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Julius Caesar

Gaius Julius Caesar (/ˈszər/, SEE-zər; Latin: [ˈɡaːiʊs ˈjuːliʊs ˈkae̯sar]; 12 July 100 BC – 15 March 44 BC) was a Roman general and statesman. A member of the First Triumvirate, Caesar led the Roman armies in the Gallic Wars before defeating his political rival Pompey in a civil war, and subsequently became dictator from 49 BC until his assassination in 44 BC. He played a critical role in the events that led to the demise of the Roman Republic and the rise of the Roman Empire.

Julius Caesar
The Tusculum portrait, possibly the only surviving sculpture of Caesar made during his lifetime, now housed at the Archaeological Museum in Turin, Italy
Born12 July 100 BC[1]
Died15 March 44 BC (aged 55)
Theatre of Pompey, Ancient Rome
Cause of deathAssassination (stab wounds)
Resting placeTemple of Caesar in Rome
41°53′31″N 12°29′10″E / 41.891943°N 12.486246°E / 41.891943; 12.486246
Occupations
  • Politician
  • soldier
  • author
Notable work
Office
Spouses
PartnerCleopatra
Children
Parents
AwardsCivic Crown
Military service
Years of service81–45 BC
Battles/wars

In 60 BC, Caesar, Crassus, and Pompey formed the First Triumvirate, an informal political alliance that dominated Roman politics for several years. Their attempts to amass political power were opposed by many in the senate, among them Cato the Younger with the private support of Cicero. Caesar rose to become one of the most powerful politicians in the Roman Republic through a string of military victories in the Gallic Wars, completed by 51 BC, which greatly extended Roman territory. During this time he both invaded Britain and built a bridge across the Rhine river. These achievements and the support of his veteran army threatened to eclipse the standing of Pompey, who had realigned himself with the Senate after the death of Crassus in 53 BC. With the Gallic Wars concluded, the Senate ordered Caesar to step down from his military command and return to Rome. In 49 BC, Caesar openly defied the Senate's authority by crossing the Rubicon and marching towards Rome at the head of an army.[3] This began Caesar's civil war, which he won, leaving him in a position of near-unchallenged power and influence in 45 BC.

After assuming control of government, Caesar began a program of social and governmental reforms, including the creation of the Julian calendar. He gave citizenship to many residents of far regions of the Roman Republic. He initiated land reform and support for veterans. He centralized the bureaucracy of the Republic and was eventually proclaimed "dictator for life" (dictator perpetuo). His populist and authoritarian reforms angered the elites, who began to conspire against him. On the Ides of March (15 March) 44 BC, Caesar was assassinated by a group of rebellious senators led by Brutus and Cassius, who stabbed him to death.[4] A new series of civil wars broke out and the constitutional government of the Republic was never fully restored. Caesar's great-nephew and adopted heir Octavian, later known as Augustus, rose to sole power after defeating his opponents in the last civil war of the Roman Republic. Octavian set about solidifying his power, and the era of the Roman Empire began.

Caesar was an accomplished author and historian as well as a statesman; much of his life is known from his own accounts of his military campaigns. Other contemporary sources include the letters and speeches of Cicero and the historical writings of Sallust. Later biographies of Caesar by Suetonius and Plutarch are also important sources. Caesar is considered by many historians to be one of the greatest military commanders in history.[5] His cognomen was subsequently adopted as a synonym for "Emperor"; the title "Caesar" was used throughout the Roman Empire, giving rise to modern descendants such as Kaiser and Tsar. He has frequently appeared in literary and artistic works, and his political philosophy, known as Caesarism, has inspired politicians into the modern era.

Early life and career

 
Gaius Marius, Caesar's uncle and the husband of Caesar's aunt Julia. He was an enemy of Sulla and took the city with Lucius Cornelius Cinna in 87 BC.

Gaius Julius Caesar was born into a patrician family, the gens Julia on 12 July 100 BC.[6] The family claimed to have immigrated to Rome from Alba Longa during the seventh century BC after the third king of Rome, Tullus Hostilius, took and destroyed their city. The family also claimed descent from Julus, the son of Aeneas and founder of Alba Longa. Given that Aeneas was a son of Venus, this made the clan divine. This genealogy had not yet been taken its final form by the first century but the clan's claimed descent from Venus was more well established in public consciousness.[7] There is no evidence that Caesar himself was born by Caesarian section; such operations entailed the death of the mother, but Caesar's mother lived for decades after his birth and no ancient sources record any difficulty with the birth.[8]

Despite their ancient pedigree, the Julii Caesares were not especially politically influential during the middle republic. The first person known to have had the cognomen Caesar was a praetor in 208 BC during the Second Punic War. The family's first consul was in 157 BC, though their political fortunes had recovered in the early first century, producing two consuls in 91 and 90 BC.[9] Caesar's homonymous father was moderately successful politically. He married Aurelia, a member of the politically influential Aurelii Cottae, producing – along with Caesar – two daughters. Buoyed by his own marriage and his sister's marriage (the dictator's aunt) with the extremely influential Gaius Marius, he also served on the Saturninian land commission in 103 BC and was elected praetor some time between 92 and 85 BC; he served as proconsular governor of Asia for two years, likely 91–90 BC.[10]

Life under Sulla and military service

 
Sulla, depicted on a coin mined by Quintus Pompeius Rufus in 54 BC. Sulla took the city in 82 BC, purged his political enemies, and instituted new constitutional reforms.

Caesar's father did not seek a consulship during the domination of Lucius Cornelius Cinna and instead chose retirement.[11] During Cinna's dominance, Caesar was named as flamen Dialis (a priest of Jupiter) which led to his marriage to Cinna's daughter, Cornelia. The religious taboos of the priesthood would have forced Caesar to forego a political career; the appointment – one of the highest non-political honours – indicates that there were few expectations of a major career for Caesar.[12] In early 84 BC, Caesar's father died suddenly.[13] After Sulla's victory in the civil war (82 BC), Cinna's acta were annulled. Sulla consequently ordered Caesar to abdicate and divorce Cinna's daughter. Caesar refused, implicitly questioning the legitimacy of Sulla's annulment. Sulla may have put Caesar on the proscription lists, though scholars are mixed.[14] Caesar then went into hiding before his relatives and contacts among the Vestal Virgins were able to intercede on his behalf.[15] They then reached a compromise where Caesar would resign his priesthood but keep his wife and chattels; Sulla's alleged remark he saw "in [Caesar] many Mariuses"[16] is apocryphal.[17]

 
Bust, from the imperial period, of a man – in this case Augustus – wearing the civic crown (Latin: corona civica). Caesar won the civic crown for his bravery at the Siege of Mytilene in 81 BC.

Caesar then left Italy to serve in the staff of the governor of Asia, Marcus Minucius Thermus. While there, he travelled to Bithynia to collect naval reinforcements; he stayed some time as a guest of the king, Nicomedes IV, though later invective connected Caesar to a homosexual relation with the monarch.[18][19] He then served at the Siege of Mytilene where he won the civic crown for saving the life of a fellow citizen in battle. The privileges of the crown – the senate was supposed to stand on a holder's entrance and holders were permitted to wear the crown at public occasions – whetted Caesar's appetite for honours. After the capture of the Mytilene, Caesar transferred to the staff of Publius Servilius Vatia in Cilicia before learning of Sulla's death in 78 BC and returning home immediately.[20] He was alleged to have wanted to join in on the consul Lepidus' revolt that year[21] but this is likely literary embellishment of Caesar's desire for tyranny from a young age.[22]

Afterward, Caesar attacked some of the Sullan aristocracy in the courts but was unsuccessful in his attempted prosecution of Gnaeus Cornelius Dolabella in 77 BC, who had recently returned from a proconsulship in Macedonia. Going after a less well-connected senator, he was successful the next year in prosecuting Gaius Antonius Hybrida (later consul in 63 BC) for profiteering from the proscriptions but was forestalled when a tribune interceded on Antonius' behalf.[23] After these oratorical attempts, Caesar left Rome for Rhodes seeking the tutelage of the rhetorician Apollonius Molon.[24] While travelling, he was intercepted and ransomed by pirates in a story that was later much embellished. According to Plutarch and Suetonius, he was freed after paying a ransom of fifty talents and responded by returning with a fleet to capture and execute the pirates. The recorded sum for the ransom is literary embellishment and it is more likely that the pirates were sold into slavery per Velleius Paterculus.[25] His studies were interrupted by the outbreak of the Third Mithridatic War over the winter of 75 and 74 BC; Caesar is alleged to have gone around collecting troops in the province at the locals' expense and leading them successfully against Mithridates' forces.[26]

Entrance to politics

While absent from Rome, in 73 BC, Caesar was co-opted into the pontifices in place of his deceased relative Gaius Aurelius Cotta. The promotion marked him as a well-accepted member of the aristocracy with great future prospects in his political career.[27] Caesar decided to return shortly thereafter and on his return was elected one of the military tribunes for 71 BC.[28] There is no evidence that Caesar served in war – even though the war on Spartacus was on-going – during his term; he did, however, agitate for the removal of the Sulla's disabilities on the plebeian tribunate and for those who supported Lepidus' revolt to be pardoned.[29] These advocacies were common and uncontroversial.[30] The next year, 70 BC, Pompey and Crassus were consuls and brought legislation restoring the plebeian tribunate's rights; one of the tribunes, with Caesar supporting, then brought legislation pardoning the Lepidan exiles.[31]

For his quaestorship in 69 BC, Caesar was allotted to serve under Gaius Antistius Vetus in Hispania Ulterior. His election also gave him a lifetime seat in the senate. However, before he left, his aunt Julia, the widow of Marius, died; soon afterwards his wife Cornelia died shortly after bearing his only legitimate child, Julia. He gave eulogies for both at public funerals.[32] During Julia's funeral, Caesar displayed the images of his aunt's husband Marius, whose memory had been suppressed after Sulla's victory in the civil war. Some of the Sullan nobles – including Quintus Lutatius Catulus – who had suffered under the Marian regime objected, but by this point depictions of husbands in aristocratic women's funerary processions was common.[33] Contra Plutarch,[34] Caesar's action here was likely in keeping with a political trend for reconciliation and normalisation rather than a display of renewed factionalism.[35] Caesar quickly remarried, taking the hand of Sulla's granddaughter Pompeia.[36]

Aedileship and election as pontifex maximus

For much of this period, Caesar was one of Pompey's supporters. Caesar joined with Pompey in the late 70s to support restoration of tribunician rights; his support for the law recalling the Lepidan exiles may have been related to the same tribune's bill to grant lands to Pompey's veterans. Caesar also supported the lex Gabinia in 67 BC granting Pompey an extraordinary command against piracy in the Mediterranean and also supported the lex Manilia in 66 BC to reassign the Third Mithridatic War from its then-commander Lucullus to Pompey.[37]

Four years after his aunt Julia's funeral, in 65 BC, Caesar served as curule aedile and staged lavish games that won him further attention and popular support.[38] He also restored the trophies won by Marius, and taken down by Sulla, over Jugurtha and the Cimbri.[39] According to Plutarch's narrative, the trophies were restored overnight to the applause and tears of joy of the onlookers; any sudden and secret restoration of this sort would not have been possible – architects, restorers, and other workmen would have to have been hired and paid for – nor would it have been likely that the work could have been done in a single night.[40] It is more likely that Caesar was merely restoring his family's public monuments – consistent with standard aristocratic practice and the virtue of pietas – and, over objections from Catulus, these actions were broadly supported by the senate.[41]

In 63 BC, Caesar stood for the praetorship and also for the post of pontifex maximus,[42] who was the head of the College of Pontiffs and the highest ranking state religious official. In the pontifical election before the tribes, Caesar faced two influential senators: Quintus Lutatius Catulus and Publius Servilius Isauricus. Caesar came out victorious. Many scholars have expressed astonishment that Caesar's candidacy was taken seriously, but this was not without historical precedent.[43] Ancient sources allege that Caesar paid huge bribes or was shamelessly ingratiating;[44] that no charge was ever laid alleging this implies that bribery alone is insufficient to explain his victory.[45] If bribes or other monies were needed, they may have been underwritten by Pompey, whom Caesar at this time supported and who opposed Catulus' candidacy.[46]

Many sources also assert that Caesar supported the land reform proposals brought that year by plebeian tribune Publius Servilius Rullus, however, there are no ancient sources so attesting.[47] Caesar also engaged in a collateral manner in the trial of Gaius Rabirius by one of the plebeian tribunes – Titus Labienus – for the murder of Saturninus in accordance with a senatus consultum ultimum some forty years earlier.[48][49] The most famous event of the year was the Catilinarian conspiracy. While some of Caesar's enemies, including Catulus, alleged that he participated in the conspiracy,[50] the chance that he was a participant is extremely small.[51]

Praetorship

Caesar won his election to the praetorship in 63 BC easily and, as one of the praetor-elects, spoke out that December in the senate against executing certain citizens who had been arrested in the city conspiring with Gauls in furtherance of the conspiracy.[52] Caesar's proposal at the time is not entirely clear: the earlier sources assert that he advocated life imprisonment without trial; the later sources assert he instead wanted the conspirators imprisoned pending trial. Most accounts agree that Caesar supported confiscation of the conspirator's property.[53] Caesar likely advocated the former, which was a compromise position that would place the senate within the bounds of the lex Sempronia de capite civis, and was initially successful in swaying the body; a later intervention by Cato, however, swayed the senate at the end for execution.[54]

 
Cicero, consul in 63 BC, depicted in an 1889 fresco denouncing Catiline and exposing his conspiracy before the senate. When conspirators within the city were later arrested, Cicero referred their fate to the senate, triggering a debate in which Caesar as praetor-elect participated.

