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Logothete of the Course : ウィキペディア英語版
Logothetes tou dromou
The ''logothetēs tou dromou'' (), in English usually rendered as Logothete of the Course/Drome/''Dromos'' or Postal Logothete, was the head of the department of the Public Post ((ラテン語:cursus publicus), (ギリシア語:δημόσιος δρόμος), ''dēmosios dromos'', or simply , ''ho dromos''), and one of the most senior fiscal ministers (logothetes) of the Byzantine Empire.
==History and functions==
The office of the ''logothetēs tou dromou'' is explicitly attested for the first time in circa 762, but traces its origins to the officials supervising the Public Post in Late Antiquity. Until the late 4th century, the administration of the Roman Empire's Public Post was a responsibility of the praetorian prefectures. Due to the abuse of the Post and its privileges by the officials of the praetorian prefecture, in the late 4th century the oversight over the Post passed to the ''magister officiorum'', while the day-to-day administration remained in the hands of the praetorian prefecture. As a result, an official known as the ''curiosus cursus publici'', the inspector of the Public Post, is attested in the late 4th-century ''Notitia Dignitatum'' (''Pars Orientalis'', XI.50) as one of the principal aides of the ''magister officiorum''. The twin administration of the Public Post by the praetorian prefects and the ''magister officiorum'' continued into the 6th century, and it was not until ca. 680 that the Public Post is found fully under the supervision of the ''magister officiorum''.
The office of the ''logothetēs tou dromou'' does not appear in the surviving sources until the year 762, but must have come into existence earlier, as the once-wide ranging duties of the ''magister officiorum'' were gradually removed and the office itself practically abolished during the course of the 8th century. Among the various functions of the ''magister officiorum'', the ''logothetēs tou dromou'' assumed control not only the Public Post, but also of domestic security and the Empire's foreign affairs, handling collection of intelligence on foreign peoples, correspondence with foreign princes and the reception of ambassadors. Although originally simply one of the four senior fiscal ministers or ''logothetai''—the ''Klētorologion'' of 899 places the ''logothetēs tou dromou'' 35th in the imperial hierarchy, after the ''logothetēs tou genikou'' (33rd) and the ''logothetēs toū stratiōtikou'' (35th), but above the ''logothetēs tōn agelōn'' (40th)—the office rose quickly in importance, combining, as the French scholar Rodolphe Guilland writes, the functions of a modern Interior, Security and Foreign Minister in his person, although his role in foreign affairs remained by far the most important. It is indicative of his pre-eminence that in the Byzantine sources of the 9th–10th centuries, when there is mention of "the ''logothetēs''" without further qualification, it refers usually to the ''logothetēs tou dromou''.
Consequently, the incumbent of the office often served as the Empire's chief minister, although this ultimately depended on the reigning emperor—the Byzantines never formalized such a position, nor was it attached to a particular office, rather it was granted ''ad hoc'' on the basis of each emperor's favour towards a particular courtier, irrespective of rank or office. As Guilland points out, the senior officials of the imperial household—''praipositoi'', ''parakoimōmenoi'' and ''prōtovestiarioi''–had far more opportunity to attract imperial favour and far more often filled the role of chief minister. Notable ''logothetai tou dromou'' who served as chief ministers include Staurakios under Empress Irene of Athens (reigned 797–802), Theoktistos during the regency of Empress Theodora (842–856), Stylianos Zaoutzes in the early reign of Leo VI the Wise (r. 886–912), Leo Phokas the Younger during the rule of his brother Nikephoros II Phokas (r. 963–969), John under Constantine IX Monomachos (r. 1042–55), and Nikephoritzes under Michael VII Doukas (r. 1071–78). The ''logothetēs tou dromou'' retained this pre-eminence among the senior ministers until superseded in the 12th century by the ''logothetēs tōn sekretōn''. The 10th-century ''De Ceremoniis'' of Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus (r. 913–959) depicts the administrative and ceremonial roles of the ''logothetēs tou dromou'': he was received in audience every morning by the Emperor in the Chrysotriklinos, he presented the senior officials at award-giving ceremonies, and had a prominent part in the reception of foreign embassies, as well as the exhibition of captives. After the reforms of Emperor Alexios I Komnenos (r. 1081–1118), in circa 1108 the ''dromos'' ceased to exist as a department, but the ''logothetēs'' remained, now responsible for official communications and for supervising foreigners resident in Constantinople.

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