Originally a
Moorish prince, Lusius Quietus was the son of a tribal lord from unconquered
Morocco. Lusius' father and his warriors had supported the Roman legions in their attempt to subdue
Mauretania Tingitana (northern Morocco) during
Aedemon's revolt in
46. This useful ally, on a notoriously difficult frontier, was honoured with the gift of Roman citizenship. Lusius served as an auxiliary officer in the Roman cavalry, recruiting from free tribes of
Morocco. Emperor
Domitian rewarded him with equestrian rank but later dismissed him for insubordination. Since practically every officer of calibre had been mistreated by this paranoid ruler this commended rather than harmed Lusius in the eyes of his brother officers. In due course it was one of these, a Spanish legionary commander called
Trajan, who occupied the throne. Lusius served as Trajan's cavalry commander during the tough
Dacian campaigns (his barehead
Berber cavalry can be seen on
Trajan's column in
Rome). He was made a senator, a governor of
Iudaea Province and even appointed consul. The high profile of cavalry in the war against Parthia further strengthened his standing, while a brilliant rearguard action, which saved the whole army from destruction, made Lusius the darling of the legions. According to
Heinrich Graetz, only the quick action of
Hadrian, supported by
Trajan's widow, prevented Lucius being acclamed emperor on the death of
Trajan.
Hadrian had the infantry under Lusius' command quietly disarmed, but the North African cavalry proudly refused to surrender their arms and abandon their heroic commander. They had to be slaughtered to a man before
Hadrian was in position to order the execution of his rival. Lusius was clearly an exceptional general, and although it seems unlikely that he would have made a better ruler than
Hadrian, the wisdom of the Roman meritocracy is abundantly clear.