During his year as praetor, Caesar first attempted to deprive his enemy Catulus of the honour of completing the rebuilt Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus, accusing him of embezzling funds and threatening to bring legislation to reassign it to Pompey. This proposal was quickly dropped amid near-universal opposition.[55] He then supported the attempt by plebeian tribune Metellus Nepos to transfer the command against Catiline from the consul of 63, Gaius Antonius Hybrida, to Pompey. After a violent meeting of the comitia tributa in the forum, where Metellus came into fisticuffs with his tribunician colleagues Cato and Quintus Minucius Thermus,[56] the senate passed a decree against Metellus – Suetonius claims that both Nepos and Caesar were deposed from their magistracies; this would have been a constitutional impossibility[57] – which led Caesar to distance himself from the proposals: hopes for a provincial command and need to repair relations with the aristocracy took priority.[58] He also was engaged in the Bona Dea affair, where Publius Clodius Pulcher snuck into Caesar's house sacrilegiously during a female religious observance; Caesar avoided any part of the affair by divorcing his wife immediately – claiming that his wife needed to be "above suspicion"[59] – but there is no indication that Caesar supported Clodius in any way.[60]

 
Bronze bust of Cato, Caesar's principal opponent in the Catilinarian debate and also a personal enemy. Cato may have been responsible for the law requiring declarations of candidacy in person within the pomerium.[61]

After his praetorship, Caesar was appointed to govern Hispania Ulterior pro consule.[62] Deeply indebted from his campaigns for the praetorship and for the pontificate, Caesar required military victory beyond the normal provincial extortion to pay them off.[63] He campaigned against the Callaeci and Lusitani and seized the Callaeci capital in northwestern Spain, bringing Roman troops to the Atlantic and seizing enough plunder to pay his debts.[64] Claiming to have completed the peninsula's conquest, he made for home after having been hailed imperator.[65] When he arrived home in the summer of 60 BC, he was then forced to choose between a triumph and election to the consulship: either he could remain outside the pomerium (Rome's sacred boundary) awaiting a triumph or cross the boundary, giving up his command and triumph, to make a declaration of consular candidacy.[66] Attempts to waive the requirement for the declaration to be made in person were filibustered in the senate by Caesar's enemy Cato, even though the senate seemed to support the exception.[67] Faced with the choice between a triumph and the consulship, Caesar chose the consulship.[68]

First consulship and the Gallic wars

 
A denarius depicting Julius Caesar, dated to February–March 44 BC – the goddess Venus is shown on the reverse, holding Victoria and a scepter. Caption: CAESAR IMP. M. / L. AEMILIVS BVCA.

Caesar stood for the consulship of 59 BC along with two other candidates. His political position at the time was strong: he had supporters among the families which had supported Marius or Cinna; his connection with the Sullan aristocracy were good; his support of Pompey had won him support in turn. His support for reconciliation in continuing aftershocks of the civil war were popular in all parts of society.[69] With the support of Crassus, who supported Caesar's joint ticket with one Lucius Lucceius, Caesar won. Lucceius, however, did not and the voters returned Marcus Calpurnius Bibulus instead, one of Caesar's long-standing personal and political enemies.[70][71]

First consulship

After the elections, Caesar reconciled Pompey and Crassus, two political foes, in a three-way alliance misleadingly[72] termed the "First Triumvirate" in modern times. Caesar was still at work in December of 60 BC attempting to find allies for his consulship and the alliance was finalised only some time around its start.[73] Pompey and Crassus joined in pursuit of two respective goals: the ratification of Pompey's eastern conquests and the bailing out of tax farmers in Asia, many of whom were Crassus' clients. All three sought the extended patronage of land grants, with Pompey especially seeking the promised land grants for his veterans.[74]

Caesar's first act was to publish the minutes of the senate and the assemblies, signalling the senate's accountability to the public. He then brought in the senate a bill – crafted to avoid objections to previous land reform proposals and any indications of radicalism – to purchase property from willing sellers to distribute to Pompey's veterans and the urban poor. It would be administered by a board of twenty, Caesar would be excluded, and financed by Pompey's plunder and territorial gains.[75] Referring it to the senate in hopes that it would take up the matter to show its beneficence for the people,[76] there was little opposition and the obstructionism that occurred was largely unprincipled, firmly opposing it not on grounds of public interest but rather opposition to Caesar's political advancement.[75] Unable to overcome Cato's filibustering, he moved the bill before the people; at a public meeting, Caesar's co-consul Bibulus threatened a permanent veto for the entire year. This clearly violated the people's well-established legislative sovereignty[77] and triggered a riot in which his fasces were broken, symbolising popular rejection of his magistracy.[78] The bill was then voted through. Bibulus attempted to induce the senate to nullify it on grounds it was passed by violence and contrary to the auspices; the senate refused.[79]

Caesar also brought and passed a one-third write-down of tax farmers' arrears for Crassus and ratification of Pompey's eastern settlements. Both bills were passed with little or no debate in the senate.[80] Caesar then moved to lift the extend his agrarian bill to Campania some time in May; this may be when Bibulus withdrew to his house.[81] Pompey, shortly thereafter, also wed Caesar's daughter Julia to seal their alliance.[82] An ally of Caesar's, plebeian tribune Publius Vatinius, moved the lex Vatinia assigning the provinces of Illyricum and Cisalpine Gaul to Caesar for five years.[83][84] Suetonius' claim that the senate had assigned to Caesar the silvae callesque (woods and tracks) is likely an exaggeration; fear of Gallic invasion had grown in 60 BC and it is more likely that the consuls had been assigned to Italy and that Caesarian partisans dismissed this defensive posture as "mere 'forest tracks'".[85] The senate was also persuaded to assign to Caesar the Transalpine Gaul as well, subject to annual renewal, likely to control his ability to make war on the far side of the Alps.[86]

Some time in the year, perhaps after the passage of bill distributing the Campanian land,[87] after these political defeats, Bibulus to withdraw to his house to issue edicts in absentia purporting unprecedentedly to cancel all days on which Caesar or his allies could hold votes for religious reasons.[88] Cato too attempted symbolic gestures against it which allowed him and his allies, allowing them to "feign victimisation"; these tactics were successful in building revulsion to Caesar and his allies through the year.[89][90] This opposition caused serious political difficulties to Caesar and his allies, belying the common depiction of triumviral political supremacy".[91] When his consulship ended, Caesar's legislation was challenged by two of the new praetors but discussion in the senate stalled and was regardless dropped. He stayed near the city until some time around mid-March.[92]

Caesar in Gaul

 
The extent of the Roman Republic in 40 BC after Caesar's conquests

During the Gallic Wars, Caesar wrote his Commentaries thereon, which were acknowledged even in his time as a Latin literary masterwork. Meant to document Caesar's campaigns in his own words and maintain support in Rome for his military operations and career, he produced some ten volumes covering operations in Gaul from 58 to 52 BC.[93] Each was likely produced in the year following the events described and was likely aimed at the general, or at least literate, population in Rome;[94] the account is naturally partial to Caesar – his defeats are excused and victories highlighted – but it is almost the sole source for events in Gaul in this period.[95]

Gaul in 58 BC was in the midst of some instability. Tribes had raided into Transalpine Gaul and there was an on-going struggle between two tribes in central Gaul which collaterally involved Roman alliances and politics. The divisions within the Gauls – they were no unified bloc – would be exploited in the coming years.[96] The first engagement was in April 58 BC when Caesar met the migrating Helvetii from moving through Roman territory, allegedly because he feared they would unseat a Roman ally.[97] Building a wall, he stopped their movement near Geneva and – after raising two legions – defeated them in at the Battle of Bibracte before forcing them to return to their original homes.[98] He was drawn further north responding to requests of Gallic tribes, including the Aedui, for aid against Ariovistus – king of the Suebi and a declared friend of Rome by the senate during Caesar's own consulship – and he defeated them at the Battle of Vosges.[99] Wintering in northeastern Gaul near the Belgae in the winter of 58–57, Caesar's forward military position triggered an uprising to remove his troops; able to eke out a victory at the Battle of the Sabis, Caesar spent much of 56 BC suppressing the Belgae and dispersing his troops to campaign across much of Gaul, including against the Veneti in what is now Brittany.[100] At this point, almost all of Gaul – except its central regions – falling under Roman subjugation.[101]

 
Vercingetorix throws down his arms at the feet of Julius Caesar, painting by Lionel Royer in 1899. Musée Crozatier, Le Puy-en-Velay, France.

Seeking to buttress his military reputation, he engaged Germans attempting to cross the Rhine, which marked it as a Roman frontier;[101] displaying Roman engineering prowess, he here built a bridge across the Rhine in a feat of engineering meant to show Rome's ability to project power.[102] Ostensibly seeking to interdict British aid to his Gallic enemies, he led expeditions into southern Britain in 55 and 54 BC, perhaps seeking further conquests or otherwise wanting to impress readers in Rome: Britain at the time was to the Romans an "island of mystery" and "a land of wonder".[103] He, however, withdrew from the island in the face of winter uprisings in Gaul led by the Eburones and Belgae starting in late 54 BC which ambushed and virtually annihilated a legion and five cohorts.[104] Caesar was, however, able to lure the rebels into unfavourable terrain and routed them in battle.[105] The next year, a greater challenge emerged with the uprising of most of central Gaul, led by Vercingetorix of the Averni. Caesar was initially defeated at Gergovia before besieging Vercingetorix at Alesia; after becoming himself besieged, Caesar won a major victory which forced Vercingetorix's surrender; Caesar then spent much of his time into 51 BC suppressing any remaining resistance.[106]

Politics, Gaul, and Rome

In the initial years from the end of Caesar's consulship in 59 BC, the three so-called triumvirs sought to maintain the goodwill of the extremely popular Publius Clodius Pulcher,[107] who was plebeian tribune in 58 BC and in that year successfully sent Cicero into exile. When Clodius took an anti-Pompeian stance later that year, he unsettled Pompey's eastern arrangements, started attacking the validity of Caesar's consular legislation, and by August 58 forced Pompey into seclusion. Caesar and Pompey responded by successfully backing the election of magistrates to recall Cicero from exile on the condition that Cicero would refrain from criticism or obstruction of the allies.[108][109][110]

With politics in Rome falling into violent street clashes between Clodius and two tribunes who were friends of Cicero, now supporting the allies, Caesar sent to Rome news of his victories in Gaul along with the claim of total victory and pacification. The senate at Cicero's motion voted him an unprecedented fifteen days of thanksgiving.[111] Such reports were necessary for Caesar, especially in light of senatorial opponents, to prevent the senate from reassigning his command in Transalpine Gaul, even if his position in Cisalpine Gaul and Illyricum was guaranteed by the lex Vatinia until 54 BC.[112] His success was evidently recognised when the senate voted state funds for some of Caesar's legions, which until this time Caesar paid for personally.[113]

The three allies' relations broke down in 57 BC: one of Pompey's allies challenged Caesar's land reform bill and the allies had a poor showing in the elections that year.[114] With a real threat to Caesar's command and acta brewing in 56 BC under the aegis of the unfriendly consuls, Caesar needed his allies' political support.[115] Pompey and Crassus too wanted military commands; they pooled their political resources again. Drawing in the support of Appius Claudius Pulcher and his younger brother Clodius for the consulship of 54 BC, they planned second consulships with following governorships in 55 BC, for both Pompey and Crassus, along with a five-year extension of Caesar's command.[116]

Cicero was inducted to oppose reassignment of Caesar's provinces and to defend a number of the allies' clients; his gloomy predictions of a triumviral set consuls-designate for years on end proved an exaggeration when only by desperate tactics, bribery, intimidation, and violence were Pompey and Crassus elected consuls for 55 BC.[117] During their consulship, Pompey and Crassus passed – with some tribunician support – the lex Pompeia Licinia extending Caesar's command and the lex Trebonia giving them respective commands in Spain and Syria,[118] though Pompey never left for the province and remained politically active at Rome.[119] The opposition again unified against their heavy-handed political tactics – though not against Caesar's activities in Gaul[120] – and defeated the allies in the elections of that year.[121]

The ambush and destruction in Gaul of a legion and five cohorts in the winter of 55–54 BC produced substantial concern in Rome about Caesar's command and competence, evidenced by the highly defensive narrative in Caesar's Commentaries.[122] The death of Caesar's daughter and Pompey's wife Julia in childbirth c. late August 54 did not create a rift between Caesar and Pompey.[123][124][125] At the start of 53 BC, Caesar sought and received reinforcements by recruitment and a private deal with Pompey before two years of largely unsuccessful campaigning against Gallic insurgents.[126] In the same year, Crassus's campaign ended in disaster at the Battle of Carrhae, culminating in his death amongst the Parthians. When in 52 BC Pompey started the year with a sole consulship to restore order to the city,[127] Caesar was in Gaul suppressing insurgencies; after news of his victory at Alesia, with the support of Pompey he received twenty days of thanksgiving and, pursuant to the "Law of the Ten Tribunes", the right to stand for the consulship in absentia.[128][129]

Civil war

 
A Roman bust of Pompey the Great made during the reign of Augustus (27 BC – 14 AD), a copy of an original bust from 70 to 60 BC, Venice National Archaeological Museum, Italy

From the period 52 to 49 BC, trust between Caesar and Pompey disintegrated.[130] In 51 BC, the consul Marcellus proposed recalling Caesar, arguing that his provincia (here meaning "task") in Gaul – due to his victory against Vercingetorix in 52 – was complete; it evidently was incomplete as Caesar was that year fighting the Bellovaci[131] and regardless the proposal was vetoed.[132] That year, it seemed that the conservatives around Cato in the Senate would seek to enlist Pompey to force Caesar to return from Gaul without honours or a second consulship.[133] Cato, Bibulus, and their allies, however, were successful in winning Pompey over to take a hard line against Caesar's continued command.[134]

As 50 BC progressed, fears of civil war grew; both Caesar and his opponents started building up troops in southern Gaul and northern Italy, respectively.[135] In the autumn, Cicero and others sought disarmament by both Caesar and Pompey, and on 1 December 50 BC this was formally proposed in the Senate.[136] It received overwhelming support – 370 to 22 – but was not passed when one of the consuls dissolved the meeting.[137] That year, when a rumour came to Rome that Caesar was marching into Italy, both consuls instructed Pompey to defend Italy, a charge he accepted as a last resort.[138] At the start of 49 BC, Caesar's renewed offer that he and Pompey disarm was read to the Senate, which was rejected by the hardliners.[139] A later compromise given privately to Pompey was also rejected at their insistence.[140] On 7 January, his supportive tribunes were driven from Rome; the Senate then declared Caesar an enemy and it issued its senatus consultum ultimum.[141]

