Questorship (458 BC) In 458 BC, Marcus Valerius was elected
quaestor, with
Titus Quinctius Capitolinus Barbatus as his colleague. They continued the prosecution against the tribune of the plebs,
Marcus Volscius Fictor started by the previous year's quaestors. Fictor was accused of giving false testimony in the trial of
Caeso Quinctius, which had led to Quinctius' exile in 461 BC.
Consulate (456 BC) In 456 BC, he was elected
consul together with
Spurius Verginius Tricostus Caeliomontanus. Their term of office was during a period of political tension between the
plebs represented by the
tribunes of the plebs, and the
patricians, represented by the senate and the consuls. Valerius and his colleague eventually came to a compromise with the tribunes, which resulted into a new law, known as the
Lex Icilia de Aventino publicando, which allocated the
Aventine Hill for the benefit of the
commons. ==References==