it became expedient to fix territorial limits to the exercise of authority by the magistrates who were regularly sent abroad, so that provincia signified henceforth in an abstract sense the rule of the governor, and in a concrete sense the specified region entrusted to his care; and with the development and consolidation of the Roman system of administration, the geographical meaning of the word became more and more significant.

2. Roman Provincial Administration:
The history of Roman provincial administration in the more definite sense commences in 227 BC, when four praetors were elected for the first time, of whom two were assigned to the government of the provinces. Three periods may be distinguished in the history of the system of provincial administration: (1) from 227 BC to Sulla, (2) from Sulla to Augustus, and (3) the Empire.

(1) First Period.
During the first period, provision was made for the government of the provinces by means of special praetors, or, in exceptional circumstances, by consuls, during their term of office. Accordingly, the number of praetors was increased from four in 227 BC to eight at the time of Sulla.

(2) Second Period.
In accordance with the reforms of Sulla all the consuls and praetors remained at Rome during their year of office, and were entrusted with the administration of provinces a subsequent year with the title proconsul (pro consule) or propraetor (pro praetore). The proconsuls were sent to the more important provinces. The senate determined the distinction between consular and praetorian provinces and generally controlled the assignment of the provinces to the ex-magistrates. Julius Caesar increased the praetors to sixteen, but Augustus reduced them to twelve.

(3) Third Period.
In 27 BC, Augustus as commander-in-chief of the Roman army definitely assumed the administration of all provinces which required the presence of military forces and left the other provinces to the control of the senate. There were then twelve imperial and ten senatorial provinces, but all provinces added after 27 BC came under imperial administration. The emperor administered his provinces through the agency of personal delegates, legati Augusti of senatorial, and praefecti or procuratores of equestrian, rank. The term of their service was not uniform, but continued usually for more than a single year. The senatorial administration was essentially a continuation of the post-Sullan, republican regime. The senatorial governors were called proconsuls generally, whether they were of consular or praetorian rank; but Africa and Asia alone were reserved for exconsuls, the eight remaining senatorial provinces being attributed to ex-praetors. The financial administration of each imperial province was entrusted to a procurator, that of each senatorial province to a quaestor.

3. Division of Provinces:
The provinces were divided into smaller circumscriptions (civitates) for the purposes of local government. In the older provinces these districts corresponded generally with the urban communities which had been the units of sovereignty before the advent of the Romans. Under Roman rule they were divided into different classes on the basis of their dignity and prerogatives, as follows:

(1) Coloniae:
Roman or Latin colonies established after the model of the Italian commonwealths.

(2) Civitates Foederatae:
Communities whose independence had been guaranteed by a formal treaty with Rome.

(3) Civitates Liberae:
Communities whose independence the Romans respected, although not bound to do so by a formal obligation.

(4) Civitates Stipendiariae:
Communities which had surrendered to the discretion of the Romans and to which limited powers of local government were granted by the conquerors as a matter of convenience.
The civitates stipendiariae, and in some cases the colonies, paid taxes to the Roman government, the greater part of which was in the form either of a certain proportion of the annual products of the soil, such as a fifth or tenth, or a fixed annual payment in money or kind.

4. Province of Judea:
Judaea became a part of the province of Syria in 63 BC, but was assigned in 40 BC as a kingdom to Herod the Great, whose sovereignty became effective three years later. The provincial regime was reestablished in 6 AD, and was broken only during the years 41-44 AD, when Herod Agrippa was granted royal authority over the land (Josephus, Josephus, Antiquities XIX, viii, 2). The Roman administration was in the hands of the procurators (see PROCURATORS) who resided at Caesarea (Josephus, BJ, II, xv, 6; Act_23:23, Act_23:33; Act_25:1) in the palace of Herod the Great (Acts 23 through 35). The procurators of Judea were subject to the authority of the imperial governors of Syria, as is evident from the deposition of Pontius Pilate by Vitellius (Josephus, Ant., XVIII, iv, 2; Tacitus, Annals vi. 32). The procurator was competent to exercise criminal jurisdiction over the provincials in cases involving a capital sentence (Josephus, BJ, II, viii, 1), but he was bound to grant an appeal by Roman citizens for trial at Rome (Act_25:11). A death sentence by the Sanhedrin required the sanction of the procurator, as appears in the process against the Saviour. Under Roman rule cities like Caesarea, Sebaste, and Jerusalem became organs for local government, like the urban communities in other parts of the Empire.

5. Revenue:
The revenue of Palestine under Claudius is said to have been 12,000,000 denarii (about $2,400,000, or 500,000 British pounds (in 1915); compare Josephus, Ant. XIX, viii, 2). In addition to the ground tax, the amount of which is not known, a variety of indirect contributions were collected on auctions, salt, highways, bridges, etc., which constituted, no doubt, the field of activity in which the publicans gained their unenviable reputation.

Literature.
The reader may be directed to Marquardt, Romische Staatsverwaltung, I, 497-502, 517-57, for a general discussion of the Roman system of provincial administration, and to the same volume, pp. 405-12, for the provincial government of Palestine.

International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
PRINTER 1915.