There is scholarly disagreement as to the specific reasons why Caesar marched on Rome. A very popular theory is that Caesar was forced to choose – when denied the immunity of his proconsular tenure – between prosecution, conviction, and exile or civil war in defence of his position.[142][143] Whether Caesar actually would have been prosecuted and convicted is debated. Some scholars believe the possibility of successful prosecution was extremely unlikely.[144][145] Caesar's main objectives were to secure a second consulship – first mooted in 52 as colleague to Pompey's sole consulship[146] – and a triumph. He feared that his opponents – then holding both consulships for 50 BC – would reject his candidacy or refuse to ratify an election he won.[147] This also was the core of his war justification: that Pompey and his allies were planning, by force if necessary (indicated in the expulsion of the tribunes[148]), to suppress the liberty of the Roman people to elect Caesar and honour his accomplishments.[149]

Italy, Spain, and Greece

Around 10 or 11 January 49 BC,[150][151] in response to the Senate's "final decree",[152] Caesar crossed the Rubicon – the river defining the northern boundary of Italy – with a single legion, the Legio XIII Gemina, and ignited civil war. Upon crossing the Rubicon, Caesar, according to Plutarch and Suetonius, is supposed to have quoted the Athenian playwright Menander, in Greek, "let the die be cast".[153] Pompey and many senators fled south, believing that Caesar was marching quickly for Rome.[154] Caesar, after capturing communication routes to Rome, paused and opened negotiations, but they fell apart amid mutual distrust.[155] Caesar responded by advancing south, seeking to capture Pompey to force a conference.[156]

Pompey withdrew to Brundisium and was able to escape to Greece, abandoning Italy in face of Caesar's superior forces, evading Caesar's pursuit.[157] Caesar stayed near Rome for about two weeks – during his stay his forceful seizure of the treasury over tribunician veto put the lie to his pro-tribunician war justifications – and left Lepidus in charge of Italy while he attacked Pompey's Spanish provinces.[158][159] He defeated two of Pompey's legates at the Battle of Ilerda before forcing surrender of the third; his legates moved into Sicily and into Africa, though the African expedition failed.[160] Returning to Rome in the autumn, Caesar had Lepidus, as praetor, bring a law appointing Caesar dictator to conduct the elections; he, along with Publius Servilius Isauricus, won the following elections and would serve as consuls for 48 BC.[161] Resigning the dictatorship after eleven days,[162] Caesar then left Italy for Greece to stop Pompey's preparations, arriving in force in early 48 BC.[163]

Caesar besieged Pompey at Dyrrhachium, but Pompey was able to break out and force Caesar's forces to flee. Following Pompey southeast into Greece and to save one of his legates, he engaged and decisively defeated Pompey at Pharsalus on 9 August 48 BC. Pompey then fled for Egypt; Cato fled for Africa; others, like Cicero and Marcus Junius Brutus, begged for Caesar's pardon.[164]

Alexandrine war and Asia Minor

 
Cleopatra and Caesar, 1866 painting by Jean-Léon Gérôme
 
This mid-1st-century-BC Roman wall painting in Pompeii is probably a depiction of Cleopatra VII as Venus Genetrix, with her son Caesarion as Cupid. Its owner Marcus Fabius Rufus most likely ordered its concealment behind a wall in reaction to the execution of Caesarion on orders of Octavian in 30 BC.[165][166]

Pompey was killed when he arrived in Alexandria, the capital of Egypt. Caesar arrived three days later on 2 October 48 BC. Prevented from leaving the city by Etesian winds, Caesar decided to arbitrate an Egyptian civil war between the child pharaoh Ptolemy XIII Theos Philopator and Cleopatra, his sister, wife, and co-regent queen.[167] In late October 48 BC, Caesar was appointed in absentia to a year-long dictatorship,[168] after news of his victory at Pharsalus arrived to Rome.[169] While in Alexandria, he started an affair with Cleopatra and withstood a siege by Ptolemy and his other sister Arsinoe until March 47 BC. Reinforced by eastern client allies under Mithridates of Pergamum, he then defeated Ptolemy at the Battle of the Nile and installed Cleopatra as ruler.[170] Caesar and Cleopatra celebrated the victory with a triumphal procession on the Nile; he stayed in Egypt with Cleopatra until June or July that year, though the relevant commentaries attributed to him give no such impression. Some time in late June, Cleopatra gave birth to a child by Caesar, called Caesarion.[171]

When Caesar landed at Antioch, he learnt that during his time in Egypt, the king of what is now Crimea, Pharnaces, had attempted to seize what had been his father's kingdom, Pontus, across the Black Sea in northern Anatolia. His invasion had swept aside Caesar's legates and the local client kings but Caesar engaged him at Zela and defeated him immediately, leading Caesar to write veni, vidi, vici ("I came, I saw, I conquered"), downplaying Pompey's previous Pontic victories. He then left quickly for Italy.[172]

Italy, Africa, and Spain

Caesar's absence from Italy put Mark Antony, as magister equitum, in charge. His rule was unpopular: Publius Cornelius Dolabella, serving as plebeian tribune in 47 BC, agitated for debt relief and after that agitation got out of hand the senate moved for Antony to restore order. Delayed by a mutiny in southern Italy, he returned and suppressed the riots by force, killing many and delivering a similar blow to his popularity. Cato had marched to Africa[173] and there Metellus Scipio was in charge of the remaining republicans; they allied with Juba of Numidia; what used to be Pompey's fleet also raided the central Mediterranean islands. Caesar's governor in Spain, moreover, was sufficiently unpopular that the province revolted and switched to the republican side.[174]

Caesar demoted Antony on his return and pacified the mutineers without violence[175] before overseeing the election of the rest of the magistrates for 47 BC – no elections had yet been held – and also for those of 46 BC. Caesar would serve with Lepidus as consul in 46; he borrowed money for the war, confiscated and sold the property of his enemies at fair prices, and then left for Africa on 25 December 47 BC.[176] Caesar's landing in Africa was marked with some difficulties establishing a beachhead and logistically. He was defeated by Titus Labienus at Ruspina on 4 January 46 BC and thereafter took a rather cautious approach.[177] After inducing some desertions from the republicans, Caesar ended up surrounded at Thapsus. His troops attacked prematurely on 6 April 46 BC, starting a battle; they then won it and massacred the republican forces without quarter. Marching on Utica, where Cato commanded, Caesar arrived to find that Cato had killed himself rather than receive Caesar's clemency.[178] Many of the remaining anti-Caesarian leaders, including Metellus Scipio and Juba, also committed suicide shortly afterwards.[179] Labienus and two of Pompey's sons, however, had moved to the Spain provinces in revolt. Caesar started a process of annexing parts of Numidia and returned to Italy via Sardinia in June 46 BC.[180]

Caesar stayed in Italy to celebrate four triumphs in late September, supposedly over four foreign enemies: Gaul, Egypt, Pharnaces (Asia), and Juba (Africa). He led Vercingetorix, Cleopatra's younger sister Arsinoe, and Juba's son before his chariot; Vercingetorix was executed.[180] According to Appian, in some of the triumphs, Caesar paraded pictures and models of his victories over fellow Romans in the civil wars, to popular dismay.[181] The soldiers were each given 24,000 sesterces (a lifetime's worth of pay); further games and celebrations were put on for the plebs. Near the end of the year, Caesar heard bad news from Spain and, with an army, left for the peninsula, leaving Lepidus in charge as magister equitum.[182]

At a bloody battle at Munda on 17 March 45 BC, Caesar narrowly found victory;[183] his enemies were treated as rebels and he had them massacred.[184] Labienus died on the field. While one of Pompey's sons, Sextus, escaped, the war as effectively over.[185] He remained in the province until June before setting out for Rome. He arrived in Rome in October of the same year and celebrated an unseemly triumph over fellow Romans.[184] By this point he had started preparations for war on the Parthians to avenge Crassus' death at Carrhae in 53 BC with wide-ranging objectives that would take him into Dacia for three or more years. It was set to start on 18 March 44 BC.[186]

Assassination

 
The Green Caesar, posthumous portrait from the 1st century AD, now located at the Altes Museum in Berlin.

Dictatorships and honours

Prior to Caesar's assumption of the title dictator perpetuo in February 44 BC, he had been appointed dictator some four times since his first dictatorship in 49 BC. After occupying Rome, he engineered this first appointment, largely to hold elections; after 11 days he resigned. The other dictatorships lasted for longer periods, up to a year, and by April 46 he was given a new dictatorship annually.[187] The task he was assigned revived that of the Sulla's dictatorship: rei publicae constituendae.[188] These appointments, however, were not the source of legal power themselves; in the eyes of the literary sources, they were instead honours and titles which reflected Caesar's dominant position in the state, secured not by extraordinary magistracy or legally powers but by personal status as victor over other Romans.[189]

Through the period after Pharsalus, the senate showered Caesar with honours,[190] including the title praefectus moribus (lit.'prefect of morals') which historically was associated with the censorial power to revise the senate rolls. He was also granted power over war and peace,[191] usurping a power traditionally held by the comitia centuriata.[192] These powers attached to Caesar personally.[193] Similarly extraordinary were a number of symbolic honours which saw Caesar's image put onto Roman coinage – the first for a living Roman – with special rights to wear royal dress, sit atop a golden chair in the senate, and have his statues erected in public temples. The month Quintilis, in which he was born, was renamed Julius (now July).[194] These were symbols of divine monarchy and, later, objects of resentment.

The decisions on the normal operation of the state – justice, legislation, administration, and public works – were concentrated into Caesar's person without regard for or even notice given to the traditional institutions of the republic.[195] Caesar's domination over public affairs and his competitive instinct to preclude all others alienated the political class and led eventually to the conspiracy against his life.[196]

Legislation

Caesar, as far as is attested in evidence, did not intend to restructure Roman society. Ernst Badian, writing in the Oxford Classical Dictionary, noted that although Caesar did implement a series of reforms, they did not touch on the core of the republican system: he "had no plans for basic social and constitutional reform" and that "the extraordinary honours heaped upon him... merely grafted him as an ill-fitting head on to the body of the traditional structure".[188]

The most important of Caesar's reforms was to the calendar, which saw the abolition of the traditional republican lunisolar calendar and its replacement with a solar calendar now called the Julian calendar.[197] He also increased the number of magistrates and senators (from 600 to 900) to better administer the empire and reward his supporters with offices. Colonies also were founded outside Italy – notably on the sites of Carthage and Corinth, which had both been destroyed during Rome's 2nd century BC conquests, – to discharge Italy's population into the provinces and reduce unrest.[198] The royal power of naming patricians was revived to benefit the families of his men[199] and the permanent courts jury pools were also altered to remove the tribuni aerarii, leaving only the equestrians and senators.[200]

He also took further administrative actions to stabilise his rule and that of the state.[201] Caesar reduced the size of the grain dole from 320,000 down to around 150,000 by tightening the qualifications; special bonuses were offered to families with many children to stall depopulation.[202] Plans were drawn for the conduct of a census. Citizenship was extended to a number of communities in Cisalpine Gaul and to Cádiz.[203] During the civil wars, Caesar had also instituted a novel debt repayment programme (no debts would be forgiven but they could be paid in kind), remitted rents up to a certain amount, and thrown games distributing food.[204] Many of his enemies during the civil wars were pardoned – Caesar's clemency was exalted in his propaganda and temple works – with the intent to cultivate gratitude and draw a contrast between himself and the vengeful dictatorship of Sulla.[205]

The building programmes, started prior to his expedition to Spain, continued, with the construction of the Forum of Caesar and the Temple of Venus Genetrix therein. Other public works, including an expansion of Ostia's port and a canal through the Corinthian Isthmus, were also planned.[citation needed] Very busy with this work, the heavy-handedness with which he ignored the senate, magistrates, and those who came to visit him also alienated many in Rome.[206]

The collegia, civic associations, restored by Clodius in 58 BC were again abolished.[202] His actions to reward his supporters saw him allow his subordinates illegal triumphal processions and resign the consulship on the last day of the year so any ally could be elected as suffect consul for a single day.[207] Corruption on the part of his partisans was also overlooked to ensure their support; provincial cities and client kingdoms were extorted for favours to pay his bills.[208]

Conspiracy and death

 
Denarius (42 BC) of Cassius and Lentulus Spinther, depicting the crowned head of Liberty and on the reverse a sacrificial jug and lituus.[209]
 
An 1867 depiction of Caesar's death. The Death of Caesar by Jean-Léon Gérôme.

