All this talk of history reminds me of a historical multiple-choice game I once played that let you review your current place in history after every chapter. I think I might start doing something of the sort upon request, if only to hone my fake historian skills. Here's a tentative first go:
Quintus Cingulatus Atellus was a Roman soldier and orator active during the Civil Wars of the late Republic. Son of the more famous Lucius Cingulatus of Spanish fame, he is attested by both Livy and Sallust to have studied under Scaevola Pontifex, being one of his last students before his assassination in 83 BC. According to Livy, he served as military Tribune during Sertorius' subjugation of the Samnites. A few Samnite inscriptions from the time mention 'the Roman, dark-of-hair, who brought ruin to Aeclanum', leading several historians to speculate that it was Atellus (which means dark-haired) and not Sertorius, as is widely believed who sacked and fired the Samnite settlement of Aeclanum in 85 BC. Nevertheless, this is the last historical mention of Atellus outside a letter from Cicero to his tutor Scaevola, in which he mentions him among his notable peers in the city. Afterwards, he disappears from the historical record.