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Answer for the clue "Roman official ", 8 letters:
quaestor

Alternative clues for the word quaestor

Word definitions for quaestor in dictionaries

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. any of several public officials of ancient Rome (usually in charge of finance and administration)

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. An Ancient Roman official responsible for public revenue and other financial affairs.

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Questor \Ques"tor\, n. [L. quaestor, contr. fr. quaesitor, fr. quaerere, quaesitum, to seek for, ask: cf. F. questeur.] (Rom. Antiq.) An officer who had the management of the public treasure; a receiver of taxes, tribute, etc.; treasurer of state. Note: ...

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
The Quaestor at the University of St Andrews , in Scotland, is a senior executive , member of the University Court and is responsible for the finances of the University; the equivalent of treasurer or Finance Director in other institutions. The Quaestor ...

Usage examples of quaestor.

The quaestor and exceptor Cassiodorus Filius is preparing the mandatum.

Roman citizens spread across the whole thirty-five tribes would markedly decrease the Roman content of the elections, would see Italians contest the polls for consul, praetor, aedile, tribune of the plebs, and quaestor, would see Italians in huge numbers enter the Senate, all determined to wrest control of the Senate away from the Romans and into the hands of Italy.

So I will see two consuls elected, eight praetors elected, two curule and two plebeian aediles elected, ten tribunes of the plebs elected, and twelve quaestors.

Then will follow the elections for quaestors, curule aediles, tribunes of the soldiers and other minor positions in the Assembly of the People ten days before the Kalends of Sextilis.

Gnaeus Octavius, you harass the praetors, the aediles, your fellow tribunes of the plebs, Publius Cethegus, all our consulars and great men, bankers like Titus Atticus, even the poor quaestors!

It elected the curule aediles, the quaestors, and the tribunes of the soldiers.

This privatization was an ongoing thing throughout the Republic, and was usually effected through the censors, praetors, aediles and quaestors.

Senate through its aediles and quaestors made sure the Head Count was sold grain at a reasonable price, even if in times of shortage that meant buying expensive grain and letting it go at the same reasonable price, much to the chagrin of the Treasury.

Silarus into Campania again, Varinius and Valerius left these five cohorts to guard the ford under the command of a quaestor, Gaius Toranius.

There will be twenty quaestors elected each year, a sufficient number to offset senatorial deaths and keep the House plump.

Sicily, who will have two quaestors, one for Syracuse and one for Lilybaeum.

Sulla increased the number of quaestors from perhaps twelve to twenty, and laid down that a man could not be quaestor until he was thirty years of age.

The interview then proceeded with a speed and cleverness which had Marcus Vibius gasping, for he was not used to quaestors with a grasp of accounting, nor to a memory so good it enabled its owner to reel off whole screeds of data without consultation of written material.

The quaestors also did their friends and families favors if these people were in debt to the State by turning a blind eye to the fact or ordering their names erased from the official records.

In short, the quaestors located in Rome simply permitted the permanent Treasury staff to go about their business and get the work done.