- Source: Publius Curiatius Fistus Trigeminus
Publius Curiatius Fistus Trigeminus was a Roman politician in the 5th century BC, consul in 453 BC and decemvir in 451 BC.
Family
He was named Publius Curiatius by Livy, but named Publius Horatius by Dionysius of Halicarnassus. Diodorus Siculus calls him only Trigeminus. He could have been part of the gens Horatii rather than the Curiatii, two gentes that had opposed each other during the Roman monarchy in the fight of the Horatii and the Curiatii.
If he was part of the gens Curiatii, he was the only member of the family to become consul.
Biography
= Consulship
=In 453 BC, he was consul with Sextus Quinctilius Varus. Rome was ravaged in that year by a famine and an epidemic, which killed animals as well as people. It is thought to have been typhus, with the epidemic continuing on for ten or more years. His colleague, Varus, and Furius Medullinus Fusus, the consul suffect who replaced him, both died of the disease that same year.
= Decemvirate
=In 451 BC, he was part of the First Decemvirate which wrote the ten first tables of the Law of the Twelve Tables.
References
Bibliography
= Ancient bibliography
=Livy, Ab urbe condita
(in French) Diodorus Siculus, Universal History, Book XII, 9 on the site Philippe Remacle
Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Roman Antiquities, Book X, 1-16, and Book X, 45-63 at LacusCurtius
= Modern bibliography
=Broughton, T. Robert S. (1951), "The Magistrates of the Roman Republic", Philological Monographs, number XV, volume I, vol. I, 509 B.C. - 100 B.C., New York: The American Philological Association
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Desemviri
- Publius Curiatius Fistus Trigeminus
- Decemviri
- 450s BC
- 453 BC
- Appius Claudius Crassus Inregillensis Sabinus
- Horatia gens
- Decemvirate (Twelve Tables)
- Curiatia gens
- Spurius Furius Medullinus Fusus (consul 464 BC)
- Sextus Quinctilius