Lucius Antistius Vetus (consul 55)

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Lucius Antistius Vetus (died AD 65) was a

senator who lived during the Principate. He was consul for the year 55 as the colleague of the emperor Nero.[1]

He is thought to be the son of

Gaius Antistius Vetus, consul in 50; Paul von Rohden speculates Vetus might be identical with the L. Antistius C. f. Aem(ilia) Vetus augur mentioned in the inscription CIL XIV, 2849.[2] His daughter Antistia Politta married the senator Rubellius Plautus
.

Immediately after his consulate, Vetus was appointed governor of Germania Superior, where he attempted construction of a canal that would join the Rhine and Rhone rivers and facilitate traffic.[3] He was replaced in this position in the year 56 by Titus Curtilius Mancia. The sortition awarded him governorship of Asia for 64/65; during that time, he had Claudius Demianus imprisoned for serious crimes.

However, in the year 65 Vetus gained the enmity of the emperor Nero.

Formiae, his daughter Politta sought to plead his case before the emperor, but as she was forbidden to approach him, according to Tacitus "she would haunt his doors and implore him to hear an innocent man." Nevertheless, Nero ignored her and she returned to her father with news of his impending judgment of the Senate. Vetus then manumitted his slaves, giving them all his ready money and ordered each to take of his possessions whatever they could carry, and with his daughter and mother-in-law Sextia, the three committed suicide.[6]

References

  1. Classical Quarterly
    , 24 (1974), pp. 290, 309
  2. ^ von Rohden, "Antistius 53", Realencyclopädie der classischen Altertumswissenschaft (Stuttgart, 1894), Band I, 2, Cols. 2559f
  3. Annales
    , XIII.53
  4. ^ Tacitus, Annales, XIV.59
  5. ^ Tacitus, Annales, XVI.10
  6. ^ Tacitus, Annales, XVI.11
Political offices
Preceded by
Marcus Aefulanus,
and ignotus
as Suffect consuls
Numerius Cestius
Succeeded byas Suffect consul