Mago, The name of diuerse men: whereof one was Annibals brother.
Magus, magi, m. g. Dictio Persica, qua apud eos sapiens significatur. eos enim Persæ magos vocant, quos Græci philosophos, Latini sapientes, Galli druydas, Aegyptij prophetas, siue sacerdores. Cicero. A wise manne: a great learned philosopher.Magus.A soothsayer: a diuinor: a magician: an inchanter.Artes magotum.Ouid.The artes and sciences of the Magicians. Portenta magorum. Cic.
Lewis and Short: Latin dictionary
Māgo and Māgon, ōnis, m., *ma/gwn. I.A Carthaginian, the brother of Hannibal, Nep. Hann. 7, 4; 8, 2; Liv. 21, 47; 4, 6; Aur. Vict. Vir. Ill. 49; Sil. 11, 556; and perhaps also id. 4, 564.—II.Another Carthaginian, the author of a work on agriculture, which was afterwards translated into Latin by order of the Roman Senate, Cic. Or. 1, 58, 249; Varr. R. R. 1, 1, 10; Col. 1, 1, 13; Plin. 18, 3, 5, 22.—III.A son of Hamilcar the elder, Just. 19, 2, 1.—IV.A town in the Balearic islands, now Port Mahon, Plin. 3, 5, 11, 77.