Attempts in January 44 BC to call Caesar rex (lit.'king') – a title associated with arbitrary oppression against citizens – were shut down by two tribunes before a supportive crowd. Caesar, claiming that the two tribunes infringed on his honour by doing so, had them deposed from office and ejected from the senate.[210] The incident both undermined Caesar's original arguments for pursuing the civil war (protecting the tribunes) and angered a public which still revered the tribunes as protectors of popular freedom.[211] Shortly before 15 February 44 BC, he assumed the dictatorship for life, putting an end to any hopes that his powers would be merely temporary.[212] Just days after his assumption of the life dictatorship, he publicly rejected a diadem from Antony at celebrations for the Lupercalia. Interpretations of the episode vary: he may have been rejecting the diadem publicly only because the crowd was insufficiently supportive; he could have done it performatively to signal he was no monarch; alternatively, Antony could have acted on his own initiative. By this point, however, rumour was rife that Caesar – already wearing the dress of a monarch – sought a formal crown and the episode did little to reassure.[213]

The plan to assassinate Caesar had started by the summer of 45 BC. An attempt to recruit Antony was made around that time, though he declined and gave Caesar no warning. By February 44 BC, there were some sixty conspirators.[214] It is clear that by this time, the victorious Caesarian coalition from the civil war had broken apart.[215] While most of the conspirators were former Pompeians, they were joined by a substantial number of Caesarians.[216] Among their leaders were Gaius Trebonius (consul in 45), Decimus Brutus (consul designate for 42), as well as Cassius and Brutus (both praetors in 44 BC).[217] Trebonius and Decimus had joined Caesar during the war while Brutus and Cassius had joined Pompey; other Caesarians involved included Servius Sulpicius Galba, Lucius Minucius Basilus, Lucius Tullius Cimber, and Gaius Servilius Casca.[218] Many of the conspirators would have been candidates in the consular elections for 43 to 41 BC,[219] likely dismayed by Caesar's sham elections in early 44 BC that produced advance results for the years 43–41 BC. Those electoral results came from the grace of the dictator and not that of the people; for the republican elite this was no substitute for actual popular support.[220] Nor is it likely that the subordination of the normal magistrates to Caesar's masters of horse (Latin: magistri equitum) was appreciated.[221]

Brutus, who claimed descent from the Lucius Junius Brutus who had driven out the kings and the Gaius Servilius Ahala who had freed Rome from incipient tyranny, was the main leader of the conspiracy.[222] By late autumn 45 BC, graffiti[223] and some public comments at Rome were condemning Caesar as a tyrant and insinuating the need for a Brutus to remove the dictator. The ancient sources, excepting Nicolaus of Damascus, are unanimous that this reflected a genuine turn in public opinion against Caesar.[224] Popular indignation at Caesar was likely rooted in his debt policies (too friendly to lenders), use of lethal force to suppress protests for debt relief, his reduction in the grain dole, his abolition of the collegia restored by Clodius, his abolition of the poorest panel of jurors in the permanent courts, and his abolition of open elections which deprived the people of their ancient right of decision.[225] A popular turn against Caesar is also observed with reports that the two deposed tribunes were written-in on ballots at Caesar's advance consular elections in place of Caesar's candidates.[226] Whether there was a tradition of tyrannicide at Rome is unclear: Cicero wrote in private as if the duty to kill tyrants was already given; he, however, made no public speeches to that effect and there is little evidence that the public accepted the logic of preventive tyrannicide.[227] The philosophical tradition of the Platonic Old Academy was also a factor driving Brutus to action due to its emphasis on a duty to free the state from tyranny.[228]

While some news of the conspiracy did leak out, Caesar refused to take precautions and rejected escort by a bodyguard. The date decided upon by the conspirators was 15 March, the Ides of March, three days before Caesar intended to leave for his Parthian campaign.[229] News of his imminent departure forced the conspirators to move up their plans; the senate meeting on the 15th would be the last before his departure.[230] They had decided that a senate meeting was the best place to frame the killing as political, rejecting the alternatives at games, elections, or on the road.[231] That only the conspirators would be armed at the senate meeting, per Dio, also would have been an advantage. The day, 15 March, was also symbolically important as it was the day on which consuls took office until the mid-2nd century BC.[232]

 
The Ides of March coin, minted in 42 BC, depicts Marcus Junius Brutus. The reverse depicts daggers and a pileus symbolising their use to win back freedom.

Various stories purport that Caesar was on the cusp of not attending or otherwise being warned about the plot.[232][233] Approached on his golden chair at the foot of the statue of Pompey, the conspirators attacked him with daggers. Whether he fell in silence, per Suetonius, or after reply to Brutus' appearance – kai su teknon? ("you too, child?") – is variantly recorded.[234] Between twenty-three and thirty-five wounds later, the dictator-for-life was dead.[235][236]

Aftermath of the assassination

 
Marc Antony's Oration at Caesar's Funeral by George Edward Robertson (late 19th or early 20th century).

The assassins seized the Capitoline hill after killing the dictator. They then summoned a public meeting in the Forum where they were coldly received by the population. They were also unable to fully secure the city, as Lepidus – Caesar's lieutenant in the dictatorship – moved troops from the Tiber Island into the city proper. Antony, the consul who escaped the assassination, urged an illogical compromise position in the senate:[237] Caesar was not declared a tyrant and the conspirators were not punished.[238]

Caesar's funeral was then approved. At the funeral, Antony inflamed the public against the assassins, which triggered mob violence that lasted for some months before the assassins were forced to flee the capital and Antony then finally acted to suppress it by force.[239] On the site of his cremation, the Temple of Caesar was begun by the triumvirs in 42 BC at the east side of the main square of the Roman Forum. Only its altar now remains.[240] The terms of the will were also read to the public: it gave a generous donative to the plebs at large and left as principal heir one Gaius Octavius, Caesar's great-nephew then at Apollonia, and adopted him in the will.[241]

Resumption of the pre-existing republic proved impossible as various actors appealed in the aftermath of Caesar's death to liberty or to vengeance to mobilise huge armies that led to a series of civil wars.[242] The first war was between Antony in 43 BC and the senate (including senators of both Caesarian and Pompeian persuasion) which resulted in Octavian – Caesar's heir – exploiting the chaos to seize the consulship and join with Antony and Lepidus to form the Second Triumvirate.[243] After purging their political enemies in a series of proscriptions,[244] the triumvirs secured the deification of Caesar – the senate declared on 1 January 42 BC that Caesar would be placed among the Roman gods[245] – and marched on the east where a second war saw the triumvirs defeat the tyrannicides in battle,[246] resulting in a final death of the republican cause and a three-way division of much of the Roman world.[247] By 31 BC, Caesar's heir had taken sole control of the empire, ejecting his triumviral rivals after two decades of civil war. Pretending to restore the republic, his masked autocracy was acceptable to the war-weary Romans and marked the establishment of a new Roman monarchy.[248]

Personal life

Health and physical appearance

 
The Chiaramonti Caesar bust, a posthumous portrait in marble, 44–30 BC, Museo Pio-Clementino, Vatican Museums

Based on remarks by Plutarch,[249] Caesar is sometimes thought to have suffered from epilepsy. Modern scholarship is sharply divided on the subject, and some scholars believe that he was plagued by malaria, particularly during the Sullan proscriptions of the 80s BC.[250] Other scholars contend his epileptic seizures were due to a parasitic infection in the brain by a tapeworm.[251][252]

Caesar had four documented episodes of what may have been complex partial seizures. He may additionally have had absence seizures in his youth. The earliest accounts of these seizures were made by the biographer Suetonius, who was born after Caesar died. The claim of epilepsy is countered among some medical historians by a claim of hypoglycemia, which can cause epileptoid seizures.[253][254]

A line from Shakespeare has sometimes been taken to mean that he was deaf in one ear: "Come on my right hand, for this ear is deaf".[255] No classical source mentions hearing impairment in connection with Caesar. The playwright may have been making metaphorical use of a passage in Plutarch that does not refer to deafness at all, but rather to a gesture Alexander of Macedon customarily made. By covering his ear, Alexander indicated that he had turned his attention from an accusation in order to hear the defence.[256]

Francesco M. Galassi and Hutan Ashrafian suggest that Caesar's behavioral manifestations – headaches, vertigo, falls (possibly caused by muscle weakness due to nerve damage), sensory deficit, giddiness and insensibility – and syncopal episodes were the results of cerebrovascular episodes, not epilepsy. Pliny the Elder reports in his Natural History that Caesar's father and forefather died without apparent cause while putting on their shoes.[257] These events can be more readily associated with cardiovascular complications from a stroke episode or lethal heart attack. Caesar possibly had a genetic predisposition for cardiovascular disease.[258]

Suetonius, writing more than a century after Caesar's death, describes Caesar as "tall of stature with a fair complexion, shapely limbs, a somewhat full face, and keen black eyes".[259]

Name and family

The name Gaius Julius Caesar

Using the Latin alphabet of the period, which lacked the letters J and U, Caesar's name would be rendered GAIVS IVLIVS CAESAR; the form CAIVS is also attested, using the older Roman representation of G by C. The standard abbreviation was C. IVLIVS CÆSAR, reflecting the older spelling. (The letterform Æ is a ligature of the letters A and E, and is often used in Latin inscriptions to save space.)

In Classical Latin, it was pronounced [ˈɡaː.i.ʊs ˈjuːl.i.ʊs ˈkae̯sar]. In the days of the late Roman Republic, many historical writings were done in Greek, a language most educated Romans studied. Young wealthy Roman boys were often taught by Greek slaves and sometimes sent to Athens for advanced training, as was Caesar's principal assassin, Brutus. In Greek, during Caesar's time, his family name was written Καίσαρ (Kaísar), reflecting its contemporary pronunciation. Thus, his name is pronounced in a similar way to the pronunciation of the German Kaiser ([kaɪ̯zɐ]) or Dutch keizer ([kɛizɛr]).

In Vulgar Latin, the original diphthong [ae̯] first began to be pronounced as a simple long vowel [ɛː]. Then, the plosive /k/ before front vowels began, due to palatalization, to be pronounced as an affricate, hence renderings like [ˈtʃeːsar] in Italian and [ˈtseːzar] in German regional pronunciations of Latin, as well as the title of Tsar. With the evolution of the Romance languages, the affricate [ts] became a fricative [s] (thus, [ˈseːsar]) in many regional pronunciations, including the French one, from which the modern English pronunciation is derived.

Caesar's cognomen itself became a title; it was promulgated by the Bible, which contains the famous verse "Render unto Caesar the things which are Caesar's, and unto God the things that are God's". The title became, from the late first millennium, Kaiser in German and (through Old Church Slavic cěsarĭ) Tsar or Czar in the Slavic languages. The last Tsar in nominal power was Simeon II of Bulgaria, whose reign ended in 1946, but is still alive in 2023. This means that for approximately two thousand years, there was at least one head of state bearing his name. As a term for the highest ruler, the word Caesar constitutes one of the earliest, best attested and most widespread Latin loanwords in the Germanic languages, being found in the text corpora of Old High German (keisar), Old Saxon (kēsur), Old English (cāsere), Old Norse (keisari), Old Dutch (keisere) and (through Greek) Gothic (kaisar).[260]

Posterity

 
Julio-Claudian family tree
Wives
  • First marriage to Cornelia, from 84 BC until her death in 69 BC
  • Second marriage to Pompeia, from 67 BC until he divorced her around 61 BC over the Bona Dea scandal
  • Third marriage to Calpurnia, from 59 BC until Caesar's death
 
Reliefs of Cleopatra and her son by Julius Caesar, Caesarion, at the Temple of Dendera
 
Roman painting from the House of Giuseppe II, Pompeii, early 1st century AD, most likely depicting Cleopatra VII, wearing her royal diadem, consuming poison in an act of suicide, while her son Caesarion, also wearing a royal diadem, stands behind her[261]
Children
Suspected children

Some ancient sources refer to the possibility of the tyrannicide, Marcus Junius Brutus, being one of Julius Caesar's illegitimate children.[262] Caesar, at the time Brutus was born, was 15. Most ancient historians were sceptical of this and "on the whole, scholars have rejected the possibility that Brutus was the love-child of Servilia and Caesar on the grounds of chronology".[263][264][265]

Grandchildren

Grandchild from Julia and Pompey, dead at several days, unnamed.[266]

Lovers

Rumors of passive homosexuality

Roman society viewed the passive role during sexual activity, regardless of gender, to be a sign of submission or inferiority. Indeed, Suetonius says that in Caesar's Gallic triumph, his soldiers sang that, "Caesar may have conquered the Gauls, but Nicomedes conquered Caesar."[267] According to Cicero, Bibulus, Gaius Memmius, and others – mainly Caesar's enemies – he had an affair with Nicomedes IV of Bithynia early in his career. The stories were repeated, referring to Caesar as the "Queen of Bithynia", by some Roman politicians as a way to humiliate him. Caesar himself denied the accusations repeatedly throughout his lifetime, and according to Cassius Dio, even under oath on one occasion.[268] This form of slander was popular during this time in the Roman Republic to demean and discredit political opponents.

Catullus wrote a poem suggesting that Caesar and his engineer Mamurra were lovers,[269] but later apologised.[270]

Mark Antony charged that Octavian had earned his adoption by Caesar through sexual favors. Suetonius described Antony's accusation of an affair with Octavian as political slander. Octavian eventually became the first Roman Emperor as Augustus.[271]

Literary works

 
Julii Caesaris quae exstant (1678)
 
A 1783 edition of The Gallic Wars

During his lifetime, Caesar was regarded as one of the best orators and prose authors in Latin – even Cicero spoke highly of Caesar's rhetoric and style.[272] Only Caesar's war commentaries have survived. A few sentences from other works are quoted by other authors. Among his lost works are his funeral oration for his paternal aunt Julia and his "Anticato", a document attacking Cato in response to Cicero's eulogy. Poems by Julius Caesar are also mentioned in ancient sources.[273]

Memoirs

  • The Commentarii de Bello Gallico, usually known in English as The Gallic Wars, seven books each covering one year of his campaigns in Gaul and southern Britain in the 50s BC, with the eighth book written by Aulus Hirtius on the last two years.
  • The Commentarii de Bello Civili (The Civil War), events of the Civil War from Caesar's perspective, until immediately after Pompey's death in Egypt.

Other works historically have been attributed to Caesar, but their authorship is in doubt:

These narratives were written and published annually during or just after the actual campaigns, as a sort of "dispatches from the front". They were important in shaping Caesar's public image and enhancing his reputation when he was away from Rome for long periods. They may have been presented as public readings.[274] As a model of clear and direct Latin style, The Gallic Wars traditionally has been studied by first- or second-year Latin students.

