LUCIUS DOMITIUS AHENOBARBUS, son of the above, and hus band of Porcia the sister of Cato Uticensis. Being a convinced aristocrat he opposed Pompey and Caesar while they were united, and when their friendship cooled, attached himself to Pompey. He was consul in 54 B.C., and in 49 B.c. he was appointed by the senate to succeed Caesar as governor of Gaul. After the outbreak of the civil war he commanded the Pompeian troops at Corfinium, but was obliged to surrender. Although treated with great generosity by Caesar, he stirred up Massilia (Marseille) to an unsuccessful resistance against him. After its surrender, he joined Pompey in Greece and was slain in the flight after the battle of Pharsalus (Caesar, Bellwn Civile, iii.; Dio Cassius xxxix., xli.; Appian, B.C. ii. 82).