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- Decanus - Wikipedia
Decanus means "chief of ten" in Late Latin The term originated in the Roman army and became used thereafter for subaltern officials in the Byzantine Empire, as well as for various positions in the Church, whence derives the English title "dean" It is unrelated to the position of deacon (Latin diaconus, Greek διάκονος)
- Roman Legions: Structure and Ranks - Roman Britain
Decanus The decanus was the first man of an eight man contubernium unit A normal soldier without formal command he was most likely in charge of various tent or barracks duties
- Hierarchy in the Late Roman army, 300-550 AD - Fectio
Vegetius refers to this rank as the decanus, comparable to Maurikios’ dekarch, which means “set over ten” or “commander of ten” Both may well have been purely theoretical though (comparable to a centurio commanding 80 men instead of a 100), instead of signifying a real change of the contubernium from eight to ten men
- Decanus | Ancient Rome - Stronghold Nation
A Title with The Roman Legions in the late Imperial Period (4th Century AD), The Decanus meant ''Chief of Ten'' While originally thought by Historians that this was a Junior Officer Position, it was probably held by the Modern equivalent Military Rank of Squad Leader (Sergeant)
- What does decanus mean? - Definitions. net
Decanus means "chief of ten" in Late Latin The term originated in the Roman army and became used thereafter for subaltern officials in the Byzantine Empire, as well as for various positions in the Church, whence derives the English title "dean"
- A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities (1890)
We may distinguish three senses 1 A petty officer commanding a contubernium of ten men (Modestus, § 9; Veget de Re Mil 2 8 and 13) The latter says that in his time (the end of the 4th century) the name caput contubernii had superseded decanus 2 Officials at the court of Constantinople, but of no higher than menial rank (Cod
- Decanus - Legio X Fretensis
Decanus - (Latin decanus - "leader of ten") was the commander for a group of 10 individuals who lived in the same tent - 8 soldiers and 2 non-combatants, as well as servants or slaves Together, they formed a contubernium
- Decanus - Military Wiki | Fandom
Decanus means "chief of ten" in Late Latin The term originated in the Roman army and became used thereafter for subaltern officials in the Byzantine Empire, as well as for various positions in the Church, whence derives the English title "dean"
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