Quintus Caecilius Metellus Celer (died 59 bc) was a leading Roman politician of the late 60s bc who became an opponent of Pompey the Great, the Catilinarian conspiracy (see Catiline), and the formation of the secret political agreement of Julius Caesar, Pompey, and Marcus Crassus.
Adopted from one branch of the noble Caecilius Metellus family into another, Celer had an early senatorial career that was standard for a young Roman of distinguished ancestry. He maintained good relations with Pompey, under whom in 66 he served as legate (emissary) in Asia, where Pompey was fighting Mithradates VI of Pontus and settling the affairs of the Middle East in Rome’s interest.
In 63, the year of Cicero’s consulate, Celer was urban praetor (i.e., a high-level magistrate). Either as praetor or as augur (diviner), he ended the treason trial of Gaius Rabirius before the Centuriate Assembly by the archaic ritual of lowering the flag on the Janiculan Hill. Rabirius had participated in the killing of Lucius Appuleius Saturninus under the “ultimate decree of the Senate” (100 bc). To cast doubt on the legitimacy of the ultimate decree, Caesar had used an archaic procedure to condemn Rabirius, who appealed to the Centuriate Assembly. The premature end of the trial was intended to make the use of the decree moot and thus to discourage the consul (or chief magistrate), Cicero, from employing the decree against Catiline and his followers. This it did not do. To win over Celer, Cicero proposed that he receive the command against Catiline and the province of Cisalpine Gaul (present-day northern Italy). Cicero’s plan did not work, and Celer supported his adopted brother, Nepos, who used his position as tribune in 62 to harass Cicero.
Celer was consul in 60 and turned against Pompey, who had divorced Celer’s sister, Mucia Tertia, on the grounds that she had committed adultery during her husband’s long absence in Asia. Celer worked with Marcus Portius Cato and Metellus Creticus to reject the proposed agrarian law, which would have provided land grants for Pompey’s veterans. In response Pompey formed a secret political alliance with Caesar and Crassus. Caesar became consul for 59, and Celer opposed his program. Celer had been given Transalpine Gaul (largely equivalent to present-day France) for his province, but he died suddenly before leaving Rome. Rumour attributed his death to his wife, Clodia, sister of Caesar’s ally Publius Clodius.