• Quintus Hortensius,
tribune of the plebs in 422 BC, indicted
Gaius Sempronius Atratinus, consul of the preceding year, for his negligence in preparation against the
Volscians; but he was dissuaded from pursuing the charge by the loyalty shown to Sempronius, both by his former soldiers and by the other tribunes. •
Quintus Hortensius, appointed
dictator in BC 287, in response to a secession of the plebs occasioned, once again, by debt. Hortensius passed a measure giving the force of law to
plebiscita, effectively allowing the people to pursue debt relief without first having to obtain the approval of the
Senate. Hortensius died before resigning his office, and was probably replaced by a dictator
suffectus, the only instance of such an appointment in Roman history. •
Lucius Hortensius,
praetor in 170 BC, was given the command of the fleet in the war against
Perseus. When the city of
Abdera appealed from his demands for money and wheat, he stormed the city, had the leaders beheaded, and sold the rest into slavery. The Roman Senate repudiated these acts, and ordered that the people be set free. Hortensius continued to despoil Greece, and was upbraided for his harshness to the
Chalcidians, but does not seem to have been recalled or punished. •
Quintus or Lucius Hortensius, elected consul in 108 BC, he was tried and condemned before taking office, and exiled. • Lucius Hortensius, father of the orator, was praetor in
Sicily in 97 BC, where his administration was remembered for its honesty and justice. He married Sempronia, daughter of
Gaius Sempronius Tuditanus. • Lucius Hortensius L. f., elder brother of the orator, was
legate under
Sulla during the
First Mithridatic War. He acquitted himself admirably in the build-up to the
Battle of Chaeronea, and again during the battle, despite the inferior size of his force. •
Quintus Hortensius L. f., the renowned orator and contemporary of Cicero. He served his country in the
Social War, was
quaestor in BC 81, praetor
urbanus in 72, and consul in 69. He withdrew from public life as the
first triumvirate began to dominate the affairs of the Roman state. His wife was Lutatia, daughter of
Quintus Lutatius Catulus. • Hortensia L. f., sister of the orator, married Marcus Valerius Messala. Her brother considered naming Hortensia's son as his heir, in preference to his own son, from whom he was estranged. • Quintus Hortensius Q. f. L. n. Hortalus, son of the orator, from whom he was estranged. Just before the
Civil War, he joined
Caesar in
Cisalpine Gaul, and it was Hortensius whom Caesar sent across the
Rubicon. Proscribed after the death of Caesar, Hortensius had
Gaius Antonius, brother of the triumvir, put to death in revenge. For this, he was executed upon Antonius' grave after the
Battle of Philippi. •
Hortensia Q. f. L. n., daughter of the orator, intervened on behalf of the wealthy Roman matrons when the
triumvirs proposed a special tax to pay for the war against
Brutus and
Cassius. She spoke with eloquence worthy of her father. • Hortensius Q. f. L. n. Hortalus, second son of the orator from his marriage to
Marcia. • Quintus Hortensius Q. f. Q. n. Corbio, grandson of the orator, described by
Valerius Maximus "as a person sunk in base and brutal profligacy." • Aulus Hortensius, father of Sextus Hortensius Clarus. • Sextus Hortensius A. f. Clarus, dedicated an
Augusteum at
Ferentinum during the reign of
Caligula. ==See also==