Anaedile (English:/ˈiːdʌɪl/EE-dighl[1]) was amagistrate in theRoman Republic who had responsibilities for the upkeep of the city, such as itsbuildings,roads, and markets; theavailability of grain at reasonable prices; and the holding ofgames.[2] It also had some judicial functions, being able to issue fines and corporal punishments with an additional right to prosecute crimesbefore the assemblies, but by the middle republic was mostly an office used for distributing largesse to win the officeholder popular acclaim.
The duties of the aediles did not long survive the republic. While the office continued to exist under the empire, many of their public functions were assumed by theemperor or his appointees. There were, however, aediles inself-governing communities outside of Rome who continued to be elected by and support their localities in much the same way the republican aediles at Rome did.
There were two kinds of aediles: curule and plebeian. Curule aediles were elected in thetribal assembly, while plebeian aediles were elected in the plebeian council from plebeian candidates by aplebeian tribune. While curule aediles possessed acurule chair, they did not possessimperium or the immunity from prosecution which it implied.[5]
By the late middle republic the two pairs of aediles had largely overlapping duties in the upkeep of temples, markets, and streets.[6] They were also responsible for two major sets of annual games: the curule aediles held theludi Romani and the Megalensian games; the plebeian aediles held theludi plebii and the Floralian and Cerealian games.[7] Plebeian aediles also had responsibilities to keep plebeian records, which were likely stored at theTemple of Ceres on theAventine.[8]
It was not necessary to hold the aedilate as part of thecursus honorum;[9] however, if held, by the middle and late republic it usually was held after the plebeian tribunate and before the praetorship.[10][11] Customarily, though not entirely observed by the late republic, two years had to elapse between the holding of the aedilate and the praetorship.[12]
One of the main responsibilities of the aediles was management of Rome's marketplaces. This included a responsibility to ensure the availability of grain and tolerable prices.[13] Aediles managed markets by promulgating an edict specifying the Rome's commercial law and regulations observed therein, while also providing men to ensure the proper enforcement of those rules.[14] Aediles also had a role in stabilising grain prices, but until the development of public granaries fromGaius Gracchus' tribunate in 122 BC, the aediles' ability achieve this goal was limited and contingent on officeholders' foreign contacts, their financial resources, and the availability of shipping.[15]
Aediles also possessed a generalcura urbis.[16] This entailed caring for the condition of streets and public buildings (such as basilicas and temples). At times this could also include the construction of new buildings, such as the erection of shops on the Tiber and aporticus by the aedilican pairs of 193 and 192 BC.[17] Aediles also supervised more junior city magistrates such as thetriumviri capitales ornocturni, who were part of the minorvigintisexviri, in their law enforcement duties.[7]
Both curule and plebeian aediles possessed the power to prosecute byiudicium populi before the tribal assembly. The offences that aediles could prosecute were essentially unlimited, with attested aedilican prosecutorial jurisdiction overprovocatio (violation of citizen appeal rights),vis (public violence), tax evasion, usury,veneficia (witchcraft), andstuprum (sexual assault).[18] These judicial powers were exercised withoutimperium and also included the authority to issue summary corporal punishments.[19]
This prosecutorial power also entailed the ability to assess fines from offenders, which were often used to defray costs incurred in the upkeep of the city.[20] Indeed, aedilician fines collected from usurers orillegal graziers, are attested to have been used temple construction and games.[21] However, many of the costs incurred were also paid for by the officeholders: this was especially the case with games which, when splendid, could win the man who paid for them substantial popularity with the voters.[22] This was recognised by 182 BC, whenTiberius Gracchus spent so much as curule aedile on games that legislation was passed in 179 to put a cap on expenditures.[23]
The annalistic tradition suggests that the first aediles at Rome were the plebeian pair, created as assistants to theplebeian tribunes with judicial powers in 494 BC. Livy also suggests that these first plebeian aediles were sacrosanct, like the tribunes, but this has been doubted.[24][25] Some scholars have also suggested that the plebeian aediles first emerged as priests of the goddessCeres but there is no ancient evidence of this.[26]
The curule aediles, in the annalistic tradition, were created in theLicinio-Sextian settlement from 367 BC: plebeians being eligible for the consulship and the consular tribunate suppressed, a praetorship along with two curule aediles were added.[27] Large parts of this tradition, which place the impulse for these reforms in the conflict between patricians and plebeians, have been doubted; the reforms before 367 may instead have largely reflected the city-state's then need for more specialised governance.[28] If the curule aedilate was intended to be exclusive to the patricians, this was quickly dropped. Annalistic accounts of a compromise where alternating years had plebeian and patrician pairs as curule aedile, if at all accurate, did not reflect late republican practice which saw no such alternation.[29][30]
The acquisition of Rome's overseas provinces and entanglements likely catalysed the development of aedilican responsibilities: consuls and some praetors would regularly have been absent from the city commanding troops; plebeian tribunes on the other hand, in their more political role, would have had little time for administrative affairs.[31]
