-
Aulus Hirtius (Latin: [ˈau̯lʊs ˈhɪrtɪ.ʊs]; c. 90 – 43 BC) was
consul of the
Roman Republic in 43 BC and a
writer on
military subjects. He was
killed during...
-
forces loyal to the
Senate under consuls Gaius Vibius Pansa and
Aulus Hirtius,
supported by the
forces of
Caesar Octavian,
versus the
forces of Mark...
-
written in
Latin prose sometime between 46 and 43 BC, was a
certain Aulus Hirtius, a
military officer serving under Caesar.
Burstein (2004, p. 30) writes...
-
legalized his
command of troops,
sending him to
relieve the
siege along with
Hirtius and
Pansa (the
consuls for 43 BC). He ****umed the
fasces on 7 January,...
-
southern Britain in the 50s BC, with the
eighth book
written by
Aulus Hirtius on the last two years. The
Commentarii de
Bello Civili (The
Civil War)...
-
supernatural apparition. It was
reported that
Caesar dined with Sallust,
Hirtius, Oppius,
Lucius Balbus and
Sulpicus Rufus on the
night after his famous...
- from
their governors. The Senate, led by
Cicero and the
consuls (Aulus
Hirtius and
Gaius Vibius Pansa),
attempted to woo
Julius Caesar's heir (today known...
- them even once in his
accounts of his
Gaulish conquests. Nor did
Aulus Hirtius, who
continued Caesar's
account of the
Gallic Wars
after Caesar's death...
-
supernatural apparition. It was
reported that
Caesar dined with Sallust,
Hirtius,
Gaius Oppius,
Lucius Cornelius Balbus, and
Servius Sulpicius Rufus on...
-
command on 1
January 43 BC, the
senate dispatched him
along with
consuls Hirtius and
Pansa to
defeat Antony and his
exhausted five legions. Antony's forces...