(1) Inde Rōmam regressus tertiō sē cōnsulem fēcit cum M. Aemiliō Lepidō, quī et magister equitum dictātōrī ante annum fuerat. Inde in Āfricam profectus est, ubi īnfīnita nōbilitās cum Iubā Maurentāniae rēge bellum reparāverat.
(2) Ducēs autem Rōmānī erant P. Cornēlius Scīpiō ex genere antīquissimō Scīpiōnis Āfricānī (hīc etiam socer Pompeiī fuerat), M. Petreius, Q. Vārus, M. Porcius Catō, L. Cornēlius Faustus, Sullae dictātōris fīlius.
(3) Contrā hōs commissō proeliō post multās dīmicātiōnēs victor fuit Caesar. Catō, Scīpiō, Petreius, Iuba ipsī sē occīdērunt. Faustus, Sullae quondam dictātōris fīlius, Pompeiī gener, ā Caesare interfectus est.
notes
Battle of Thapsus, 46 BCE
(1) regressus: supply Caesar
cum M. Aemiliō Lepidō: M. Aemilius Lepidus was praetor in 49 BCE and governed Nearer Spain in 48–47 BCE (Bird).
in Āfricam profectus est: In December 47 BCE Caesar landed in Africa where within four months he defeated the Pompeians under Pompey’s father-in-law, Q. Metellus Scipio (originally P. Cornelius Scipio, he had been adopted by Metellus Pius), at Thapsus on the Tunisian coast. Caesar's troops massacred most of the Pompeians and only Labienus and Sextus Pompey escaped to Spain (Bird).
īnfīnita nōbilitās: i.e. a whole lot of Roman senators
cum Iubā: see Juba
(2) Ducēs autem Rōmānī: Caesar’s opponents included Quintus Caecilius Metellus Pius Scipio Nasica, Marcus Petreius, Publius Attius Varus, Marcus Porcius Cato (Cato the Younger), and Faustus Cornelius Sulla.
M. Porcius Catō: Cato the Younger was the great-grandson of the M. Porcius Cato mentioned in Brev. 4.23. He is known in history as Cato Uticēnsis, "of Utica," the place where he committed suicide. He was famous for the austerity of his manners and for his studied imitation of the customs of early days (Hazzard).
hīc etiam: "he also," as well as Caesar (Hazzard)
Sullae dictātōris fīlius: Faustus Cornelius Sulla was the son of the famous dictator Sulla, whose reign is covered in Brev. 4.27.
(3) commissō proeliō: ablative absolute with perfect passive participle (AG 419)
victor fuit: this was known as the Battle of Thapsus.