Type of public official in Ancient Rome.
1 The other six commanded the armies and discharged the duties previously assigned to the quæstors and ædiles.
2 After they have served as quæstors and ædiles, or tribunes, let them be prætors, when they have attained their thirtieth birthday.
3 As before, the consuls obstructed the law, the tribunes the trial of Volscius: but in the new quæstors there was greater power and greater influence.
4 And a certain prætor, as the senate was then in session and none of the quæstors was present, also read an epistle once composed by
5 And it was our responsibility to turn him in to the quaestors .
6 The finances of the provinces were intrusted to one or more QUAESTORS .
7 The temple of quaestors , and from the former they derived their name.
8 Every governor of a province had one or more quaestors under him.
9 Certainly however there were, already before Sulla's time, more than eight quaestors .
10 How many quaestors had been hitherto chosen annually, is not known.
11 The elections for Quaestors were held in the Comitia Tribúta.
12 Former consuls, tribunes and quaestors rubbed shoulders with ordinary politicians.
13 And that eventually the quaestors caught him and killed him.
14 The quaestors also were the paymasters of the army.
15 Vacancies were to be supplied as before from the retiring consuls, praetors, aediles, and quaestors .
16 The municipal funds were managed by two quaestors .
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