Publius Servilius Casca

He is believed to have died at the Battle of Phillipi either by suicide or at the hands of Octavian's forces.

[1] Despite his being initially a childhood friend of Caesar, Casca and his brother Titedius[2] joined in the assassination.

Casca struck the first blow,[3] attacking Caesar from behind and hitting his bare shoulders, after Tillius Cimber had distracted the dictator by grabbing his toga.

However, after Octavian marched on Rome during the War of Mutina, Casca fled the city and joined Marcus Junius Brutus and Gaius Cassius Longinus, the leaders of the assassins, in the Liberators' civil war against the Second Triumvirate of Antony, Lepidus, and Octavian.

[6] Elmley Lovett in England is the place where a coin hoard was found to include a rare Roman Republican silver denarius of Brutus with Casca Longus struck at a mint moving with Brutus 43-42 BC.

Cimber (centre) holds out the petition and pulls at Caesar's tunic, while Casca behind prepares to strike: painting by Karl von Piloty .
A coin celebrating Casca and Brutus