Administrative system in the Early Byzantine period

1. Reforms of Diocletian and Constantine

Early Byzantine Imperial administration is the Late Antique Roman Imperial administration as reformed by Diocletian (284-305) and Constantine (324-37). Diocletian understood that a well integrated administration that could address issues of governance, security, and finance would be more responsive to the crises that the empire had faced for sometime. From fewer than fifty provinces, Diocletian created about one-hundred uniform provinces. These provinces were grouped into twelve dioceses administered by a vicar whose superior was the praetorian prefect of one of the tetrarchy, Diocletian’s system of four emperors. This system of dioceses and prefectures, as set up by Diocletian, had a lasting impact. Prefectures were subdivided into dioceses, which were divided into provinces. The number of major officials was tripled, and the number of low-ranking bureaucrats increased correspondingly. There were also four imperial courts with bodyguards, messengers, and departments to keep government records, all under a master of offices (magister officiorum). The army and navy were also increased in size, and each province was assigned a duke (dux) to command the forces in the province, although a duke’s command sometimes covered two or three of the new small provinces. Dicoletian made a principle of separating civil and military authority, a principle that survived until the development of the thematic system at the end of the seventh century. While the bureaucracy was large, it was meant to be efficient, and promotion was open to any ambitious, able, and loyal Roman. Diocletian also tried to stabilize the currency and improve taxation. One of the main purposes of civil administration was taxation (the poll tax), and taxation remained an important function throughout the early Byzantine period. Taxation was based on indictions (assessments). The indiction was fixed to September the 1st and occurred on a five-year cycle.

Many of Diocletian’s reforms did not survive, although he stabilized the Empire.1 The tetrarchy, a power sharing executive meant to prevent civil war and ensure a smooth succession, quickly collapsed after Diocletian’s retirement. Yet, his bureaucratic reforms survived and were completed and modified by Constantine. Certain aspects of the administration of this period survive into the late Byzantine period. For example, Constantine converted the five-year tax indiction to a fifteen year cycle. As Constantine took over more of the empire, he appointed new prefects to administer regional groups of dioceses. Constantine created the scholae, an exclusive group of guards and agents who served him in various capacities, and who remained an important unit through much of the Middle Byzantine period. Constantine’s reforms had the effect of further centralizing the administration around one emperor. Constantine also tried to increase revenues and to streamline imperial finances. He created two new ministers responsible to him, the count of the sacred largesses (comes sacrarum largitionum) to manage public expenditures and the count of the private estate (comes rei privatae) to administer imperial properties.2

From the fourth century, the palace at Constantinople became the center of the imperial court, even though Constantine himself, who began construction of the palace, moved around a great deal. The palace was still the political center of the empire, and provincials from all over the empire flocked to the court in search of rank and office. Titles could be honorific or connected to an office. In the early period, titles still carried considerable weight; in the middle and later Byzantine periods, a kind of honor inflation set in, and emperors invented new titles of more weight. Magistros and patrikios were both senior titles, but not necessarily offices. In the time of Justinian spathariosmeant just a sword bearer, but by the end of the seventh century, it was a high-ranking honorific title. Honorific titles did not guarantee that one had a significant role in the imperial administration, but officials who had a significant role in the administration usually had one or more honorific titles.

2. The Age of Justinian

Justinian (r. 527-65) furthered modified the imperial administration by his legal and administrative reforms that were intended to shape a new era. Early Byzantine imperial administration as shaped by Justinian remained intact until the thematic reforms of the seventh and eighth centuries. Justinian quite self-consciously attempted dramatic reforms of the imperial administration, although he maintained the late antique system as shaped by Diocletian and Constantine.First, Justinian codified the law in his Codex Justinianus. Then he issued a new handbook for law students in his Institutes, and finally, he began a series of administrative reforms, even on the provincial level. He attempted to emasculate the senatorial class, which had been implicated in the Nika riots. Justinian made the senatorial class more reliant on the emperor by the granting of titles, which he preferred to grant to those who had served loyally in the provincial administration.

