Guy Fabricius Luscinus was an ancient Roman politician, consul of 282 and 278 years BC. e. , the censor of 275 BC. E. , famous for his negotiations with Pierre during the Pyrrhic War.
Background
Gaius Fabricius belonged to an ignorant clan, probably of non-Roman origin, and at the same time extremely poor. According to the Capitoline fasts, his father and grandfather wore the same prenomen - Guy. The Birth of Gaius Fabricius in historiography dates approximately 313 BC. e. His family could move to Rome from the lands of the Guernica soon after 306 BC. E. , when most of the hernics were to take Roman citizenship.
Career
Roman general, was the first member of the Fabrician gens who settled in Rome. He migrated to Rome from Aletrium, one of the Hernican towns which was allowed to retain its independence as a reward for not having revolted. In 285 he was one of the ambassadors sent to the Tarentines to dissuade them from making war on the Romans. In 282 (when consul) he defeated the Bruttians and Lucanians, who had besiegedThurii. After the defeat of the Romans by Pyrrhus at Heraclea (280), Fabricitfs was sent to treat for the ransom and exchange of the prisoners. All attempts to bribe him were unsuccessful, and Pyrrhus is said to have been so impressed that he released the prisoners without ransom (Plutarch, Pyrrhus, 18). The story that Pyrrhus attempted to frighten Fabricius by the sight of an elephant is probably a fiction. In 278 Fabricius was elected consul for the second time, and was successful in negotiating terms of peace with Pyrrhus, who sailed away to Sicily. Fabricius afterwards gained a series of victories over the Samnites, the Lucanians and the Bruttians, and on his return to Rome received the honour of a triumph. Notwithstanding the offices he had filled he died poor, and provision had to be made for his daughter out of the funds of the state.
Personality
Fabricius was regarded by the Romans of later times as a model of ancient simplicity and incorruptible integrity.
Connections
In ancient sources, only the daughters of Gaius Fabricius are mentioned. The Senate had to give them a dowry, "because the paternal heritage left them nothing but exceptional glory. " A certain Gaius Fabricius Luscin was a city praetor in 195 BC. He might have been a descendant of the consul (apparently, great-grandson), but the insignificance of this figure arouses in some researchers doubts about its glorious origin.