There was another division, later than that of Sulla, into "conventus juridici," as in other Roman provinces, for judicial purposes, as Cicero says (pro Flacco. c. 29: 'ubi . . . jus a nostro magistratu didtiir'), and for other business which it was necessary to do be£ore a court. These were much larger than the 40 districts, and quite independent of them. The following were the chief places of these conventns, as far as we know them: Ephesus, Tralles, Alabanda, Laodicea (or the Jurisdicto Cibyratica, which contained 25 towns: see Plin. v. 28), Apamea Clbotus, Synnada; Sardes containing all Lydia, but Philadelphia in the second century was also the chief town of a Conventus; Smyrna; Adramyttium, and Pergamum. These Conventus were also called dioceses (δεοικήσεις: Strabu p. 629). Cicero (ad. Fam. xiii. 67), when he was governor of Cilicia, mentions three dioceses of Asia, Cibyratica, Apamensis, and Synnadensis, which belonged to Phrygia, as attached to his province of Cilicia; but this arrangement appears to have been only temporary. (Strab. p. 631, mentions the Cibyratica as belonging to Asia.) The 40 regions probably disappeared altogether, for the divisions into Conventus seems to have been the division for all administrative purposes. Under the empire there was a division of the cities of Asia according to rank. The chief cities were called Metropoleis (Modestinus, Dig. 27, tit. 1. s. 6, De Excusationibus). Besides Ephesus, there are mentioned as Metropoleis — Smyrna, Sardes, Pergamun, Lampsacus, and Cyzicus. Ephesus, which was always considered the chief place of the Province, was called "first of all and the greatest," and "the Metropolis of Asia." Metropolis (μητρόπολις) in this sense of chief town is quite different from the earlier Greek meaning of "mother" or "parent city." As one province contained several of these Metropoleis, the name seems to have been inferred merely as a title of honour, at least in the case of these cities of Asia. If any privilege was connected with the name, it is conjectured that the cities which had the title of Metropolis were in turns the places at which were held the great festival of Asia (τό κοινόν Άσίας). There were also autonomous towns in Asia, towns which had the self-government (αύτονομίας). The term αύτονόμος corresponds to the Latin "libera civitas". Such towns are sometimes described as having "freedom and immunity from taxation" (έλευθερία καί άτελεία). The second term is expressed by the Latin "immunitas". The following list of autonomous towns in Asia has been made out: |
The limits of the province Asia have been determined from the classical writers. In the Acts of the Apostles (ii. 9, xvi. 6), Phrygia is excluded from Asia, which means the province Asia; and in the Apocalypse (i. 4), when the seven churches of Asia are addressed, the term also seems to have a limited signification. This discrepancy may arise from Phrygia having been divided, the south and east part of it being attached to Galatia. (Strab. pp. 568, 569.) But there appears to be some difficulty about this matter of Phrygia. At the close of the 4th century Asia was divided into six divisions. 1. Asia proconsularis, a strip along the coast from Assus to the Maeander, with Ephesus the capital. 2. Hellespontus, with Cyzicus the capital. 3. Lydia, with Sardes the capital. 4. Phrygia Salutaris, the north-east part of Phrygia, with Eucarpia the capital. 5. Phrygia Pacatiana, the west part of Phrygia, extending to Ancyra of Phrygia and Aezani or Azani, with Laodicea the capital. 6. Caria, with Aphrodisias the capital. The islands which belonged to the province of Asia were formed into a Provincia Insularum (έπαρχία νήσων), by Vespasian as it appears. In the time after Constantine it contained 53 islands, of which Rhodes was the Metropolis. (Becker, Rom. Alterth. vol. iii. pt. i. by J. Marquardt)[ G. L. ]
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