Legacy

Historiography

 
Flowers placed on the remains of the altar of Caesar in the Roman Forum of Rome, Italy

The texts written by Caesar, an autobiography of the most important events of his public life, are the most complete primary source for the reconstruction of his biography. However, Caesar wrote those texts with his political career in mind.[275] Julius Caesar is also considered one of the first historical figures to fold his message scrolls into a concertina form, which made them easier to read.[276] The Roman emperor Augustus began a cult of personality of Caesar, which described Augustus as Caesar's political heir. The modern historiography is influenced by this tradition.[277]

Many rulers in history became interested in the historiography of Caesar. Napoleon III wrote the scholarly work Histoire de Jules César, which was not finished. The second volume listed previous rulers interested in the topic. Charles VIII ordered a monk to prepare a translation of the Gallic Wars in 1480. Charles V ordered a topographic study in France, to place the Gallic Wars in context; which created forty high-quality maps of the conflict. The contemporary Ottoman sultan Suleiman the Magnificent catalogued the surviving editions of the Commentaries, and translated them to Turkish language. Henry IV and Louis XIII of France translated the first two commentaries and the last two respectively; Louis XIV retranslated the first one afterwards.[278]

Politics

Julius Caesar is seen as the main example of Caesarism, a form of political rule led by a charismatic strongman whose rule is based upon a cult of personality, whose rationale is the need to rule by force, establishing a violent social order, and being a regime involving prominence of the military in the government.[279] Other people in history, such as the French Napoleon Bonaparte and the Italian Benito Mussolini, have defined themselves as Caesarists.[280][281] Bonaparte did not focus only on Caesar's military career but also on his relation with the masses, a predecessor to populism.[282] The word is also used in a pejorative manner by critics of this type of political rule.

Depictions

Battle record

Date War Action Opponents Type Present-day areas Outcome
58 BC 58 BC Gallic Wars Arar Battle of the Arar .Helvetii Battle France Victory

58 BC 58 BC Mount Haemus Battle of Bibracte Helvetii, Boii, Tulingi, Rauraci Battle France Victory

58 BC 58 BC Vosges Battle of Vosges .Suebi Battle France Victory

57 BC 57 BC Battle of the Axona .Belgae Battle France Victory

57 BC 57 BC Battle of the Sabis Battle of the Sabis .Nervii, Viromandui,

Atrebates, Aduatuci

Battle France Victory

55 and 54 BC55 and 54 BC Julius Caesar's invasions of Britain Julius Caesar's invasions of Britain .Celtic Britons Campaign England Victory

54 BC–53 BC 54 BC–53 BC Ambiorix's revolt Ambiorix's revolt .Eburones Campaign Belgium, France Victory

52 BC 52 BC Avaricum Avaricum .Bituriges, Arverni Siege France Victory

52 BC 52 BC Battle of Gergovia Battle of Gergovia .Gallic tribes Battle France Defeat
September 52 BC Battle of Alesia Battle of Alesia .Gallic Confederation Siege and Battle Alise-Sainte-Reine, France Decisive victory

51 BC 51 BC Siege of Uxellodunum Siege of Uxellodunum .Gallic Siege Vayrac, France Victory

June–August 49 BC June–August 49 BC Caesar's Civil War Battle of Ilerda Battle of Ilerda Optimates. Battle Catalonia, Spain Victory