The dictatorJulius Caesar introduced two more aediles in 44 BC. They may have been entrusted with care for the city's grain supply, theludi Cereales, or both. If these new aediles had responsibilities for the grain supply, their powers over it were likely stripped in 22 BC, when Augustus assumed responsibility over that matter. The twoaediles Cereales, however, were not disestablished; they likely were instead reassigned to other customary aedilician tasks.[32]
The emergence of huge building projects during the triumviral period, which continued into the early empire under Augustus, tended against the continued relevance of the aediles. The expense of holding the office, along with the few political benefits, had by 33 BC made it something to avoid. That year, Augustus had his friend and allyMarcus Vipsanius Agrippa (who had previously been praetor and consul in 40 and 37 BC respectively) hold the office of aedile: Agrippa promptly started a huge building programme, repaired three aqueducts, began construction of anew one, and spent lavishly on games.[33] In the years after Agrippa's aedilate, however, many of the customary maintenance functions of temples, aqueducts, and roads were assigned to the emperor in the name of the senate rather than kept with the annual aediles.[34]
Most of the aedilician responsibilities for public order were also stripped from the period after 44 BC, though some powers over public markets (especially the sale of goods) and jurisdiction over sumptuary laws was retained.[10]
Other cities in Italy also had their own aediles and they were also a standard feature of Romanmunicipia.[10]Municipia were commonly run by a board of four magistrates: the town's chief magistrates, theduoviri with twoaediles. This arrangement was common in attested colonies in Spain,[35] but not all municipalities necessarily followed such a division. It was likely that, in some towns, there was a senior college ofquattorviri assisted with twoaediles.[36]
Elections for these positions were generally conducted in similar form to Roman republican elections, with the town's citizens divided into votingcuriae and the victors decided by thosecuriae. Candidates were also regulated by law, excluding those with dishonourable professions or reputations and requiring sureties to be posted for performance of duties.[35] Even as elections for the aedilate at Rome came under the control of the emperors, they continued to be contested at the local level. AtPompeii, for example, there has been discovered graffiti of campaign messages for municipal elections to the municipal aedilate.[37] Other cities that had aediles includeAgrigentum in Sicily[38] andCorinth, at the time a Roman colony, in Greece.[39]
These municipal aediles were generally put in charge of similar tasks to those of the republican aediles at Rome: supervising road maintenance, public buildings, public markets, and night watches. Some towns also elected municipal quaestors, generally more junior than the aediles,[40] to assist in these tasks but it is not clear that all towns had such a magistracy.[41] Municipal aediles were also normally inducted into the town's council (curia orordo decurionum), either by virtue of having held office or by wealth.[42] There are few attested difficulties in filling these municipal offices until the late second century AD, when complaints about the personal expense of holding these offices – which were paid out of the officeholder's pocket – become more common.[43] The municipal office starts to disappear, probably after having been stripped of decision-making powers while retaining a rump notary function, in the fifth century AD.[44]
Not all magistrates by the name "aedile" necessarily had similar duties, however. Cities within the Roman empire may have adopted Roman terms for magistrates but assigned them different duties or simply assigned the name to a preexisting local magistracy.[45] Aediles, for example, appear asmoneyers inSaguntum and other Spanish towns in the 1st century BC. Localities with privileged status (such asmunicipia orcolonia) likely reformed their local constitutions to conform with more Roman practices.[46]
^Lintott 1999, p. 129;Pellam 2014, p. 82, noting "general agreement... that the temple of Ceres was the site of a 'plebeian archive'" but arguing against this identification.
^Mouritsen 2017, p. 140, placing the tribunate usually between quaestorship and aedilate but noting that the tribunate was not covered by thelex annalis.
^Garnsey, Peter; Rathbone, Dominic (1985). "The background to the grain law of Gaius Gracchus".Journal of Roman Studies.75:20–25.doi:10.2307/300649.ISSN0075-4358.JSTOR300649.
^Pellam 2014, pp. 77–78, noting that aedilican sacrosanctity was debated even in antiquity;Lintott 1999, pp. 121, 129 n. 29, citing:Livy, 3.55.7–9, 29.20.11,Dion. Hal.Ant. Rom., 7.26.3, 7.35.3–4, among others.
^Drogula 2015, pp. 37–38. "von Fritz... demonstrated [the Licinio-Sextian rogations] were not motivated by the Conflict of the Orders... instead [they] were primarily intended to provide a greater number of annual magistrates to satisfy Rome's increasing demand for government... this is undoubtedly correct".
^Smith 2023, p. 114 n. 41, citing:CILIV, 429 (an aedilican campaign message by Gaius Julius Polybius promising good bread);CILIV, 7273 (pistores endorsing Gnaeus Helvius Sabinus for aedile).
^OLD, pp. 61–62, s.v. "aedilis", citingCicero,In Verrem, 4.93 (principes in ea civitate erant praecipitur et negotium datur quaestoribus et aedilibus).
Ryan, F X (1998). "The biennium and the curule aedileship in the late republic".Latomus.57 (1):3–14.ISSN0023-8856.JSTOR41538203.
Sherwin-White, A N; Lintott, Andrew (2012). "aediles, Roman magistrates".Oxford classical dictionary (4th ed.). Oxford University Press.doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199381135.001.0001 (inactive 13 July 2025).{{cite encyclopedia}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of July 2025 (link)
Smith, Timothy (2023). "Where's Vestorius? Locating Rome's aediles".Running Rome and its empire. London: Routledge. pp. 99–119.doi:10.4324/b23090-7.ISBN978-1-003-32086-9.
Deniaux, Elizabeth (2016). "The money and power of friend and clients: successful aediles in Rome". In Beck, Hans; Jehne, Martin; Serrati, John (eds.).Money and power in the Roman republic. Brussels: Latomus. pp. 178–87.