About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 33. Chapters: People from Annonay, People from Aubenas, People from Guilherand-Granges, People from Le Teil, People from Privas, People from Tournon-sur-Rhone, Montgolfier brothers, Gaius Valerius Troucillus, Franck Sauzee, Paul Merault Monneron, Jean-Gabriel Charvet, Leonce Verny, Henri Charriere, Augustin Barruel, Francois Antoine de Boissy d'Anglas, Antoine-Guillaume Rampon, Jean-Marc Gounon, Francois-Joachim de Pierre de Bernis, Marc Seguin, Joseph Canteloube, Remy Martin, Anne de Joyeuse, Cyril Thereau, Antoine Court, Auguste Bravais, Albert Seibel, Amandine Leynaud, Gaius Valerius Caburus, Jacques Dupin, Leonce Vieljeux, Maurice Grimaud, Anthony Mounier, Pierre Broue, Louis Auguste Sabatier, Leon-Alexandre Delhomme, Cedric Barbosa, Louis Leopold Ollier, Laurent Paganelli, Marcel Astier, Benoit Peschier, Pierre Bertrand de Colombier, Honore Flaugergues, Mickael Pontal, Francois de Tournon, Andre Buffiere, Christophe Edaleine, Renaud Cohade, Pascal Fugier, Louis Georges Gouy, Jules Aime Battandier, Florent Gache, Olivier de Serres, Joseph-Christian-Ernest Bourret, Louis Monneron, Delphine Combe, Roger Dumas, Olivier Dussopt, Alexis Tendil, Louis Nicolas, Joseph Francois Augustin Monneron, Pierre Antoine Monneron, Jocelyne Villeton, Andre Joseph Abrial. Excerpt: Gaius Valerius Troucillus or Procillus (fl. mid-1st century BC) was a Helvian Celt who served as an interpreter and envoy for Julius Caesar in the first year of the Gallic Wars. Troucillus was a second-generation Roman citizen, and is one of the few ethnic Celts who can be identified both as a citizen and by affiliation with a Celtic polity. His father, Caburus, and a brother are named in Book 7 of Caesar's Bellum Gallicum as defenders of Helvian territory against a force sent by Vercingetorix in 52 BC. Troucillus plays a role in two episodes...