Type of public official in Ancient Rome.
1 He soon after held the important offices of tribune, quæstor , and edile.
2 The latter was at once appointed quæstor and the former ædile.
3 Then Maria snatched up a pen, and subscribed it with the name: Fabius Cunctator, quæstor of Volhynia.
4 Before their resolves had transpired, a quæstor and some tribunes were commissioned to take his devoted life.
5 In 421, the plebeians made further progress, for the office of quæstor (paymaster) was opened to them, and they thus became eligible to the senate.
6 And it was our responsibility to turn him in to the quaestors .
7 The energetic measures which the new Quaestor took fully met the emergency.
8 As quaestor , I looked into the matter perhaps more closely than anyone.
9 The finances of the provinces were intrusted to one or more QUAESTORS .
10 He was made quaestor , which gave him a place in the Senate.
11 The temple of quaestors , and from the former they derived their name.
12 The stone bridge was built many years afterwards, when Aemilius was Quaestor .
13 Every governor of a province had one or more quaestors under him.
14 Certainly however there were, already before Sulla's time, more than eight quaestors .
15 The Quaestor glared at the men to make sure they understood.
16 All these were weighed and reckoned to the quaestor , Caius Flaminius.
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