22 years after the assassination of Caesar, at the beginning of 27 BC, Octavian, nephew, adopted son and political heir of Julius Caesar, was endowed by the Senate with an imperium (power to command the legions of Rome) that he did not need to deposit every time he went to Rome, which made him the true leader of the Roman armies. In addition to the many civil powers that are attributed to him, Octavian thus manages, without resorting to dictatorship, to obtain what Caesar could not obtain withou
- Retour sur le dernier cours
1. Les pouvoirs romains
La Potestas
Collégialité
Magistratures non cumulables
La puissance tribunicienne
L'Imperium
2. L'Auctoritas
Honneurs et titres honorifiques, le Sénat
Honneurs religieux, Pontifex Maximus
3. Usage d'Octave Auguste de la Potestas et de l'Auctoritas