10 July 48 BC 10 July 48 BC Battle of Dyrrhachium (48 BC) .Optimates Battle Durrës, Albania Defeat

9 August 48 BC 9 August 48 BC Battle of Pharsalus .Pompeians Battle Greece Decisive Victory

47 BC 47 BC Battle of the Nile .Ptolemaic Kingdom Battle Alexandria, Egypt Victory

2 August 47 BC 2 August 47 BC Battle of Zela .Kingdom of Pontus Battle Zile, Turkey Victory

4 January 46 BC 4 January 46 BC Battle of Ruspina Battle of Ruspina .Optimates, Numidia Battle Ruspina Africa Defeat

6 April 46 BC 6 April 46 BC Battle of Thapsus Battle of Thapsus .Optimates, Numidia Battle Tunisia Decisive Victory

17 March 45 BC 17 March 45 BC Battle of Munda Battle of Munda .Pompeians Battle Andalusia Spain Victory

Chronology

ConsulRoman military history


See also

References

  1. ^ Badian 2009, p. 16. All ancient sources place his birth in 100 BC. Some historians have argued against this; the "consensus of opinion" places it in 100 BC. Goldsworthy 2006, p. 30.
  2. ^ Broughton 1952, p. 574.
  3. ^ Keppie, Lawrence (1998). "The approach of civil war". The Making of the Roman Army: From Republic to Empire. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press. p. 102. ISBN 978-0-8061-3014-9.
  4. ^ Suet. Iul., 81–82; Plut. Caes., 64–67.
  5. ^ Tucker, Spencer (2010). Battles That Changed History: An Encyclopedia of World Conflict. ABC-CLIO. p. 68. ISBN 978-1-59884-430-6.
  6. ^ Badian 2009, p. 16, pursuant to Macr. Sat. 1.12.34, quoting a law by Mark Antony noting the date as the fourth day before the Ides of Quintilis. Only Dio gives 13 July. All sources give the year 100 BC.
  7. ^ Goldsworthy 2006, pp. 32–33.
  8. ^ Goldsworthy 2006, p. 35.
  9. ^ Badian 2009, p. 14; Goldsworthy 2006, pp. 31–32. The consul of 157 BC was Sextus Caesar; the consuls of 91 and 90 were Sextus Caesar and Lucius Caesar, respectively.
  10. ^ Badian 2009, p. 15 dates the land commission to 103 per MRR 3.109; Goldsworthy 2006, pp. 33–34; Broughton 1952, p. 22, dating the proconsulship to 91 with praetorship in 92 BC and citing, among others, CIL I, 705 and CIL I, 706.
  11. ^ Badian 2009, p. 16.
  12. ^ Badian 2009, p. 16. Badian cites Suet. Iul., 1.2 arguing that Caesar was actually appointed; because a divorced man could not be flamen Dialis, the assertion that Caesar married one Cossutia then divorced her to marry Cornelia and become flamen in Plut. Caes., 5.3 is incorrect.
  13. ^ Goldsworthy 2006, p. 34.
  14. ^ Badian 2009, pp. 16–17, stating Caesar was placed on the lists. Cf, stating Caesar was only summoned for interrogation, Hinard, François (1985). Les proscriptions de la Rome républicaine (in French). Ecole française de Rome. p. 64. ISBN 978-2-7283-0094-5. OCLC 1006100534.
  15. ^ Badian 2009, pp. 16–17, also rejecting claims that Caesar hid by bribing his pursuers: "this is an example of how the [Caesar myth] pervades our accounts and makes it difficult to get at the facts... [that he bribed his pursuers] cannot be true, since confiscation of his fortune went with his proscription".
  16. ^ Plut. Caes., 1.4; Suet. Iul., 1.3.
  17. ^ Badian 2009, p. 17, noting also that Sulla never killed any fellow patricians.
  18. ^ Badian 2009, pp. 17–18.
  19. ^ Suet. Iul., 2–3; Plut. Caes., 2–3; Dio, 43.20.
  20. ^ Badian 2009, p. 17.
  21. ^ Badian 2009, p. 18, citing Suet. Iul., 3.
  22. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 35.
  23. ^ Alexander 1990, p. 71 (Trial 140) noting also that Tac. Dial., 34.7 wrongly places the trial in 79 BC; Alexander 1990, pp. 71–72 (Trial 141).
  24. ^ Badian 2009, p. 18.
  25. ^ Pelling, C B R (2011). Plutarch: Caesar. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 139–41. ISBN 978-0-19-814904-0. OCLC 772240772. Pelling agrees with Vell. Pat., 2.42.3 over Plut. Caes., 1.8–2.7 and Suet. Iul., 4.
  26. ^ Badian 2009, p. 19, calling the story in Suet. Iul., 4.2 that Caesar called up auxiliaries and with them drove Mithridates' prefect from the province of Asia, "a striking example of the Caesar myth... [that is] difficult to believe".
  27. ^ Goldsworthy 2006, p. 78.
  28. ^ Badian 2009, p. 19; Broughton 1952, pp. 114, 125; Vell. Pat., 2.43.1 (pontificate); Plut. Caes., 5.1 and Suet. Iul., 5 (military tribunate).
  29. ^ Badian 2009, p. 19, citing Suet. Iul., 5.
  30. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 63.
  31. ^ Badian 2009, pp. 19–20, also noting senatorial support for the pardons; Broughton 1952, pp. 126, 128, 130 n. 4, argues the tribunician law recalling the Lepidan exiles must postdate the consular law in 70 which removed Sulla's suppression of tribunician legislative initiative.
  32. ^ Badian 2009, p. 20; Broughton 1952, p. 132. Badian 2009, p. 21 cites Suet. Iul., 6.1 for the incipit of Caesar's eulogy.
  33. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 43.
  34. ^ Plut. Caes., 5.2–3.
  35. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 43–46.
  36. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 46, noting also that Plutarch omits this detail likely because it "would indeed have been embarrassing for his Marian representation of Caesar" (internal citations and quotation marks omitted).
  37. ^ Gruen 1995, p. 79–80.
  38. ^ Mouritsen, Henrik (2001). Plebs and politics in the late Roman Republic. Cambridge University Press. p. 97. ISBN 0-511-04114-4. OCLC 56761502. See also Broughton 1952, p. 158 and Plut. Caes., 6.1–4.
  39. ^ Broughton 1952, p. 158.
  40. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 46–47.
  41. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 48–49.
  42. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 64, 64 n. 129, noting that it is not clear which election was first; it is more likely, however, that elections were late and therefore that the pontifical election occurred first. Dio's claim of elections in December is clearly erroneous. Broughton 1952, p. 172 n. 3.
  43. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 64–65, noting the victory of curule aedile Publius Licinius Crassus in 212 over senior consulars and plebeian tribune Gnaeus Domitius Ahenobarbus over consulars.
  44. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 66, citing Suet. Iul., 13; Plut. Caes., 7.1–4; Dio, 37.37.1–3.
  45. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 67–68.
  46. ^ Gruen 1995, pp. 80–81.
  47. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 69 n. 148.
  48. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 71.
  49. ^ Alexander 1990, p. 110 (Trials 220–21).
  50. ^ Gruen 1995, p. 80, citing Sall. Cat., 49.1–2. See also Suet. Iul., 17.
  51. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 72–77, placing it around 2.5 per cent. Gruen 1995, p. 429 n. 107 calls the view that Caesar was one of the masterminds of the conspiracy "long... discredited and requires no further refutation".
  52. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 85–86, 90.
  53. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 92. Earlier sources being Cic. Cat., 4.8–10 and Sall. Cat., 51.42. Later sources include Plut. Caes., 7.9 and App. BCiv., 2.6.
  54. ^ Gruen 1995, pp. 281–82.
  55. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 102.
  56. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 102–04.
  57. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 107, citing Suet. Iul., 16. Dio reports a senatus consultum ultimum. Broughton 1952, p. 173, citing Dio, 37.41.
  58. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 109.
  59. ^ Plut. Caes., 10.9.
  60. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 110, adding in notes that the affair is usually interpreted as an attempt to destroy Clodius' career and that Caesar may have been a secondary target due to expectations that he would reject political pressure for a divorce.
  61. ^ Drogula 2019, pp. 97–98.
  62. ^ Broughton 1952, pp. 173, 180. Most sources give a proconsular dignity. After the Sullan era, all magistrates were prorogued pro consule. Badian, Ernst; Lintott, Andrew (2016). "pro consule, pro praetore". Oxford Classical Dictionary. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199381135.013.5337. ISBN 978-0-19-938113-5.
  63. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 109–10.
  64. ^ Broughton 1952, p. 180.
  65. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 110–11.
  66. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 111.
  67. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 112–13.
  68. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 114; Plut. Caes., 13; Suet. Iul., 18.2.
  69. ^ Gruen 2009, p. 28.
  70. ^ Gruen 2009, pp. 30–31.
  71. ^ Gruen 2009, p. 28; Broughton 1952, pp. 158, 173. Bibulus was Caesar's colleague both in the curule aedileship and the praetorship. They clashed politically in both magistracies. On credit for the aedilican games, see Suet. Iul., 10, Dio, 37.8.2, and Plut. Caes., 5.5.
  72. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 119. "[A]n alliance which in modern times has come, quite misleadingly, to be called the 'First Triumvirate'... the very phrase... invokes a misleading teleology. Furthermore, it is almost impossible to use [it] without adopting some version of the view that it was a kind of conspiracy against the republic".
  73. ^ Gruen 2009, p. 31.
  74. ^ Gruen 2009, p. 31; Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 121–22, noting that the senate had approved distribution of lands to Pompey's veterans from the Sertorian War all the way back in 70 BC.
  75. ^ a b Gruen 2009, p. 32.
  76. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 125–29.
  77. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 130, 132.
  78. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 138.
  79. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 139–40.
  80. ^ Wiseman 1994, p. 372.
  81. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 143 (Bibulus), 147 (dating to May).
  82. ^ Wiseman 1994, p. 374.
  83. ^ Drogula 2019, p. 137.
  84. ^ Gruen 2009, p. 33, noting that the lex Vatinia was "no means unprecedented... or even controversial".
  85. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 175, citing Balsdon, J P V D (1939). "Consular provinces under the late Republic – II. Caesar's Gallic command". Journal of Roman Studies. 29: 167–83. doi:10.2307/297143. ISSN 0075-4358. JSTOR 297143. S2CID 163892529. Transalpine and Cisalpine Gaul had been assigned to the consuls of 60 and therefore would have been unavailable. Rafferty, David (2017). "Cisalpine Gaul as a consular province in the late Republic". Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte. 66 (2): 147–172. doi:10.25162/historia-2017-0008. ISSN 0018-2311. JSTOR 45019257. S2CID 231088284.
  86. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 176–77; Gruen 2009, p. 34.
  87. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 143: Dio, 38.6.5 and Suet. Iul., 20.1 say around late January; Plut. Pomp., 48.5 says in early May; Vell. Pat., 2.44.5 says May.
  88. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 142–44.
  89. ^ Gruen 2009, p. 34, also citing Suet. Iul., 20.2 – the "consulship of Julius and Caesar" – as part of Catonian propaganda.
  90. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 150–51, noting that Bibulus' voluntary seclusion "presented the image of the city dominated by one man [Caesar]... unchecked by a colleague".
  91. ^ Gruen 2009, p. 34.
  92. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 182–83, 182 n. 260, citing Suet. Iul., 23.1; pace Ramsey 2009, p. 38.
  93. ^ Goldsworthy 2006, pp. 186–87.
  94. ^ Goldsworthy 2006, p. 188–89.
  95. ^ Goldsworthy 2006, pp. 189–90.
  96. ^ Goldsworthy 2006, p. 204.
  97. ^ Goldsworthy 2006, pp. 205, 208–10.
  98. ^ Goldsworthy 2016, pp. 212–15.
  99. ^ Goldsworthy 2016, p. 217.
  100. ^ Goldsworthy 2016, p. 220.
  101. ^ a b Boatwright 2004, p. 242.
  102. ^ Goldsworthy 2016, p. 203.
  103. ^ Goldsworthy 2016, pp. 221–22; Boatwright 2004, p. 242.
  104. ^ Goldsworthy 2016, p. 222.
  105. ^ Goldsworthy 2016, p. 223.
  106. ^ Goldsworthy 2016, pp. 229–32, 233–38; Boatwright 2004, p. 242.
  107. ^ Gruen 1995, p. 98. "It should no longer be necessary to refute the older notion that Clodius acted as agent or tool of the triumvirate". Clodius was an independent agent not beholden to the triumvirs or any putative popular party. Gruen, Erich S (1966). "P. Clodius: Instrument or Independent Agent?". Phoenix. 20 (2): 120–30. doi:10.2307/1086053. ISSN 0031-8299. JSTOR 1086053.
  108. ^ Ramsey 2009, pp. 37–38.
  109. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 194, noting Caesar's opposition – in early 58 BC – to Cicero's banishment. Caesar offered Cicero a position on his staff which would have conferred immunity from prosecution but Cicero refused. Ramsey 2009, p. 37.
  110. ^ Ramsey 2009, p. 39.
  111. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 220, citing Gelzer, "this extraordinary honour... cut the ground from under the feet of those who maintained that since 58 Caesar had held his position illegally"; Morstein-Marx also rejects the claim of senatorial duress at Plut. Caes., 21.7–9.
  112. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 196, 220; Ramsey 2009, pp. 39–40.
  113. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 220–21.
  114. ^ Ramsey 2009, pp. 39–40.
  115. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 229.
  116. ^ Ramsey 2009, pp. 41–42; Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 232.
  117. ^ Ramsey 2009, p. 43; Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 232–33.
  118. ^ Ramsey 2009, p. 44; Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 232–33.
  119. ^ Gruen 1995, p. 451.
  120. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 238, citing Cic. Sest., 51, "hardly anyone has lost popularity among the citizens for winning wars".
  121. ^ Ramsey 2009, p. 44.
  122. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 241ff, citing Caes. BGall., 5.26–52.
  123. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 272 n. 42: "Gruen.. and Raaflaub... have effectively disposed of the old idea, too heavily influenced by [Plutarch]", citing Plut. Caes., 28.1 and Plut. Pomp., 53.6–54.2, "that Pompey had now turned against Caesar... since Julia's death in 54".
  124. ^ Ramsey 2009, p. 46: "Despite the fact that Pompey declined Caesar's later offer to form another marriage connection, their political alliance showed no signs of strain for the next several years".
  125. ^ Gruen 1995, pp. 451–52, 453: "Julia's death came in the late summer of 54[;] if it opened a breach between Pompey and Caesar, there is no sign of it in subsequent months... The evidence indicates no change in the relationship during 53"; "Julia's death provoked no change in the contract[;] Caesar did not cut Pompey out of his will until the outbreak of civil war".
  126. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 243–44.
  127. ^ Ramsey, J T (2016). "How and why was Pompey made sole consul in 52 BC?". Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte. 65 (3): 298–324. doi:10.25162/historia-2016-0017. ISSN 0018-2311. JSTOR 45019234. S2CID 252459421.
  128. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 247–48, 260, 265–66.
  129. ^ Wiseman 1994, p. 412.
  130. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 258. See also Appendix 4 in the same book, analysing the conflict between Caesar and Pompey in terms of a Prisoner's dilemma.
  131. ^ Wiseman 1994, p. 414, citing Caes. BGall., 8.2–16.
  132. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 270; Drogula 2019, p. 223.
  133. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 273.
  134. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 272, 276, 295 (identities of Cato's allies).
  135. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 291.
  136. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 292–93.
  137. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 297.
  138. ^ Wiseman 1994, pp. 412–22, citing App. BCiv., 2.30–31 and Dio, 40.64.1–66.5.
  139. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 304.
  140. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 306.
  141. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 308.
  142. ^ Boatwright 2004, p. 247; Meier 1995, pp. 1, 4; Mackay 2009, pp. 279–81; Wiseman 1994, p. 419.
  143. ^ Ehrhardt, C T H R (1995). "Crossing the Rubicon". Antichthon. 29: 30–41. doi:10.1017/S0066477400000927. ISSN 0066-4774. S2CID 142429003. from the original on 21 November 2021. Retrieved 26 April 2022. Everyone knows that Caesar crossed the Rubicon because [he would have been...] put on trial, found guilty and have his political career ended... Yet over thirty years ago, Shackleton Bailey, in less than two pages of his introduction to Cicero's Letters to Atticus, destroyed the basis for this belief, and... no one has been able to rebuild it.
  144. ^ Morstein-Marx, Robert (2007). "Caesar's alleged fear of prosecution and his "ratio absentis" in the approach to the civil war". Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte. 56 (2): 159–78. doi:10.25162/historia-2007-0013. ISSN 0018-2311. JSTOR 25598386. S2CID 159090397.
  145. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 262–63, explaining:
    • Any prosecution was extremely unlikely to succeed.
    • No contemporary source expresses dissatisfaction with an inability to prosecute.
    • No timely charges could have been brought. The possibility of conviction for irregularities during his consulship in 59 was a fantasy when none of Caesar's actions in 59 were overturned. Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 624.
    • Caesar proposed giving up his command – opening himself up to prosecution – in January 49 BC as part of peace negotiations, something he would not have proposed if he were worried about a sure-fire conviction.
    See also Morstein-Marx 2021, Appendix 2, and, contra Morstein-Marx, Girardet, Klaus Martin (2020). Januar 49 v. Chr.: Vorgeschichte, Rechtslage, politische Aspekte (in German). Bonn. doi:10.22028/d291-30177. ISBN 978-3-7749-4068-0.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  146. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 247 n. 234, citing Suet. Iul., 26.1; Plut. Pomp., 56.1–3.
  147. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 288. "Caesar feared that the only guarantee of his rights... to stand for election in absentia under the protection of the Law of the Ten Tribunes and to receive a triumph... was his army".
  148. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 309.
  149. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 320.
  150. ^ Beard, Mary (2016). SPQR: a history of ancient Rome. W W Norton. p. 286. ISBN 978-1-84668-381-7. "The exact date is unknown".
  151. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 322.
  152. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 331.
  153. ^ Boatwright 2004, p. 246, citing Plut. Caes., 32.8. Rawson 1994a, p. 424 gives the same translation.
  154. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 336.
  155. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 340 (Caesar's pause), 342 (Caesar's offer), 343 (Pompey's counter-offer), 345 (negotiations collapse).
  156. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 347.
  157. ^ Rawson 1994a, pp. 424–25, 427. "[Abandoning Italy] was probably justified from a military point of view ... but Cicero was doubtless right in seeing it as politically and psychologically very damaging to abandon the capital and indeed all Italy, intending to starve and then invade it".
  158. ^ Rawson 1994a, p. 430, citing Cic. Att., 10.4.8; Dio, 41.15–16; App. BCiv., 2.41.
  159. ^ Boatwright 2004, p. 252.
  160. ^ Rawson 1994a, p. 431, citing Caes. BCiv., 2.17–20.
  161. ^ Rawson 1994a, p. 431. He also passed laws removing civil disabilities from the descendants of those proscribed by Sulla and recalling all exiles on specious claims of unfair trials.
  162. ^ Wilson 2021, p. 309, citing, among others, Caes. BCiv., 3.1.1; Plut. Caes., 37.1–2; App. BCiv., 2.48; Dio, 41.36.1–4. He had no magister equitum.
  163. ^ Rawson 1994a, p. 432; Boatwright 2004, p. 252.
  164. ^ Rawson 1994a, p. 433; Boatwright 2004, pp. 252–53; Plut. Caes., 42–45.
  165. ^ Roller, Duane W (2010). Cleopatra: a biography. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 175. ISBN 978-0-19-536553-5. OCLC 405105996.
  166. ^ Walker, Susan (2008). "Cleopatra in Pompeii?". Papers of the British School at Rome. 76: 35–46. doi:10.1017/S0068246200000404. ISSN 2045-239X. S2CID 62829223.
  167. ^ Rawson 1994a, pp. 433–34, noting that both children were left under Roman protection under their father's will. Boatwright 2004.
  168. ^ Wilson 2021, p. 309, citing Plut. Caes., 51.1 and Dio, 42.17.1–22.2.
  169. ^ Rawson 1994a, p. 435, citing Dio, 42.18.
  170. ^ Rawson 1994a, p. 434. At the battle, Ptolemy drowned. Boatwright 2004, p. 253.
  171. ^ Rawson 1994a, p. 434; Boatwright 2004, p. 253.
  172. ^ Rawson 1994a, p. 434, citing Plut. Caes., 50.2 and Suet. Iul., 35.2, 37.2.
  173. ^ Rawson 1994a, p. 435, noting "an epic march through the desert from Cyrenaica to the province of Africa", citing Lucan Pharsalia, 9.
  174. ^ Rawson 1994a, p. 435. Rawson also notes claims – Dio, 42.56.4 – that the republicans were planning a naval invasion of Italy.
  175. ^ Rawson 1994a, p. 435 n. 58, citing Suet. Iul., 70.
  176. ^ Rawson 1994a, p. 435.
  177. ^ Rawson 1994a, pp. 435–36.
  178. ^ Rawson 1994a, p. 436, citing Plut. Cat. Min., 58–70; see also Plut. Caes., 52–54.
  179. ^ Rawson 1994a, p. 436; Boatwright 2004, p. 253.
  180. ^ a b Rawson 1994a, p. 436.
  181. ^ Rawson 1994a, p. 436, citing App. BCiv., 2.101–2.
  182. ^ Rawson 1994a, pp. 436–37.
  183. ^ Rawson 1994a, p. 436, citing Plut. Caes., 56.
  184. ^ a b Rawson 1994a, p. 437.
  185. ^ Rawson 1994a, p. 436, noting that Sextus fomented a momentary rebellion and that Quintus Caecilius Bassus led a revolt in Syria which continued until after Caesar's death in 44 BC.
  186. ^ Rawson 1994a, pp. 437–38; Boatwright 2004, pp. 253–54.
  187. ^ Wilson 2021, p. 309.
  188. ^ a b Badian 2012.
  189. ^ Wilson 2021, pp. 311–13. "In the view of the ancient historians and biographers self-tasked with assessing Caesar's rule, his dictatorships, and indeed his consulships... were incidental to the authority he possessed on account of being himself".
  190. ^ See Wilson 2021, p. 313 n. 46. Meier 1995, pp. 474–75 notes that senators may have wanted to curry favour or otherwise, by giving him excessive honours, show the public Caesar's tyrannical ambitions.
  191. ^ Wilson 2021, p. 314.
  192. ^ Lintott 1999, p. 21; eg Livy (1905) [1st century AD]. From the Founding of the City . Translated by Roberts, Canon. 31.5–7 – via Wikisource.
  193. ^ Wilson 2021, pp. 314–15.
  194. ^ Meier 1995, pp. 473–74.
  195. ^ Meier 1995, p. 448. "He acted as he saw fit. Others had no right even to be informed of his intentions... Rome still had a senate and magistrates, but they were not free in their decision-making... in all matters the decisive authority lay with Caesar alone".
  196. ^ Badian 2012; Meier 1995, pp. 447–48.
  197. ^ Wilson 2021, p. 318; Badian 2012; Meier 1995, p. 447.
  198. ^ Badian 2012 for administration and colonial activity. Wilson 2021, p. 318, noting Suetonius viewing the expansion of the magistracies and senate as constitutional reform with Dio believing it a means to reward followers. Meier 1995, p. 464 notes "such a large membership [in the senate] would certainly make the house incapable of functioning properly, but it enabled Caesar to show favour to many".
  199. ^ Meier 1995, p. 464.
  200. ^ Wilson 2021, p. 318; Lintott 1999, p. 160.
  201. ^ Wilson 2021, p. 318.
  202. ^ a b Meier 1995, p. 447.
  203. ^ Wilson 2021, pp. 319, 321.
  204. ^ Wilson 2021, p. 319.
  205. ^ Wilson 2021, pp. 321–22.
  206. ^ Meier 1995, pp. 447–49.
  207. ^ Meier 1995, p. 462.
  208. ^ Wilson 2021, p. 322 n. 92 on favours for clients. Wilson 2021, p. 322 n. 94, noting Suet. Iul., 54.1–3 reporting on Caesar looting and extorting client states and Dio, 42.49–50, 43.24 on Caesar's forced loans to pay soldiers.
  209. ^ Crawford, Michael Hewson (1974). Roman republican coinage. Cambridge University Press. p. 514. ISBN 978-0-521-07492-6.
  210. ^ Meier 1995, p. 476.
  211. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 522 (noting attempts to restore the tribunes to office after Caesar's death); Tempest 2017, p. 81.
  212. ^ Meier 1995, pp. 474, 476.
  213. ^ Meier 1995, pp. 476–77.
  214. ^ Meier 1995, p. 479.
  215. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 561–62.
  216. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 556.
  217. ^ Meier 1995, p. 480.
  218. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 556, noting Basilus and Cimber as praetors in 45 and Casca as plebeian tribune in 44 or 43..
  219. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 560.
  220. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 93; Meier 1995, p. 465 ("their dignity would have been spurious"); Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 547–48, 549–50 ("honores obtained as a personal favour rather than by a judgment of the People were in fact no 'honour' at all").
  221. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 553.
  222. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 41; Meier 1995, pp. 480–81.
  223. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 524–25 gives a number of examples:
    • Plut. Brut., 9.6: "If only you lived now, Brutus", on the Capitoline statue of Lucius Brutus.
    • Suet. Iul., 80.3: "If only you [Lucius Brutus] were alive".
    • App. BCiv., 2.112: "[Lucius Brutus,] your descendants are unworthy of you", challenging Marcus Brutus to act.
    • Suet. Iul., 80.3: "Brutus became the first consul, since he had expelled the kings; This man [Caesar] at last became king, since he had expelled the consuls", on a statue of Caesar.
    • Plut. Brut., 9.7; Plut. Caes., 62.7; App. BCiv., 2.112; Dio, 44.12.3: graffiti at Marcus Brutus' praetorian seat in the forum challenging him as asleep, corrupt, or not a true descendant of the Lucius Brutus who founded the republic.
  224. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 523, 526–27, 528 (calling the belief in modern scholarship that Caesar remained "the darling of the People" unsupported by the evidence and "infantilising"); Tempest 2017, pp. 86–87.
  225. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 528 (debts), 529 (lethal force, corn dole, collegia), 530 (juries, elections).
  226. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 548 (the two candidates for the consulship of 43 BC were the only two men allowed to stand), 550.
  227. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, pp. 318, 573–75.
  228. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 95–99.
  229. ^ Meier 1995, p. 485.
  230. ^ Morstein-Marx 2021, p. 563.
  231. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 99–100.
  232. ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 100.
  233. ^ Meier 1995, pp. 485–86, noting three: Caesar felt unwell and had to be persuaded by a conspirator to attend the senate, one Artemidorus of Knidos gave Caesar a scroll informing on the conspiracy, the augur Spurinna allegedly prophesied misfortune for Caesar on the Ides.
  234. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 101–3, citing Suet. Iul., 81–82.
  235. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 3–4, 261 n. 1; Meier 1995, p. 486 (reporting 23 wounds).
  236. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 261 n. 1 cites all ancient accounts: Nic. Dam., 58–106; Plut. Caes., 60–68; Plut. Brut., 8–20; Suet. Iul., 76–85; App. BCiv., 2.106–147; Dio, 44.9–19.
  237. ^ Mackay 2009, p. 316.
  238. ^ Rawson 1994b, p. 469. "Antony pointed out that logically, if Caesar was a tyrant, his body should be thrown into the Tiber and all his measures [rescinded]; if he was not, his murderers should be punished".
  239. ^ Rawson 1994b, p. 470.
  240. ^ Richardson, L (1992). "Iulius, Divus, Aedes". A new topographical dictionary of ancient Rome. Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 213–14. ISBN 0-8018-4300-6.
  241. ^ Mackay 2009, pp. 318–19; Rawson 1994b, p. 471.
  242. ^ Mackay 2009, pp. 315–16.
  243. ^ Boatwright 2004, pp. 270–72.
  244. ^ Mackay 2009, p. 332.
  245. ^ Mackay 2009, p. 334. Caesar's heir then took the style divi filius, meaning "son of the deified one".
  246. ^ Boatwright 2004, p. 273.
  247. ^ Mackay 2009, p. 335; Boatwright 2004, p. 274.
  248. ^ Meier 1995, pp. 494, 496.
  249. ^ Plut. Caes., 17, 45, 60; Suet. Iul., 45.
  250. ^ Ridley, Ronald T. (2000). "The Dictator's Mistake: Caesar's Escape from Sulla". Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte. 49 (2): 211–29. ISSN 0018-2311. JSTOR 4436576. Ridley cites:
    • Kanngiesser, F (1912). "Notes on the pathology of the Julian dynasty". Glasgow Medical Journal. 77: 428–32.
    • Cawthorne, Terence (1958). "Julius caesar and the falling sickness". The Laryngoscope. 68 (8): 1442–1450. doi:10.1288/00005537-195808000-00005. PMID 13576900. S2CID 34788441.
    • Temkin, Owsei (1971) [1945]. The falling sickness: a history of epilepsy from the Greeks to the beginnings of modern neurology (Revised ed.). Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 162. ISBN 0-8018-1211-9. OCLC 208839.
  251. ^ Bruschi, Fabrizio (2011). "Was Julius Caesar's epilepsy due to neurocysticercosis?". Trends in Parasitology. 27 (9): 373–74. doi:10.1016/j.pt.2011.06.001. PMID 21757405.
  252. ^ McLachlan, Richard S (2010). "Julius Caesar's late onset epilepsy: a case of historic proportions". Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences. 37 (5): 557–561. doi:10.1017/S0317167100010696. ISSN 0317-1671. PMID 21059498. S2CID 24082872.
  253. ^ Hughes, John R; et al. (2004). "Dictator perpetuus: Julius Caesar – Did he have seizures? If so, what was the etiology?". Epilepsy & Behavior. 5 (5): 756–64. doi:10.1016/j.yebeh.2004.05.006. PMID 15380131. S2CID 34640921.
  254. ^ Gomez, J G; et al. (1995). "Was Julius Caesar's epilepsy due to a brain tumor?". Journal of the Florida Medical Association. 82 (3): 199–201. ISSN 0015-4148. PMID 7738524.
  255. ^ William Shakespeare, Julius Caesar I.ii.209.
  256. ^ Paterson 2009, p. 130.
  257. ^ Pliny, Natural History, vii.181
  258. ^ Galassi, Francesco M.; Ashrafian, Hutan (2015). "Has the diagnosis of a stroke been overlooked in the symptoms of Julius Caesar?". Neurological Sciences. 36 (8): 1521–22. doi:10.1007/s10072-015-2191-4. ISSN 1590-3478. PMID 25820216. S2CID 11730078.
  259. ^ Suet. Iul., 45. excelsa statura, colore candido, teretibus membris, ore paulo pleniore, nigris vegetisque oculis.
  260. ^ M. Philippa, F. Debrabandere, A. Quak, T. Schoonheim en N. van der Sijs (2003–2009) Etymologisch Woordenboek van het Nederlands, Amsterdam
  261. ^ Roller, Duane W (2010). Cleopatra: a biography. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 178–79. ISBN 978-0-19-536553-5.
  262. ^ Eg Plut. Brut., 5.2
  263. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 102, noting the "almost universally accepted" treatment rejecting Caesar's parentage at Fluß, Max (1923). "Servilius 101" . Realencyclopädie der classischen Altertumswissenschaft (in German). Vol. II A, 2. Stuttgart: Butcher. cols. 1817–21 – via Wikisource.
  264. ^ Syme, Ronald (1960). "Bastards in the Roman Aristocracy". Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society. 104 (3): 326. ISSN 0003-049X. JSTOR 985248. Chronology is against Caesar's paternity.
  265. ^ Syme, Ronald (1980). "No Son for Caesar?". Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte. 29 (4): 426. ISSN 0018-2311. JSTOR 4435732. Caesar is excluded by plain fact.
  266. ^ Jiménez 2000, p. 55.
  267. ^ Suet. Iul., 49.
  268. ^ Suet. Iul., 49; Dio, 43.20.
  269. ^ Catullus, Carmina 29 20 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine, 57 4 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  270. ^ Suet. Iul., 73.
  271. ^ Suet. Aug., 68, 71.
  272. ^ Cic. Brut., 252.
  273. ^ Courtney, Edward, ed. (1993). The fragmentary Latin poets. Oxford: Clarendon Press. pp. 153–55, 187–88. ISBN 0-19-814775-9. OCLC 25628739.
  274. ^ Wiseman, T P (2009). "The publication of De bello Gallico". In Welch, Kathryn; Powell, Anton (eds.). Julius Caesar as artful reporter: the war commentaries as political instruments. Classical Press of Wales. ISBN 978-1-905125-28-9.
  275. ^ Canfora 2006, pp. 10–11
  276. ^ Murray, Stuart (2009). The library: an illustrated history. Skyhorse Publishing. ISBN 978-1-60239-706-4. OCLC 277203534.
  277. ^ Canfora 2006, p. 10
  278. ^ Canfora 2006, pp. 11–12
  279. ^ Weber 2008, p. 34.
  280. ^ Brown, Howard G. (29 June 2007). "Napoleon Bonaparte, Political Prodigy". History Compass. Wiley. 5 (4): 1382–98. doi:10.1111/j.1478-0542.2007.00451.x.
  281. ^ Hartfield, James (2012). Unpatriotic History of the Second World War. John Hunt Publishing. p. 77. ISBN 978-1-78099-379-9. from the original on 28 December 2019. Retrieved 20 August 2019.
  282. ^ Canfora 2006, pp. 12–13