On of the most important and powerful offices of the empire after the emperor himself, was the magister officiorum, the master of offices. First attested in 320 but probably dating back to the reforms of Diocletian, this office was head of the empire’s central administration. He directed most of the non-fiscal departments, including imperial guard regiments (scholae palatinae) and the network of imperial spies, who kept a close watch over provincial officials. The master of offices also directed the palace administration, the arms factories, and indirectly, the diocesan and provincial governors and military officers. The provincial inspectors (curiosi) and public post (cursus publicus) were also ultimately responsible to him through imperial agents (agentes in rebus). Other officials, comes, directed clerical and administrative staff, and the praetorian prefects still had supervision over the diocesan governors (vicarii). On the local level, administration could be felt through the maintenance of public safety by controlling brigands, and the management of imperial estates upon which much of the population worked. Justinian’s rule saw an expansion of the imperial bureaucracy and an effort to expand it into the reconquered territories of Italy, North Africa, and Spain.3 At the same time, Justinian attempted to streamline the bureaucracy in an effort to save money. John of Cappadocia, Justinian’s praetorian prefect, curtailed the imperial post. In 536, he suppressed most of the dioceses. His streamlining of the bureaucracy and emphasis on efficiency earned him the dislike of the senatorial class. The historical sources do not treat him well, although he was an a gifted administrator with an eye to reform, and was attempting to continue the reforms begun under the emperor Anastasius’ (491-518) praetorian prefect, Marinus the Syrian.4 It was Marinus the Syrian who had first put tax collection under the supervision of imperial administrators, the vindices, rather than city councils.5

Justinian’s attempts at reform, however, probably had limited effect. The separation of civil and military authority and increasingly fiscal administration as well, began under Diocletian, continued. However, as Justinian’s reign continued, inefficiency and corruption grew only worse, exacerbated by financial and social crises.6 Justinian himself became completely preoccupied with ecclesiastical unity and began to leave the imperial administration to itself.7 While he never achieved his goal of church unity, he did leave the imperial administration somewhat streamlined with Greek as its new official language. However, the administration would contract just as the empire itself.

3. Post-Justinian

Justinian’s successors largely continued his administrative policies but adapted them to new circumstances. Tiberios Constantine (578-582) established exarchates in North Africa (591) and Italy (584), a sign of the importance of the regions. Even during Justinian’s time, however, there was always a gap between vision and reality of administration. The emperor may envision an efficient, effective, and even benevolent imperial administration, but the constraints of communication and transportation in a pre-modern society hampered many efforts at reform. Locals on every level had a surprising amount of freedom and could cooperate as they saw fit. Corruption was endemic, and difficult to combat. Many reforms by Justinian and his successors were responses to new crises and problems, or attempts to amend ill-conceived reforms.

Just how long the late Roman, early Byzantine administrative system began by Diocletian has been a matter of some controversy. Evidence from various sources, including coins and hagiography, suggests that at the opening of the seventh century, the administration was largely intact.8 By the end of the seventh century the Justinianic system of small provinces had begun to be replaced by the thematic system, the administrative system of the middle Byzantine period. Ostrogorsky gave credit to Heraclius (610-41) for implementing the thematic system, but this view has been largely rejected.9 This system was further developed by Leo III (717-41) and Constantine V (741-775). While the administrative units of the empire may have changed, and the civil and administrative offices became combined, the bureaucracy remained a fixture of the government from the Late Antique period on.




1. Williams, S., Diocletian and the Roman Recovery (New York 1985), pp. 61-70 for the tetrarchy; pp. 89ff. for an overview of administrative reforms; and pp. 201ff. for Diocletian’s legacy.

2. For a detailed overview of the imperial administration under Constantine, cf., Kelly, Christopher, “Bureaucracy and Government,” in N. Lenski (ed.), Cambridge Companion to the Age of Constantine (Cambridge University Press 2006), pp. 183-204.

3. For an overview of the Justinianic administrative system, cf. Haldon, J. F., “Economy and Administration: How did the Empire Work?,” in Michael Mass (ed.), Cambridge Companion to the Age of Justinian (Cambridge University Press 2005), pp. 28-59, cf. especially the helpful chart, pp. 42-43.

4. Evans, J. A. S., The Age of Justinian: The Circumstances to Imperial Power (London 1996), pp. 195-7.

5. Jones, A. H. M., The Later Roman Empire 284-602: a social, economic, and administrative survey 2 vols. (Oxford 1986), vol. 1, p. 236.

6. Haldon, J. F., “Economy and Administration: How did the Empire Work?,” in Michael Mass (ed.), Cambridge Companion to the Age of Justinian (Cambridge University Press 2005), pp.48-49.

7. Evans, J. A. S., The Age of Justinian: The Circumstances to Imperial Power (London 1996), pp. 192ff.

8. Kaegi, W., “Notes on Hagiographic Sources for some Institutional Changes and Continuities in the Early Seventh Century,” Byzantina 7 (1975), pp. 61-70, Kaegi also discusses and refers to other sources for this period.

9. For Ostrogorsky’s view that the themes were developed by Heraclius, cf. his History of the Byzantine State (New Brunswick 1952; repr. 2005), pp. 96-101, for a survey of scholarship rejecting this view, cf. Kaegi, W., “Some Reconsiderations on the Themes (seventh-ninth centuries)” Jahrbuch der Österreichischen Byzantinischen Gesellschaft 16 (1967), pp. 39-53.