Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Lucius Vorenus and Titus Pullo are principal characters in the HBO/BBC/RAI original television series Rome. Vorenus is played by actor Kevin McKidd and Pullo by Ray Stevenson. Unlike the historical centurions, the fictional characters are members of the 13th Legion (Legio XIII Gemina), an ally of Caesar, and particularly of Octavian.

  2. Se llamaban Tito Pulón y Lucio Voreno (en latín Titus Pullo y Lucius Vorenus). El motivo de su fama no es otro que el mismísimo Julio César los menciona en sus Comentarios sobre la Guerra de las Galias , donde relata cómo ambos mantenían una enconada rivalidad personal por ascender en el escalafón.

  3. Tito Pullo es un personaje ficticio de la serie de televisión Roma, interpretado por el actor Ray Stevenson. A diferencia de otros personajes no históricos, este personaje está inspirado en el centurión Tito Pulón que aparece en los Comentarios a la guerra de las Galias de Julio César .

  4. Titus Pullo is a Roman soldier and best friend of Lucius Vorenus. Coarse, good-humored, talkative, and an eternal optimist, Titus Pullo is sometimes prone to extreme fits of rage. He is extremely confident in his own fighting abilities as he is often seen successfully fighting groups of men...

  5. 14 de may. de 2022 · After found guilty of murder, Pullo has to take back his freedom by sheding blood. * Janus, two face-god invoked when we're about to change (like death). *Gaia is the Mother Earth, in which...

  6. Vorenus defense of Pullo lands him in an unexpected position of power. The official website for Rome (LWM) on HBO, featuring interviews, schedule information, behind the scenes exclusives, and more.

  7. The series primarily chronicles the lives and deeds of the rich, powerful, and historically significant, but it also focuses on the lives, fortunes, families, and acquaintances of two common men: Lucius Vorenus and Titus Pullo, fictionalized versions of a pair of Roman soldiers mentioned in Caesar's Commentarii de Bello Gallico.