Sources

Primary sources

Own writings

Ancient historians' writings

  • Appian (1913) [2nd century AD]. Civil Wars. Loeb Classical Library. Translated by White, Horace. Cambridge – via LacusCurtius.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Cassius Dio (1914–1927) [c. AD 230]. Roman History. Loeb Classical Library. Translated by Cary, Earnest – via LacusCurtius. Published in nine volumes.
  • Plutarch (1920) [2nd century AD]. "Life of Antony". Parallel Lives. Loeb Classical Library. Vol. 9. Translated by Perrin, Bernadotte. OCLC 40115288 – via LacusCurtius.
  • Plutarch (1918) [2nd century AD]. "Life of Brutus". Parallel Lives. Loeb Classical Library. Vol. 6. Translated by Perrin, Bernadotte. OCLC 40115288 – via Perseus Digital Library.
  • Plutarch (1919). "The Life of Cato the Younger". Plutarch Lives: Sertorius and Eumenes; Phocion and Cato. Loeb Classical Library. Vol. 8. Translated by Perrin, Bernadotte – via LacusCurtius.
  • Plutarch (1919) [2nd century AD]. "Life of Caesar". Parallel Lives. Loeb Classical Library. Vol. 7. Translated by Perrin, Bernadotte. OCLC 40115288 – via LacusCurtius.
  • Plutarch (1916) [2nd century AD]. "Life of Crassus". Parallel Lives. Loeb Classical Library. Vol. 3. Translated by Perrin, Bernadotte. OCLC 40115288 – via LacusCurtius.
  • Plutarch (1917) [2nd century AD]. "Life of Pompey". Parallel Lives. Loeb Classical Library. Vol. 5. Translated by Perrin, Bernadotte. OCLC 40115288 – via LacusCurtius.
  • Suetonius (1913–1914). "Life of Augustus". Lives of the Twelve Caesars. Loeb Classical Library. Translated by Rolfe, J C. Cambridge – via LacusCurtius.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Suetonius (1913–1914). "Life of Caesar". Lives of the Twelve Caesars. Loeb Classical Library. Translated by Rolfe, J C. Cambridge – via LacusCurtius.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Velleius Paterculus (1924). Roman History. Loeb Classical Library. Translated by Shipley, Frederick W – via LacusCurtius.

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  • Alexander, Michael Charles (1990). Trials in the late Roman Republic, 149 BC to 50 BC. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0-8020-5787-X. OCLC 41156621.
  • Badian, Ernst (2012). "Iulius Caesar, C (2)". In Hornblower, Simon; et al. (eds.). The Oxford classical dictionary (4th ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199381135.013.3394. ISBN 978-0-19-954556-8. OCLC 959667246.
  • Broughton, Thomas Robert Shannon (1952). The magistrates of the Roman republic. Vol. 2. New York: American Philological Association.
  • Boatwright, M T; et al. (2004). The Romans, from village to empire. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-511875-8. OCLC 52728992.
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  • Crook, John; et al., eds. (1994). The last age of the Roman Republic, 146–43 BC. Cambridge Ancient History. Vol. 9 (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-85073-8. OCLC 121060.
    • Rawson, Elizabeth (1994a). "Caesar: civil war and dictatorship". In CAH2 9 (1994), pp. 424–67.
    • Rawson, Elizabeth (1994b). "The aftermath of the Ides". In CAH2 9 (1994), pp. 468–90.
    • Wiseman, TP. "Caesar, Pompey, and Rome, 59–50 BC". In CAH2 9 (1994), pp. 368–423.
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  • Morstein-Marx, Robert (2021). Julius Caesar and the Roman People. Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/9781108943260. ISBN 978-1-108-83784-2. LCCN 2021024626. S2CID 242729962.
  • Tempest, Kathryn (2017). Brutus: the noble conspirator. London: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-18009-1.
  • Weber, Max (2008). Caesarism, Charisma, and Fate: Historical Sources and Modern Resonances in the Work of Max Weber. Transaction Publishers. ISBN 978-1-4128-1214-6.
  • Wilson, Mark B (2021). Dictator: the evolution of the Roman dictatorship. Ann Arbor, MI: Michigan University Press. ISBN 978-0-472-13266-9. OCLC 1197561102.

