A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology

Smith, William

A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology. William Smith, LLD, ed. 1890

2. L.HostiliusTubulus, praetor B. C. 142, received bribes in such an open manner, when he was presiding at a trial for murder, that in the following year P. Scaevola, the tribune of the plebs, proposed and carried a plebiscitum for an inquiry into his conduct; whereupon Tubulus forth with went into exile. Cicero more than once speaks of him as one of the vilest of men, and quotes a passage of Lucilius, in which the name of Tubulus occurs as an instance of a sacrilegious wretch. (Cic. Att. 12.5.3, de Fin. 2.16, 4.28, 5.22, de Nat. Deor. 1.23, 3.30, pro Scaur. 1.) According to Asconius (in Scaur. p. 23, ed. Orelli) Tubulus was brought back from exile on account of his numerous crimes, and took poison of his own accord, to escape being put to death in prison.

The following coin was struck by a L. Hostilius Tubulus, but it is doubtful whether by the same person as the preceding. It has on the obverse the head of Pallas, and on the reverse a laurel wreath with the legend L. H. TVB. (i. e. L. Hostilius Tubulus), and underneath ROMA. (Eckhel, vol. v. p. 227.)