Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 14, 2026

Tesserarius

A tesserarius was a watch commander in the Roman army. They organized and had command over the nightly guard assigned to keep watch over the fort when in garrison or on campaign and were responsible for getting the watchwords from the commander and seeing that they were kept safe. There was one tesserarius to each centuria. They held a position similar to that of a first sergeant of a company in modern armies and acted as seconds to the optiones.

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A tesserarius (Latin: tesserārius, from tessera, a small tile or block of wood on which watchwords were written) was a watch commander in the Roman army. They organized and had command over the nightly guard assigned to keep watch over the fort when in garrison or on campaign12 and were responsible for getting the watchwords from the commander and seeing that they were kept safe. There was one tesserarius to each centuria (Wilkes, 1972). They held a position similar to that of a first sergeant of a company in modern armies and acted as seconds to the optiones.

Tesserary pay was one and a half times (sesquiplicarii) that of the standard legionary pay.

See also

See also

Citations

Citations

  1. Adrian Goldsworthy, Caesar's Civil War, p. 20
  2. "The Imperial Legions". Legionary Books. Archived from the original on 2008-11-04. Retrieved 2008-11-08.