Gnaeus Vergilius Capito

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Gnaeus Vergilius Capito was a Roman

eques who flourished during the reign of the emperor Claudius. He was appointed to the important office of praefectus or governor of Roman Egypt from AD 48 to 52.[1] His inscription erected at the Temple of Hibis at the Kharga Oasis is considered one of the best known in Egypt.[2]

His primary concern as governor of Egypt was to safeguard the harvest and delivery of grain to the populace of Rome, but surviving letters from his administration show his responsibilities extended further. A pair of letters concern a dispute over the parentage a child; when the decision of the strategus was ignored, Capito was petitioned to enforce the ruling.[3] A third letter from Capito dated 24 April 52 releases a weaver stricken with cataracts from the burdens of liturgy.[4]

His inscription at the Temple of Hibis concerns travelling officials abusing the privileges of their rank.[5] An older interpretation of this inscription believed it concerned these officials making extortionate demands upon the local population for accommodations, provisions and transport; this was a widely documented problem throughout the history of the Roman Empire. However Naphtali Lewis has shown that the abuses Capito had legislated against was not to protect the populace, but the public funds; he was prohibiting both excessive or inappropriate spending as well as claiming fictitious expenses.[6]

References

  1. ^ Guido Bastianini, "Lista dei prefetti d'Egitto dal 30a al 299p", Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik, 17 (1975), p. 272
  2. ^ Naphtali Lewis, "On Official Corruption in Roman Egypt: the Edict of Vergilius Capito", Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 98 (1954), p. 153
  3. A. S. Hunt
    and C.C. Edgar, Select Papyri, II. Non-literary Papyri. Public Documents (London: Loeb, 1932), pp. 194f
  4. ^ Papyrus Oxyrhynchus 39
  5. ^ First published by Wilhelm Dittenberger, Orientis graeci inscriptiones selectae 2 (Leipzig: Herzel, 1902). A more accurate transcription was published by J.H. Oliver as No. 1 in The Temple of Hibis in el Khargeh Oasis, part II: Greek Inscriptions (New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1938).
  6. ^ Lewis, "On Official Corruption", pp. 153-158. Lewis also provides an English translation on p. 158
Political offices
Preceded by
Gaius Julius Postumus
Prefectus of Aegyptus
48–52
Succeeded by