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compulsor
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There are 9 letters in COMPULSOR ( C3L1M3O1P3R1S1U1 )
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Definitions of compulsor in various dictionaries:
COMPULSOR - In Ancient Roman law enforcement, a compulsor was an officer under the Roman Emperors, dispatched from court into the provinces, to force the payment...
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Compulsor description |
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In Ancient Roman law enforcement, a compulsor was an officer under the Roman Emperors, dispatched from court into the provinces, to force the payment of taxes, etc., which had not been paid within the time prescribed. * The procedure is briefly summarized in Codex Theodosianus i.14.1, "omnia tributa exigere suscipere postremo conpellere iubemus." Egyptian documents also afford a good deal of illustration, as explained in Matthias Gelzer's Studien zur byzantinischen Verwaltung Ägyptens, 42 sqq. * These were charged with so many exactions, under color of their office, that Honorius dismissed them by law in 412. * The laws of the Visigoths mention military compulsors; which were officers among the Goths, whose business was to oblige the tardy soldiers to go into the fight, to run an attack, etc. * Cassian mentions a kind of monastic compulsors, whose business was to declare the hours of canonical office, and to make sure the monks went to church at those hours. * The word is Latin, formed of the ve |