Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Marcus Scaptius, appointed military tribune of Cappadocia by Cicero during his government of Cilicia. [ 7 ] [ 8 ] Scaptia M. l. Hilara, a freedwoman, and the wife of the freedman Marcus Ceppuleius Bito, with whom she was buried at Verteneglio in Venetia and Histria , in a tomb built by their son, Marcus Ceppuleius Pudens, dating to the late ...
Together with Marcus Scaptius, a client of Brutus, Matinius had loaned a considerable amount to the people of Salamis. [ 1 ] Titus Matinius T. f. Hymenaeus, [ i ] named in an inscription found near the abbey of San Pietro at Ferentillo in Umbria .
Marcus is a masculine given name of Ancient Roman pre-Christian origin derived either from Etruscan Marce of unknown meaning or referring to the god Mars. Mars was identified as the Roman god of War.
Marcus Ostorius Scapula (died AD 65) was a Roman senator, who was active during the Principate. He was suffect consul in the second half of the year 59 as the colleague of Titus Sextius Africanus . [1]
Marcus Aemilius Scaurus was the son of Marcus Aemilius Scaurus (Praetor 56 BC) and Mucia Tertia, former wife of Pompey the Great. Sextus Pompey was his half-brother. He accompanied Sextus to Asia after the defeat of his fleet in Sicily by Octavian's general Marcus Agrippa. In 35 BC, he betrayed his brother to Marcus Antonius's generals.
Marcus Artorius (or Marcus Artorius Asclepiades) was physician of ancient Rome who was one of the followers of Asclepiades of Bithynia, and afterwards became the physician of the Roman emperor Augustus. The historian Plutarch even describes Artorius and Augustus has having been friends (philoi).
In July 36 BC the two fleets sailed from Italy, and another fleet, provided by the third triumvir, Marcus Aemilius Lepidus, sailed from Africa, to attack Sextus's stronghold in Sicily. In August, Agrippa was able to defeat Sextus in a naval battle near Mylae (modern Milazzo ); that same month, Octavian was defeated and seriously wounded in a ...
He eventually does so, with Naevia, Agron, and many others, and although victory seems near, it is soon discovered they've been led to a trap, and Crixus is eventually beheaded by Tiberius, the son of Marcus Crassus, who leads the army against Spartacus.