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Proconsul

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Ancient Rome

The many other, often new or split, provinces are under governors of various other -younger, usually less prestigious- styles : Comes, Praefectus Augustalis (unique to Egypt, the emperor's 'pharaonic crown domain'), Consularis, Praeses (provinciae), Corrector provinciae; these are not to be confused with the also territorially organised (but overlapping) and strictly military governors: Comes militaris, Dux, and later Magister Militum.

Provinces that have been governed by a proconsul include: Achaea, Africa, Asia (see above for all three), Cilicia, Cyprus, Gallia Lugdunensis, Hispania Tarraconensis, Syria, and Palestina (the promotion from the procuratorate of Christ's day, absurdly contrary to administrative logic and tradition, was meant as an extraordinary honour for the 'Holy Land' after Christianity became the new state religion).

Modern analogy

In modern speech, a leader appointed by a foreign power during military occupation or colonization is sometimes anachronistically described as a proconsul. An example of the first was Gotara Ogawa during Japan's military occupation of British Burma (1942 - 1945), of the second US general Douglas MacArthur who was referred to as the Proconsul of Japan after World War II.

For example, the Wall Street Journal described the US Civilian Administrator of Iraq as a "modern proconsul".

Sources and References

 


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