Quintus Fabricius

1st century BC) was a Roman Senator who was appointed suffect consul in 2 BC.

Quintus Fabricius is suspected to have been either the son or grandson of the Quintus Fabricius who was a Plebeian Tribune in 57 BC.

[1] A long-standing supporter of the party of Augustus, his loyalty was rewarded in 2 BC when the events that led to the banishment of Julia the Elder and the execution of a number of prominent Roman senators saw him granted a suffect consulship on 1 December, replacing Gaius Fufius Geminus, who may also have been caught up in the political crisis.

If this was so, then Augustus saw Fabricius as a man whose loyalty was unwavering during this time of crisis.

[2] He was married to a woman named Polla, probably an Antonia.