Titinius
Brutus kills himself, as does cassius.
Committed suicide with the same sword that Cassius killed himself with.
titinius was actually not captured by Antony's army, it was actually brutus's armys there. when titinius goes back to Cassius to tell him, he finds Cassius dead. titinius then kills himself with the same sword the Cassius killed himself with.
Titinius killed Cassius with Cassius' sword.
He stabs himself with Cassius's sword at the very end of Act V Scene 3. "Come Cassius' sword and find Titinius' heart."
Cassius killed himself because he thought Titinius was dead. Titinius killed himself with that same sword, after realizing that Cassius killed himself believing that he was dead.
heres the answer: to go look in the tents to see if the people in them are friends or foes
He didn't. He wasn't there. He didn't stab Cassius either, although he held the sword that Cassius stabbed himself with.
Haemon, who is Antigone's first cousin and fiance, kills himself with his own sword after finding her dead body hanging from her halter.
He stabbed him with the sword Cassius used to stab Caesar.
Cassius was killed with the same sword that he used to kill Caesar. "Caesar, thou art revenged,/ Even with the sword that killed thee." (5.3.46-47) - Cassius
Brutus asks Strato to kill him so Brutus wouldn't have to die by the enemies sword *<edit> Because the last answer was rather strange I decided to help. Cassius killed himself once he thought his friend (Titinius or something like that) was kidnapped by the enemy. He asked Pindarus (or how ever you spell his name) to kill him. Brutus kills himself later (thanks to the help of Strato) cause he's sure they're are going to lose to Antony. That's how it works in the play Julius Caesar but for all I know the top answer could be true. I rarely look into things deep. 2nd edit brutus kills himself because he feels bad for killing Caesar for no good reason. Cassius kills himself b/c he thought titunius was kidnapped and dead. after all this, Antony, octavius and lepidus are in charge of rome