Pliny the Younger offers the earliest mention of Quadratus. In a letter to his friend Geminus dated to the year 107, Pliny writes of the death of Quadratus' grandmother just shy of her eightieth birthday. She had bequeathed two-thirds of her estate to Quadratus and a third to her granddaughter, presumably Quadratus' sister. While Pliny admits he doesn't know the granddaughter, Quadratus is well known to him, and describes the man in very positive terms. Details about Quadratus include his promise as a lawyer, that he had married before the age of 24 -- thus likely before he was appointed
quaestor, which commonly happened at age 25 -- and that his inheritance included the house of the philosopher
Gaius Cassius. We know few details about Quadratus until he acceded to the consulate in 118. However, that he was associated with emperor Hadrian indicates he was a member of the inner circle. Once he stepped down from the consulate, Quadratus was appointed governor of
Moesia Inferior; he held this office from 118 to 122. The next office he is recorded as holding was one of the apices of a successful consular career,
proconsular governor of
Africa. A number of inscriptions from that province attest that Quadratus assisted several persons in becoming
Roman citizens. The
Historia Augusta mentions Quadratus in a list of three men—the other two being
Lucius Catilius Severus and
Marcius Turbo—whom the emperor Hadrian treated harshly. Syme admits it is unclear what these men did, or were thought to have done, to incur Hadrian's displeasure. == Family ==