Aulus Caecina, son of Aulus Caecina who was defended by Cicero (69 BC) in a speech still extant, took the side of Pompey in the civil wars, and published a violent tirade against Caesar, for which he was banished.
He recanted in a work called Querelae, and by the intercession of his friends, above all, of Cicero, obtained pardon from Caesar. Caecina was regarded as an important authority on the Etruscan system of divination (Etrusca Disciplina), which he endeavoured to place on a scientific footing by harmonizing its theories with the doctrines of the Stoics.
Considerable fragments of his work (dealing with lightning) are to be found in Seneca (Naturales Quaestiones, ii. 31_49). Caecina was on intimate terms with Cicero, who speaks of him as a gifted and eloquent man and was no doubt considerably indebted to him in his own treatise De Divinatione. Some of their correspondence is preserved in Cicero's letters (Ad Fam. vi. 5_8; see also ix. and xiii. 66).
AulusCaecina, son of AulusCaecina who was defended by Cicero (69 B.C.) in a speech still extant, took the side of Pompey in the civil wars, and published a violent tirade against Caesar, for which he was banished.
Caecina was regarded as an important authority on the Etruscan system of divination (Etrusca Discipline), which he endeavoured to place on a scientific footing by harmonizing its theories with the doctrines of the Stoics.
AulusCaecina Alienus, Roman general, was quaestor of Baetica in Spain (A.D. On the death of Nero, he attached himself to Galba, who appointed him to the command of a legion in upper Germany.
A complaint having been made to the emperor that he was needlessly protracting hostilities, he was recalled, but he was consul (for the second time) in 66.
During the civil war he fought on the side of Otho against Vitellius, and obtained a considerable success against AulusCaecina Alienus (one of the Vitellian generals) near Cremona, but did not follow it up.
When Caecina had been joined by Fabius Valens, Paulinus advised his colleagues not to risk a decisive battle, but his advice was disregarded, and Otho (q.v.) was utterly defeated at Bedriacum.