Notitia Dignitatum
Destination
The Notitia Dignitatum is a unique document of the Roman imperial Eastern empire in 400s. However, no absolute date can be given, and there are omissions and problems.
There are several extant fifteenth and sixteenth-century copies (plus a color-illuminated 1542 version). All the known and extant copies of this late Roman document are derived, either directly or indirectly, from a codex (Codex Spirensis) that is known to have existed in the library of the cathedral chapter at Speyer in 1542 but which was lost before 1672 and cannot now be located. That book contained a collection of documents (of which the Notitia was the last and largest document, occupying 164 pages) that brought together several previous documents of which one was of the 9th century.citation needed
Contents
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For each half of the empire, the Notitia enumerates all major 'dignities' (i.e. offices) in its gift, often with their location and even their exact officium (staff, enumerated except for the most junior). These are organised by:
The most recent editor of Notitia Dignitatum is Robert Ireland, in British Archaeological Reports, International Series 63.2.
The Notitia presents four main problems, as regards the study of the Empire's military establishment:
The Notitia contains the earliest known depictions of the diagram which later came to be known as 1
| Notitia dignitatum |
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