Quintus Lucretius Vespillo
Quintus Lucretius Vespillo was a Roman consul, and the son of another Quintus Lucretius Vespillo, an orator and jurist. The elder Lucretius was proscribed by Sulla and murdered.
Lucretius served in the Pompeian military in 48 BC. He was proscribed by the triumvirs in 43 BC. His good fortune was that he was concealed by his wife Curia in their home at Rome. He hid out there in the ceiling until his friends could obtain his pardon. In 20 BC he was one of the people selected as a candidate to represent the people that the Roman Senate sent to Augustus in Athens to request for him to assume the consulship in 19 BC. Lucretius was ultimately appointed as the Roman consul with C. Sentius Saturninus in that year.
He was in the past believed to be the author of the Laudatio Turiae, a tombstone engraved with an epitaph in the form of a husband's eulogy for his wife[1] but this is rejected by modern scholars.[2]
See also
Footnotes
- Private Lives and Public Personae University of Tennessee
- Badian, Ernst (1996). Hornblower, Simon; Spawforth, Antony (eds.). Oxford Classical Dictionary (3rd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 822. ISBN 0-19-866172-X.
...has traditionally been assigned to this Turia, but this is now generally rejected and there are no good arguments for the identification.
References
- Cicero, Brutus 48
- Julius Caesar Commentarii de Bello Civili iii 7
- Appian B.C. iv 44
- Valerius Maximus vi. 7.2
- Dio Cassius liv 10