Province
properly an outlying portion of an extended empire, such as the Persian or Roman. It is not intended here to do more than indicate the points of contact which this word presents with Biblical history and literature.
1. (מְדַינָה, medinah; Sept. χώρα; Vulg. provincia.) In the Old Test. this term first appears in connection with the wars between Ahab and Ben- hadad (1Ki_20:14-15; 1Ki_20:19). The victory of the former was gained chiefly “by the young men of the princes of the provinces,” i.e. probably of the chiefs of tribes in the Gilead country, recognising the supremacy of Ahab, and having a common interest with the Israelites in resisting the attacks of Syria. They are specially distinguished in 1Ki_20:15 from “the children of Israel.” Not the hosts of Ahab. but the younglest warriors (“armor-bearers,” Keil, ad loc.) of the land of Jephthah and Elijah, fighting with a fearless faith, were to carry off the glory of the battle (comp. Ewald, Gesch. 3, 492).
More commonly the word is used of the divisions of the Chaldaean (Dan_2:49; Dan_3:1; Dan_3:30) and the Persian kingdom (Ezr_2:1; Neh_7:6; Est_1:1; Est_1:22; Est_2:3, etc.). The occurrence of the word in Ecc_2:8; Ecc_5:8, has been noted as an indication of the later date now frequently ascribed to that book. The facts as to the administration of the Persian provinces which come within our view in these passages are chiefly these: Each province had its own governor, who communicated more or less regularly with the central authority for instructions (Ezra 4, 5). Thus Tatnai, governor of the provinces on the right bank of the Euphrates, applied to Darius to know how he was to act as to the conflicting claims of the Apharsachites and the Jews (Ezra 5). Each province had its own system of finance, subject to the king's direction (Herodotus 3, 89). The “treasurer” was ordered to spend a given amount upon the Israelites (Ezr_7:22), and to exempt them from all taxes (Ezr_7:24). SEE TAX.
The total number of the provinces is given at 127 (Est_1:1; Est_8:9). Through the whole extent of the kingdom there was carried something like a postal system. The king's couriers (βιβλιόφοροι, the ἄγγαροι of Herod. 8:98) conveyed his letters or decrees (Est_1:22; Est_3:13). From all provinces concubines were collected for his harem (Est_2:3). Horses, mules, or dromedaries were employed on this service (Est_8:10). (Comp. Herod. 8:98; Xenoph. Cyrop. 8:6; Heeren's Persians, ch. 2.) The word is used, it must be remembered, of the smaller sections of a satrapy rather than of the satrapy itself. While the provinces are 127, the satrapies are only 20 (Herod. iii, 89). The Jews who returned from Babylon are described as “children of the province” (Ezr_2:1; Neh_7:6), and had a separate governor [SEE TIRSHATHA] of their own race (Ezr_2:63; Neh_5:14; Neh_8:9); while they were subject to the satrap (פִּחִת) of the whole province west of the Euphrates (Ezr_5:7; Ezr_6:6).
2. (Ε᾿παρχία) In the New Test. we are brought into contact with the administration of the provinces of the Roman empire. The classification given by Strabo (17, p. 840) of provinces (ἐπαρχίαι) supposed to need military control, and therefore placed under the immediate government of the Caesar, and those still belonging theoretically to the republic, and administered by the senate, and of the latter again into proconsular (ὑπατικαί) and praetorian (στρατηγικαί), is recognised, more or less distinctly, in the Gospels and the Acts. SEE PROCURATOR.
Cyrenius (Quirinus) was the ἡγεμών of Syria (Luk_2:2), the word being in this case used for prteses or proconsul. Pilate was the ἡγεμών of the sub- province of Judsea (Luk_3:1; Mat_27:2, etc.), as procurator with the power of a legatus; and the same title is given to his successors, Felix and Festus (Act_23:24; Act_25:1; Act_26:30). The governors of the senatorial provinces of Cyprus, Achaia, and Asia, on the other hand, are rightly described as ἀνθύπατοι, proconsuls (Act_13:7; Act_18:12; Act_19:38). In the two former cases the province had been originally an imperial one, but had been transferred-Cyprus by Augustus (Dio Cass. liv, 4), Achaia by Claudius (Sueton. Claud. 25)-to the senate. The στρατηγοί of Act_16:22 (A.V. “magistrates”), on the other hand, were the duumviri, or praetors, of a Roman colony. The duty of the legati and other provincial governors to report special cases to the emperor is recognised in Act_25:26, and furnished the groundwork for the spurious Acta Pilati. SEE PILATE.
The right of any Roman citizen to appeal from a provincial governor to the emperor meets us as asserted by Paul (Act_25:11). In the council (συμβούλιον) of Act_25:12 we recognise the assessors who were appointed to take part in the judicial functions of the governor. The authority of the legatus, proconsul, or procurator, extended, it need hardly be said, to capital punishment (subject, in the case of Roman citizens, to the right of appeal), and, in most cases, the power of inflicting it belonged to him exclusively. It was necessary for the Sanhedrim to gain Pilate's consent to the execution of our Lord (Joh_18:31). The strict letter of the law forbade governors of provinces to take their wives with them, but the cases of Pilate's wife (Mat_27:19) and Drusilla (Act_24:24) show that it had fallen into disuse. Tacitus (Ann. 3, 33, 34) records an unsuccessful attempt to revive the old practice. SEE PROCONSUL.
PROVINCE is, in ecclesiastical language, the jurisdiction of an archbishop. SEE DIOCESE.

CYCLOPEDIA OF BIBLICAL, THEOLOGICAL AND ECCLESIASTICAL
press 1895.





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