Quintus Caecilius Metellus Celer

Quintus Caecilius Metellus Celer [1] (before 103 BC or c. 100 BC 59 BC) was a consul in 60 BC and son of Quintus Caecilius Metellus Nepos, or, according to some, the son of Tribune Quintus Caecilius Metellus Celer while the latter is the son of Quintus Caecilius Metellus Nepos. Previously he held the offices of Praetor and Augur in 63 BC.[2]

During the Third Mithridatic War (73-63 BC) against Mithridates VI of Pontus and Tigranes the Great of Armenia, Metellus Celer was a lieutenant of Pompey. In the winter of 66 BC Oroeses, king of the Caucasian Albanians attacked the forces of Pompey while they were celebrating the festival of the Saturnalia in their winter quarters in Lesser Armenia. Pompey had split his army into three divisions. Oroeses attacked Metellus Celer was in charge of one of them and of the custody of Tigranes the Younger of Armenia. Metellus vigorously repulsed Oroeses while Flaccus and Pompey, who were in charge of the other two divisions, defeated the other Albanians.[3]

In 63 BC, when Catilinarian Conspiracy was discovered Catiline, its leader, was indited for violence. He went to stay at the house of Metellus Celer to allay suspicions as Metellus was the praetor. It did not work.[4] Metellus then brought several conspirators to trial by virtue of a decree of the senate and imprisoned them.[5] Cicero entrusted matters outside Rome to Metellus Celer.[6] He was sent to the district of Pisa (in Etruria) with three legions. On learning that the rebels were advancing towards Pistoia to flee to Cisalpine Gaul (in northern Italy) he encamped at the foot of the mountain they had to come down from for their passage to Cisalpine Gaul, while the consul Antonius had his troops at their rear.[7] He besieged Faesulae (Fiesole), the base of Catiline, together with Antonius. The two men were encamped in two different places. Catiline attacked Antonius instead of Metellus, even through the former had a larger army.[8] References to Metellus Celer during the conspiracy were also made by Cicero and Valerius Maximus.[9][10]

When he was consul in 60 BC Metellus Celer sided with the optimates and vigorously opposed Pompey in everything because he had divorced his sister.[11] Together with Cato the Younger he was the main opponent of the ratification of the acts Pompey had made with the cities and kingdoms in Asia as a result of the Mithridatic War. He also opposed an agrarian bill proposed by Flavius, a plebeian tribune, which Pompey sponsored and which was intended to give land grants to Pompey's discharged soldiers which they were entitled to. Metellus led the opposition to the agrarian bill. He contested every point of Flavius' bill and attacked him so persistently that the plebeian tribune had him put in prison. Metellus wanted to convene the senate there and Flavius sat at the entrance of the cell to prevent this. Metellus had the wall cut through to let them in. When Pompey heard this he was afraid of the reaction of the people and told Flavius to desist. Metellus did not consent when the other plebeian tribunes wanted to set him free.[12]

In 59 BC Metellus Celer and Cato the Younger for a time refused to swear obedience to the agrarian law of Julius Caesar, who was consul in that year. Eventually they complied.[13]

During Metellus Celer’s praetorship, Titus Labienus indicted Gaius Rabirius for the murder of Lucius Appuleius Saturninus thirty-six years earlier. Saturinus had been opposed by the consuls of the time at the direction of the senate. Thus, with the proposed trial the senate would lose the authority to enforce its decrees. Acts which had received the approval of the senate and had been committed many years earlier tended to give immunity to those who tried to repeat the conduct of Saturninus and make punishment of such acts ineffective. The senate was outraged that an innocent elderly man of senatorial rank was attacked and that the tribunes were entrusted with the control of affairs. There were pro and anti-prosecution factions. The former won through the support of Julius Caesar, who was the judge together with Lucius Julius Caesar. Rabirius was charged. The judges had been unlawfully chosen by the praetor, Metellus Celer, instead of the people. Rabirius appealed and would have been convicted by the people, but this was presented by Metellus by obstructing the meeting of the assembly of the people.[14]

Metellus Celer was married to his cousin Clodia Quadrantaria, often referred to in scholarship as Clodia Metelli ("Clodia the wife of Metellus", the daughter of Appius Claudius Pulcher. They had a daughter named Caecilia Metella like all the women in the family of the Caecilii Metelli.

Qiuinuts Caeclius Metellus Celer died suddenly in 59 BC, according to some poisoned by his wife, who was notoriously debauched, reputed incestuous lover of her brother Clodius, of Caelius, possibly of the great lyric poet Catullus (most authorities identify her as the subject of his Lesbia), and many others.

See also

Notes

  1. agnomen due to the celerity with which he treated of his father's funerals. (Cfr. F. Noel, in Dictionnaire Historique ...)
  2. Cassius Dio, Roman History, 37.26.3
  3. Cassius Dio, Roman History, 36.54
  4. Cassius Dio, Roman History, 37.1-2
  5. Sallust, The War with Catiline, 42.3
  6. Plutarch, Parallel lives, The Life of Cicero, 16.1
  7. Sallust, The War with Catiline, 30.4; 57.2
  8. Cassius Dio, Roman History, 37.39.2
  9. Cicero, Epistilae ad Familiares, 2.1; Against Catiline, 1.19, 2.5—6; Pro Sulla 65
  10. Valerius Maximus, Nine Books of Memorable Deeds and Sayings,7.7
  11. Cassius Dio, Roman History, 37.49.3
  12. Cassius Dio, Roman History, 37.50.2-4
  13. Cassius Dio, Roman History, 38.7.1
  14. Cassius Dio, Roman History, 37.26

References

Primary sources
Secondary Sources


Political offices
Preceded by
Marcus Pupius Piso Frugi Calpurnianus,
Marcus Valerius Messalla Niger
Consul
60 BC,
with Lucius Afranius
Succeeded by
Julius Caesar,
Marcus Calpurnius Bibulus
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