Rosillo López, Cristina2024-02-012024-02-012023Hermes 151, June 2023, issue 2, pp. 155-176.10.25162/hermes-2023-0013https://hdl.handle.net/10433/19578The present study aims at elucidating two aspects of Roman governance: first of all, the overlooked, but relevant, power of decision of the consuls (and, in a minor degree, of the praetors); secondly, the relationship between magistrates and Senate. The sources, especially epigraphic senatus consulta, consistently describe a procedure through which the Senate voted to delegate fully or partially decision-making on specific matters of foreign affairs to a consul or praetor who was in Rome. This procedure is present in almost half of the decisions recorded in epigraphic senatus consulta, on a variety of matters throughout the second and first centuries. This procedure was characterised by the use of the formula ita utei ei e re publica fideque sua videbitur esse/videretur (found in both epigraphic and literary sources), which referred to the cultural and ideological connotation that addressed the relationship between the Senate and magistrates.application/pdfenhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/República romanaRepública tardíaSenadoCónsulDelegation: The Power of Decision of the Consuls at Rome and Senatorial Procedures in the Second and First Centuries BCEjournal articleopen access