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On The War In Africa
On The War In Africa
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On The War In Africa

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- DBC AF Chap. 2, 34, 44,

- Governor of Sicily in charge of continuing preparations to bring in the new legions.

- Not found

Androstene - Praetor of Thessaly

DBC L3 Cap 80,

Not found

Titus Ampius Balbo Titus Ampius Balbus (Pompeian)

- DBC L3 Cap 105,

- He was a Roman politician, at the outbreak of the civil war he sided with Pompey, was then pardoned by Caesar.

- https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tito_Ampio_Balbo

Gaius Antonio - C. Antonio (?)

- DBC L3 Chap. 67,

- Roman military.

- Not found

Antonio? (Not identifiable with certainty)

- DBC HI Cap 17, 18,

- He seems to be a well-known person but the text does not specify who he is.

- Not found

Mark Antony - Marcus Antonius (Caesarian)

- DBC L1 Chapters 2, 11, 18,

- DBC L2 Cap. -

- DBC L3 Chapters 4, 10, 24, 26, 29, 30, 34, 40, 46, 65, 89,

- He was a Roman politician and general at the turn of the first century BC. His career remained linked to that of Julius Caesar of whom he was an important lieutenant. In addition to the civil war that opposed Caesar to Pompey, there is his personal story that saw him as the protagonist immediately after the assassination of Caesar with the brief war of Mutina (Modena), the Second Triunvirate followed by a new clash between the Romans. After the elimination of the Caesaricides and the division of the provinces, contrasts arose between the Triunvirates that soon led to the final clash with Octavian. He was the first politician who suffered the cancellation of his name and his effigy from all official acts of the Roman Republic. His political and human story is very interesting and not yet fully understood because of the aura of romanticism that envelops his turbulent relationship with Cleopatra. On Mark Antony and his descendants one can well notice the unjust and moral way of Augustus' government, characteristic before the de facto dictatorships, even if they were not concomitant. Another curiosity is linked to the use of defining a Marcantonio, men with an imposing appearance, which derives precisely from the physical appearance of Mark Antony.

- https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marco_Antonio

D. Eagle (Caesarian)

- DBC AF Caps. 62, 63, 67,

- Roman Military

- Not found

M. Aquinas (Pompeian)

- DBC AF Cap 57, 89,

- Roman Military

- Not found

Clodio Arquetio - Clodio Arguetius (Caesarian)

- FBC HI Cap 10, 23,

- Caesar's lieutenant

- Not found

Ariarate X (10) - Ariarathi X - King of Cappadocia

- DBC AL Cap. 66,

- Maybe it's Ariarate X (10) from Cappadocia

- https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ariarate_X_di_Cappadocia

Ariobarzane II (2) Eusebius (Roman ally)

- DBC AL Chap. 34, 66,

- King of Cappadocia who reigned for a few years.

- https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ariobarzane_II_di_Cappadocia

Ariobarzane III (3) Eusebius - Ariobarzanis (Roman ally)

- DBC L3 Chap. 4,

- DBC AL Cap. 34,

- King of Cappadocia of the first century B.C.

- https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ariobarzane_III_di_Cappadocia

Arsinoe IV (the fourth) Egyptian Princess

- DBC L3 Cap. 112,

- DBC AL Chap. 4, 33,

- Egyptian Princess, Cleopatra's younger sister who in her youth challenged Caesar by actively participating in the Alexandrine War through her advisor Ganymede who gave the Roman general a hard time. She ended up exiled to Antioch and later killed probably on the orders of the couple Mark Antony, Cleopatra.

- https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arsinoe_IV (https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arsinoe_IV)

Lucio Nonio Asprenate - Asprenas (Cesarian)

- DBC AF Cap 80,

- DBC HI Cap. 10,

- Roman praetor

- https://it.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Lucio_Nonio_Asprenate_(console_36_a.C.)&action=edit&redlink=1

C. Atheist C. Atheiuis (Pompeian)

- DBC AF Cap. 89,

- Roman Citizen

- Not found

P. Atrium P. Atrius (Pompeian)

- DBC AF Cap 68, 89,

- Roman Military

- Not found

C. Avienus (Caesarian)

- DBC AF Cap 54,

- Military Tribune of the Tenth Legion

- Not found

B

Luceio Balbo (Cesariano)

- DBC L3 Chap. 19,

- Not found

A. Bebio - A. Baebius (Knight of Asti)

- DBC HI Cap. 26,

- Roman Knight of the city of Asti, Piedmont, Italy

- Not found

Marcus Calpurnio Bibulus - Marcus Calpurnius Bibulus (Pompeian)

- DBC L3 Chap. 5, 7. 8, 14, 15, 18, 110

- He was one of the main opponents of Julius Caesar with whom he found himself sharing the Consulate but without being able to take away his visibility and operational capacity. Supported by Marcus Porcius Cato, he was able to hold other public offices including a governorate of Syria, when he returned he was in the middle of the civil war between Caesar and Pompey. Placed in command of the Adriatic fleet, he made a serious tactical error that would allow Caesar to reach the other coast. Having learned his lesson, he blocked all the Adriatic ports to prevent the arrival of further supplies but in 48 BC he fell ill and died at Corfu.

- https://it.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marco_Calpurnio_Bibulo

Bagud or Bogus, Bogos, Bogud, Bochus - King of Mauritania (Ally of Caesar)

- DBC AL Cap. 59, 60, 62,

- DBC AF Cap 23, 25,

- He is a king of Mauritania allied with Julius Caesar in the war against Pompey. He did not have very important roles in the first part of the civil war, in De Bello Alessandrino he intervened in the dispute between Cassius and Marcellus in a questionable way, while in 45 B.C. in Munda he was decisive in provoking the disbandment of Pompey's son's army.

- https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bogud

Tenth Junius Brutus Albinus - Decimus Iunius Brutus Albinus (Caesarian)

- DBC L1 Chap. 36, 56, 57,

- DBC L2 Chapters 3, 5, 6, 22,

- He is one of the most famous characters in history, his fame is closely linked to the murder of Julius Caesar and to a sentence pronounced by Caesar at the point of death. Brutus closely followed Julius Caesar's career, he was with him in Gaul and in the first two years of the civil war, particularly in the siege of Marseilles. Later he moved away a little bit from the flattery of the Senators belonging to the party against Caesar, this because Brutus was the descendant of a very important Roman family that had played a very important role in the passage from the monarchy to the Republic, That's why the conspirators thought it important that he was also at the Ides of March. He would later face the Second Triunvirate and be one of the four protagonists of the battle of Philippi. He is a very complex figure both from a historical and psychological point of view, one can assume that he found himself squeezed between characters capable of manipulating many people.

- https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decimo_Giunio_Bruto_Albino

C

Quintus Fufio Calenus - Quintus Fufius Calenus (Caesarian)

- DBC L1 Chapter 87,

- DBC L3 Chapters 8, 14, 26, 56, 106,

- DBC AL Chap. 44,

- He was a Roman politician and soldier of the first century B.C. always close to Caesar's positions, he took part both in the war in Spain in 49 B.C. and in the Alexandrine War, he played a fairly important role in the Aegean Sea but did not take part in the Battle of Farsalo. Following Caesar's death he sided with Mark Antony but died before the final battle.

- https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quinto_Fufio_Caleno