Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
"My husband the propraetor," she said, and had to kiss his face again many times.
A Roman governor is also known as a propraetor or proconsul.
Hence, any war the propraetor engaged in had to be forced upon him; he could not seek it out.
"Try to find some humble propraetor with a war on his hands he can't handle," said Caesar.
"I'll borrow it against what I make as propraetor in a good province.
If a proconsul or propraetor, he probably governed a province.
"It would have been when he was propraetor in Africa Province.
In the following two years, he was praetor and propraetor in Sicily.
Nerva was the son of a senator who had achieved the rank of propraetor.
"You signed on as my senior legate-and with a propraetor's imperium at that!
He was promagistrate, and likely propraetor, in Africa in 52 and possibly earlier.
Correspondingly, antistrategos ("vice-general") was used to refer to the office of propraetor.
A propraetor, if you have one spare."
His imperium was prorogued as propraetor into 199 so he could continue to look into the sacrilege.
As propraetor for the following year, Baebius was assigned to Macedonia and Greece.
If proconsul or propraetor, he probably governed a province, though he might be serving as a senior legate of some general in the field.
The titles "proconsul" and "propraetor" are not used by Livy or literary sources of the Republican era.
Within a day or two, a reinforcement force of 4,000 under the propraetor Gaius Centenius was intercepted and destroyed.
Livius was propraetor in Gaul.
The Senate had instructed the propraetor of the province of Asia to take over Bithynia.
In effect, when a magistrate's term ended, his imperium was extended, and he usually held the title of either Proconsul or Propraetor.
Titus Labienus, though you have been a propraetor under Caesar, you were never an elected praetor.
He was left by his brother as propraetor in command of the army in Africa in 110 BC.
Latinius Pandus was the propraetor of Moesia.
A praetor or a propraetor could only command a single legion and not a consular army, which normally consisted of two legions plus the allies.