|
Titus Livius, Periochae 116 (ca. A.D. 9): Ex his causis conspiratione in eum facta, cuius capita fuerant M. Brutus et C. Cassius et ex Caesaris partibus Dec. Brutus et C. Trebonius, in Pompeii curia occisus est viginti tribus vulneribus, occupatumque ab interfectoribus eius Capitolium. For these reasons, with a conspiracy having been made against him, of whom the leaders were Marcus Brutus and Gaius Cassius and from the partisans of Caesar Decimus Brutus and Gaius Trebonius, he [Caesar] was killed in the curia of Pompeius by twenty-three wounds, and the Capitol was seized by his killers. (U. K. Vestal, trans.) |