In AD 69 the Emperor Vespasian took control of the Empire after a period of unrest, and strengthening the Empire’s financial position was a priority. He dispatched an agent, Titus Suedius Clemens, to Pompeii to survey public land which had been taken over by private individuals and restore them to the Pompeian state (and therefore the Empire). Multiple copies of an inscription documenting Suedius Clemen’s work were set up as boundary markers between land owned by the town of Pompeii, and the surrounding countryside.
The actions of Suedius Clemens on behalf of Vespasian illustrate how the central Roman government could step in on a local level with the authority of the Emperor.