[11]
And, to say nothing of the stains and disgraces of his youth, what other remarkable
event is there in his quaestorship, that first step to honour, except that Cnaeus
Carbo was robbed by his quaestor of the public money? that the consul was plundered
and betrayed? his army deserted? his province abandoned? the holy nature and
obligations imposed on him by lot 1 violated?—whose lieutenancy was the ruin of all
Asia and Pamphylia, in which provinces he plundered many houses, very many
cities, all the shrines and temples; when he renewed and repeated against Cnaeus
Dolabella his ancient wicked tricks when he had been quaestor, and did not only in
his danger desert, but even attack and betray the man to whom he had been
lieutenant, and proquaestor, 2 and whom he had
brought into odium by his crimes;
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1 Because the provinces which involved all these obligations were distributed by lot to the different magistrates.
2 “The proconsul or praetor who had the administration of a province was attended by a quaestor. This quaestor had undoubtedly to perform the same offices as those who accompanied the armies into the field..They had also to levy those parts of the public revenue which were not farmed by the publicani.... In the provinces they had the same jurisdiction as the curule aediles at Rome.... The relation existing between a praetor or proconsul and his quaestor was according to ancient custom regarded as resembling that between a father and his son. When a quaestor died in his province, the praetor had the right to appoint a proquaestor in his stead.”—Smith, Dict. Ant. p. 814, v. Quaestor.
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