FOOTNOTES:
414 For the feelings of legionaries and Praetorians towards one another cf. Tac. Hist. ii. 21 ‘illi ut segnem et desidem et circo ac theatris corruptum militem, hi peregrinum et externum increpabant’.
415 Dio, lxxiv. 2.
416 See Liebenam, s.v. Equites Singulares, in Pauly-Wissowa. Cf. Herodian iii. 13, 4.
417 Herodian viii. 5, 8; Hist. Aug. Vit. Caracalli, 2; Dio, lv. 24.
418 viii. 20996. He held this post between the command of an Urban and that of a Praetorian Cohort.
419 Herodian, vii. 1, 9.
420 Codex Theodosianus vii. 22, Esp. 22. 9, issued in 380: ‘Sciantque veterani liberos suos quos militaribus aptos muneribus insitum robur ostendat, aut offerendos esse militiae aut obnoxios nostrae legis laqueis iam futuros.’
421 Ammianus served in his youth in the Protectores Domestici, was on the staff of Ursicinus in the Persian War of Constantius, and survived, and has given us a brilliant description of, the siege of Amida in 359.
422 Not. Dign. Or. ix. 29. Not. Dign. Occ. vii. 24, 74, 78.
423 Not. Dign. Occ. vii. 163.
424 Not. Dign. Occ. vii. 183.
425 Not. Dign. Or. xxviii and xxxi.
426 Not. Dign. Or. xxxii.
427 For traces of a ‘nationalist’ feeling in the Egyptian army at the end of the fourth century see my remarks in Karanóg. (See above, p. 115.)
428 Not. Dign. Occ. xiii. 46-63. There are also a few Sarmatae in Gaul.
429 Not. Dign. Occ. xiii. 33-42.
430 The practice was started by Marcus, who sent 8,000 Iazyges to different parts of the Empire (5,500 to Britain) during the Marcomannian War. Dio, lxxi. 16.
431 For the organization of these Dalmatian cavalry in the third century and their subsequent importance see Ritterling in the Festschrift for O. Hirschfeld.
432 Those missing are the British Legio XX Valeria Victrix, and I Minervia and XXII Primigenia from the Rhine. It is possible, however, that the ‘Primani’ who form part of the British field army (Not. Dign. Occ. vii. 155) represent Legio I Minervia. A ‘primanorum legio’ also appears at the battle of Argentorate. Ammianus, xvi. 12, 49.
433 Cf. Not. Dign. Occ. vii. 132 and xlii. 26 with Not. Dign. Or. vii. 41 and Not. Dign. Occ. vii. 103.
434 Not. Dign. Or. xlii. 34-8, xxviii. 15.
435 Not. Dign. Occ. vii. 144, xxxiv. 37-9.
436 For Britain see Not. Dign. Occ. xxviii and xl. The occupation of the mile-castles seems to have been interrupted at the end of the third century, probably at the time of the usurpation of Carausius, but further excavation will be necessary to determine the exact bearing of this evidence.
437 For Cappadocia see Not. Dign. Or. xxxviii and Appendix.
438 For Egypt see Not. Dign. Or. xxviii and xxxi and my discussion of these sections in Karanóg. (See above, p. 115.)
439 For Legg. VIII Augusta and XXX Ulpia Victrix see Not. Dign. Occ. v. 153, vii. 28 and 108. It must be remembered, however, that possibly Legio I Minervia was still in existence (see above, p. 140) and that we have not in the Notitia a complete list of the Rhine garrison.
440 The garrison consists of a cuneus equitum Dalmatarum, a cuneus equitum Constantianorum, and some equites sagittarii. Not. Dign. Occ. xxxiii. 25, 26, and 38.
441 Twelve of these regiments appear in Not. Dign. Occ. xxxiii (Valeria) and eight in xxxii (Pannonia Secunda).
442 Not. Dign. Occ. xxxii. 57 and 59. Probably, however, in xxxiii the names of regiments have been omitted after the title tribunus cohortis, which occurs six times at the end of the list, and some of these might have been old formations.
443 e.g. the Cohors II Galatarum in Palestine and the Cohors I Ulpia Dacorum in Syria. Not. Dign. Or. xxxiv. 44 and xxxiii. 33.
444 Not. Dign. Occ. xxv (Africa), xxx (Mauretania), and xxxi (Tripolitana).