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FASCES , in See also: Roman antiquities, bundles of See also: elm or birch rods from which the See also: head of an axe projected, fastened together by a red strap
.
Nothing is known of their origin, the tradition that represents them as borrowed by one of the See also: kings from See also: Etruria resting on insufficient grounds
.
As the emblem of official authority, they were carried by the See also: lictors, in the See also: left See also: hand and on the left shoulder, before the higher Roman magistrates; at the funeral of a deceased magistrate they were carried behind the bier
.
The lictors and the fasces were so inseparably connected that they came to be used as synonymous terms
.
The fasces originally represented the power over See also: life and See also: limb possessed by the kings, and after the abolition of the See also: monarchy, the consuls, like the kings, were preceded by twelve fasces
.
Within the precincts of the city the axe was removed, in recognition of the right of See also: appeal (provocatio) to the See also: people in a See also: matter of life and See also: death; outside See also: Rome, however, each See also: consul retained the axe, and was preceded by his own lictors, not merely by a single accensus (supernumerary), as was originally the See also: case within the city when he was not officiating
.
Later, the lictors preceded the officiating consul, and walked behind the other
.
See also: Valerius Publicola, the champion of popular rights, further established the See also: custom that the fasces should be lowered before the people, as the real representatives of See also: sovereignty (See also: Livy ii
.
7; Florus i
.
9; Plutarch, Publicola, io); lowering the fasces was also the manner in which an inferior saluted a See also: superior magistrate
.
A dictator, as taking the place of the two consuls, had 24 fasces (including the axe even within the city) ; most of the other magistrates had fasces varying in number, with the exception of the censors, who, as possessing no executive authority, had none
.
Fasces were given to the Flamen Dialis and (after 42 B.c.) even to the Vestals
.
During the times of the republic, a victorious general, who had been saluted by the title of imperator by his soldiers, had his fasces crowned withSee also: laurel (See also: Cicero, See also: Pro Ligario, 3)
.
Later, under the See also: empire, when the emperor received the title for life on his accession, it became restricted to him, and the laurel was regarded as distinctive of the imperial fasces (see See also: Mommsen, Roraisches Staatsrecht, i., 1887, p
.
373)
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