Lucius Caecilius Metellus was tribune of the plebs in 49 BC. He was the son of the homonymous consul of 68 BC; during his youth he lived in Sicily with his father and later was assigned there during his own quaestorship in 52 BC.[1] He opposed Caesar during the civil war, supporting the Pompeian efforts around Capua, in March 49, before Caesar occupied the Italian peninsula.[2]
In the first months of the civil war in 49 BC, Caesar occupied Italy and forced Pompey to flee to Macedonia. On 1 April 49 BC a senate meeting was held – involving the few senators who remained at Rome – at the initiative of the tribunes aligned with Caesar.[3] Caesar used the proceedings to inveigh against the harms done to him by the Pompeians and to request money and troops.[4] Possibly when the rump senate was to approve Caesar's financial requests, Metellus vetoed the proceedings.[5]
Afterwards, Caesar moved to raid the aerarium (state treasury) anyway: in response, Metellus put himself before the door and blocked the Caesarians' way.[6] It is not clear whether Caesar was himself present; some ancient sources, such as Plutarch and Lucan,[7] report a confrontation between Metellus and Caesar within the pomerium, but whether this actually occurred is not clear.[8] Regardless, in most tellings, Metellus' life was threatened by Caesar or his men and Metellus was forced aside.[9] The episode, which showed Caesar who purported to have started the civil war to defend tribunician rights trampling on a tribune's rights, was embarrassing.[10] Cicero records Caesar making some threats to have Metellus killed after the fact.[11] Caesar regardless left the city shortly afterwards and the mention of the confrontation before the aerarium is omitted in Caesar's civil war commentaries.[12]
Metellus is last recorded as trying to find his way back to Italy in the aftermath of Caesar's victory at Pharsalus; Caesar wrote to his lieutenant in Italy, Mark Antony, to deny Metellus' return.[13]
Mackay, Christopher S (2009). The breakdown of the Roman republic. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN978-0-521-51819-2.
Meier, Christian (1995) [First published, in German by Severin und Siedler, 1982]. Caesar. Translated by McLintock, David. Basic Books. ISBN0-465-00895-X.
Münzer, F (1897). "Caecilius 75" . Realencyclopädie der classischen Altertumswissenschaft (in German). Vol. III, 1. Stuttgart: Butcher. col. 1205 – via Wikisource.