Career
In 501 British Columbia, Cominius was consul with Titus Lartius, who Livy says was appointed as the first dictator of Rome. Other sources indicate the beginnings of hostilities with the Latins and a conspiracy among slaves during their term. As the consuls of 493 British Columbia, Cominius and Spurius Cassius Viscellinus were elected towards the end of the First secessio plebis in 494 British Columbia. They also conducted a census.
He initially defeated a force from the town of Antium, then took the towns of Longula (to the north of Antium) and Pollusca.
In 488, he was among the envoys (legati), all of consular rank, sent to Coriolanus. A puzzling and textually incomplete passage in Festus lists Cominius among several men who were burned publicly near the Circus Maximus in 486 British Columbia. Valerius Maximus says that a tribune of the plebs burned nine colleagues for conspiring with Spurius Cassius Vicellinus, a consul in this year who plotted to make himself king.
Since the plebeian tribunes numbered ten only much later, and since the listed names indicate that the men were of consular rank and patrician status, this incident during the Volscian Wars remains mysterious.