External links

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Political offices
Preceded by Roman consul
59 BC
With: Marcus Calpurnius Bibulus
Succeeded by
Preceded by Roman consul II
48 BC
With: Publius Servilius Isauricus
Succeeded by
Preceded by Roman consul III
46 BC
With: Marcus Aemilius Lepidus
Succeeded by
Himself
without colleague
Preceded by Roman consul IV
January–September 45 BC
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Himself
without colleague
Roman consul V
44 BC
With: Mark Antony
Succeeded by
Religious titles
Preceded by Pontifex maximus
63–44 BC
Succeeded by

julius, caesar, gaius, caesar, redirect, here, name, gaius, name, other, uses, gaius, disambiguation, caesar, disambiguation, disambiguation, german, politician, cajus, gaius, zər, latin, ˈɡaːiʊs, ˈjuːliʊs, ˈkae, july, march, roman, general, statesman, member,. Gaius Julius Caesar and Caesar redirect here For the name see Gaius Julius Caesar name For other uses see Gaius Julius Caesar disambiguation Caesar disambiguation and Julius Caesar disambiguation For the German politician see Cajus Julius Caesar Gaius Julius Caesar ˈ s iː z er SEE zer Latin ˈɡaːiʊs ˈjuːliʊs ˈkae sar 12 July 100 BC 15 March 44 BC was a Roman general and statesman A member of the First Triumvirate Caesar led the Roman armies in the Gallic Wars before defeating his political rival Pompey in a civil war and subsequently became dictator from 49 BC until his assassination in 44 BC He played a critical role in the events that led to the demise of the Roman Republic and the rise of the Roman Empire Julius CaesarThe Tusculum portrait possibly the only surviving sculpture of Caesar made during his lifetime now housed at the Archaeological Museum in Turin ItalyBorn12 July 100 BC 1 Suburra Ancient RomeDied15 March 44 BC aged 55 Theatre of Pompey Ancient RomeCause of deathAssassination stab wounds Resting placeTemple of Caesar in Rome41 53 31 N 12 29 10 E 41 891943 N 12 486246 E 41 891943 12 486246OccupationsPoliticiansoldierauthorNotable workBellum GallicumBellum CivileOfficePontifex maximus 64 44 BC Consul 59 BC Proconsul Gaul Illyricum 58 49 BC Dictator 49 44 BC Consul 48 46 44 BC Dictator perpetuo 44 BC 2 SpousesCossutia disputed Cornelia m 84 BC d 69 BC Pompeia m 67 BC div 61 BC Calpurnia m 59 BC PartnerCleopatraChildrenJuliaCaesarion unacknowledged Augustus adoptive ParentsGaius Julius CaesarAureliaAwardsCivic CrownMilitary serviceYears of service81 45 BCBattles warsSiege of Mytilene Gallic Wars Invasions of Britain Caesar s civil war Alexandrian warIn 60 BC Caesar Crassus and Pompey formed the First Triumvirate an informal political alliance that dominated Roman politics for several years Their attempts to amass political power were opposed by many in the senate among them Cato the Younger with the private support of Cicero Caesar rose to become one of the most powerful politicians in the Roman Republic through a string of military victories in the Gallic Wars completed by 51 BC which greatly extended Roman territory During this time he both invaded Britain and built a bridge across the Rhine river These achievements and the support of his veteran army threatened to eclipse the standing of Pompey who had realigned himself with the Senate after the death of Crassus in 53 BC With the Gallic Wars concluded the Senate ordered Caesar to step down from his military command and return to Rome In 49 BC Caesar openly defied the Senate s authority by crossing the Rubicon and marching towards Rome at the head of an army 3 This began Caesar s civil war which he won leaving him in a position of near unchallenged power and influence in 45 BC After assuming control of government Caesar began a program of social and governmental reforms including the creation of the Julian calendar He gave citizenship to many residents of far regions of the Roman Republic He initiated land reform and support for veterans He centralized the bureaucracy of the Republic and was eventually proclaimed dictator for life dictator perpetuo His populist and authoritarian reforms angered the elites who began to conspire against him On the Ides of March 15 March 44 BC Caesar was assassinated by a group of rebellious senators led by Brutus and Cassius who stabbed him to death 4 A new series of civil wars broke out and the constitutional government of the Republic was never fully restored Caesar s great nephew and adopted heir Octavian later known as Augustus rose to sole power after defeating his opponents in the last civil war of the Roman Republic Octavian set about solidifying his power and the era of the Roman Empire began Caesar was an accomplished author and historian as well as a statesman much of his life is known from his own accounts of his military campaigns Other contemporary sources include the letters and speeches of Cicero and the historical writings of Sallust Later biographies of Caesar by Suetonius and Plutarch are also important sources Caesar is considered by many historians to be one of the greatest military commanders in history 5 His cognomen was subsequently adopted as a synonym for Emperor the title Caesar was used throughout the Roman Empire giving rise to modern descendants such as Kaiser and Tsar He has frequently appeared in literary and artistic works and his political philosophy known as Caesarism has inspired politicians into the modern era Contents 1 Early life and career 1 1 Life under Sulla and military service 1 2 Entrance to politics 1 3 Aedileship and election as pontifex maximus 1 4 Praetorship 2 First consulship and the Gallic wars 2 1 First consulship 2 2 Caesar in Gaul 2 3 Politics Gaul and Rome 3 Civil war 3 1 Italy Spain and Greece 3 2 Alexandrine war and Asia Minor 3 3 Italy Africa and Spain 4 Assassination 4 1 Dictatorships and honours 4 2 Legislation 4 3 Conspiracy and death 4 4 Aftermath of the assassination 5 Personal life 5 1 Health and physical appearance 5 2 Name and family 5 2 1 The name Gaius Julius Caesar 5 2 2 Posterity 5 3 Rumors of passive homosexuality 6 Literary works 6 1 Memoirs 7 Legacy 7 1 Historiography 7 2 Politics 7 3 Depictions 7 4 Battle record 8 Chronology 9 See also 10 References 11 Sources 11 1 Primary sources 11 1 1 Own writings 11 1 2 Ancient historians writings 11 2 Secondary sources 12 External linksEarly life and careerMain article Early life and career of Julius Caesar nbsp Gaius Marius Caesar s uncle and the husband of Caesar s aunt Julia He was an enemy of Sulla and took the city with Lucius Cornelius Cinna in 87 BC Gaius Julius Caesar was born into a patrician family the gens Julia on 12 July 100 BC 6 The family claimed to have immigrated to Rome from Alba Longa during the seventh century BC after the third king of Rome Tullus Hostilius took and destroyed their city The family also claimed descent from Julus the son of Aeneas and founder of Alba Longa Given that Aeneas was a son of Venus this made the clan divine This genealogy had not yet been taken its final form by the first century but the clan s claimed descent from Venus was more well established in public consciousness 7 There is no evidence that Caesar himself was born by Caesarian section such operations entailed the death of the mother but Caesar s mother lived for decades after his birth and no ancient sources record any difficulty with the birth 8 Despite their ancient pedigree the Julii Caesares were not especially politically influential during the middle republic The first person known to have had the cognomen Caesar was a praetor in 208 BC during the Second Punic War The family s first consul was in 157 BC though their political fortunes had recovered in the early first century producing two consuls in 91 and 90 BC 9 Caesar s homonymous father was moderately successful politically He married Aurelia a member of the politically influential Aurelii Cottae producing along with Caesar two daughters Buoyed by his own marriage and his sister s marriage the dictator s aunt with the extremely influential Gaius Marius he also served on the Saturninian land commission in 103 BC and was elected praetor some time between 92 and 85 BC he served as proconsular governor of Asia for two years likely 91 90 BC 10 Life under Sulla and military service nbsp Sulla depicted on a coin mined by Quintus Pompeius Rufus in 54 BC Sulla took the city in 82 BC purged his political enemies and instituted new constitutional reforms Caesar s father did not seek a consulship during the domination of Lucius Cornelius Cinna and instead chose retirement 11 During Cinna s dominance Caesar was named as flamen Dialis a priest of Jupiter which led to his marriage to Cinna s daughter Cornelia The religious taboos of the priesthood would have forced Caesar to forego a political career the appointment one of the highest non political honours indicates that there were few expectations of a major career for Caesar 12 In early 84 BC Caesar s father died suddenly 13 After Sulla s victory in the civil war 82 BC Cinna s acta were annulled Sulla consequently ordered Caesar to abdicate and divorce Cinna s daughter Caesar refused implicitly questioning the legitimacy of Sulla s annulment Sulla may have put Caesar on the proscription lists though scholars are mixed 14 Caesar then went into hiding before his relatives and contacts among the Vestal Virgins were able to intercede on his behalf 15 They then reached a compromise where Caesar would resign his priesthood but keep his wife and chattels Sulla s alleged remark he saw in Caesar many Mariuses 16 is apocryphal 17 nbsp Bust from the imperial period of a man in this case Augustus wearing the civic crown Latin corona civica Caesar won the civic crown for his bravery at the Siege of Mytilene in 81 BC Caesar then left Italy to serve in the staff of the governor of Asia Marcus Minucius Thermus While there he travelled to Bithynia to collect naval reinforcements he stayed some time as a guest of the king Nicomedes IV though later invective connected Caesar to a homosexual relation with the monarch 18 19 He then served at the Siege of Mytilene where he won the civic crown for saving the life of a fellow citizen in battle The privileges of the crown the senate was supposed to stand on a holder s entrance and holders were permitted to wear the crown at public occasions whetted Caesar s appetite for honours After the capture of the Mytilene Caesar transferred to the staff of Publius Servilius Vatia in Cilicia before learning of Sulla s death in 78 BC and returning home immediately 20 He was alleged to have wanted to join in on the consul Lepidus revolt that year 21 but this is likely literary embellishment of Caesar s desire for tyranny from a young age 22 Afterward Caesar attacked some of the Sullan aristocracy in the courts but was unsuccessful in his attempted prosecution of Gnaeus Cornelius Dolabella in 77 BC who had recently returned from a proconsulship in Macedonia Going after a less well connected senator he was successful the next year in prosecuting Gaius Antonius Hybrida later consul in 63 BC for profiteering from the proscriptions but was forestalled when a tribune interceded on Antonius behalf 23 After these oratorical attempts Caesar left Rome for Rhodes seeking the tutelage of the rhetorician Apollonius Molon 24 While travelling he was intercepted and ransomed by pirates in a story that was later much embellished According to Plutarch and Suetonius he was freed after paying a ransom of fifty talents and responded by returning with a fleet to capture and execute the pirates The recorded sum for the ransom is literary embellishment and it is more likely that the pirates were sold into slavery per Velleius Paterculus 25 His studies were interrupted by the outbreak of the Third Mithridatic War over the winter of 75 and 74 BC Caesar is alleged to have gone around collecting troops in the province at the locals expense and leading them successfully against Mithridates forces 26 Entrance to politics While absent from Rome in 73 BC Caesar was co opted into the pontifices in place of his deceased relative Gaius Aurelius Cotta The promotion marked him as a well accepted member of the aristocracy with great future prospects in his political career 27 Caesar decided to return shortly thereafter and on his return was elected one of the military tribunes for 71 BC 28 There is no evidence that Caesar served in war even though the war on Spartacus was on going during his term he did however agitate for the removal of the Sulla s disabilities on the plebeian tribunate and for those who supported Lepidus revolt to be pardoned 29 These advocacies were common and uncontroversial 30 The next year 70 BC Pompey and Crassus were consuls and brought legislation restoring the plebeian tribunate s rights one of the tribunes with Caesar supporting then brought legislation pardoning the Lepidan exiles 31 For his quaestorship in 69 BC Caesar was allotted to serve under Gaius Antistius Vetus in Hispania Ulterior His election also gave him a lifetime seat in the senate However before he left his aunt Julia the widow of Marius died soon afterwards his wife Cornelia died shortly after bearing his only legitimate child Julia He gave eulogies for both at public funerals 32 During Julia s funeral Caesar displayed the images of his aunt s husband Marius whose memory had been suppressed after Sulla s victory in the civil war Some of the Sullan nobles including Quintus Lutatius Catulus who had suffered under the Marian regime objected but by this point depictions of husbands in aristocratic women s funerary processions was common 33 Contra Plutarch 34 Caesar s action here was likely in keeping with a political trend for reconciliation and normalisation rather than a display of renewed factionalism 35 Caesar quickly remarried taking the hand of Sulla s granddaughter Pompeia 36 Aedileship and election as pontifex maximus For much of this period Caesar was one of Pompey s supporters Caesar joined with Pompey in the late 70s to support restoration of tribunician rights his support for the law recalling the Lepidan exiles may have been related to the same tribune s bill to grant lands to Pompey s veterans Caesar also supported the lex Gabinia in 67 BC granting Pompey an extraordinary command against piracy in the Mediterranean and also supported the lex Manilia in 66 BC to reassign the Third Mithridatic War from its then commander Lucullus to Pompey 37 Four years after his aunt Julia s funeral in 65 BC Caesar served as curule aedile and staged lavish games that won him further attention and popular support 38 He also restored the trophies won by Marius and taken down by Sulla over Jugurtha and the Cimbri 39 According to Plutarch s narrative the trophies were restored overnight to the applause and tears of joy of the onlookers any sudden and secret restoration of this sort would not have been possible architects restorers and other workmen would have to have been hired and paid for nor would it have been likely that the work could have been done in a single night 40 It is more likely that Caesar was merely restoring his family s public monuments consistent with standard aristocratic practice and the virtue of pietas and over objections from Catulus these actions were broadly supported by the senate 41 In 63 BC Caesar stood for the praetorship and also for the post of pontifex maximus 42 who was the head of the College of Pontiffs and the highest ranking state religious official In the pontifical election before the tribes Caesar faced two influential senators Quintus Lutatius Catulus and Publius Servilius Isauricus Caesar came out victorious Many scholars have expressed astonishment that Caesar s candidacy was taken seriously but this was not without historical precedent 43 Ancient sources allege that Caesar paid huge bribes or was shamelessly ingratiating 44 that no charge was ever laid alleging this implies that bribery alone is insufficient to explain his victory 45 If bribes or other monies were needed they may have been underwritten by Pompey whom Caesar at this time supported and who opposed Catulus candidacy 46 Many sources also assert that Caesar supported the land reform proposals brought that year by plebeian tribune Publius Servilius Rullus however there are no ancient sources so attesting 47 Caesar also engaged in a collateral manner in the trial of Gaius Rabirius by one of the plebeian tribunes Titus Labienus for the murder of Saturninus in accordance with a senatus consultum ultimum some forty years earlier 48 49 The most famous event of the year was the Catilinarian conspiracy While some of Caesar s enemies including Catulus alleged that he participated in the conspiracy 50 the chance that he was a participant is extremely small 51 Praetorship Caesar won his election to the praetorship in 63 BC easily and as one of the praetor elects spoke out that December in the senate against executing certain citizens who had been arrested in the city conspiring with Gauls in furtherance of the conspiracy 52 Caesar s proposal at the time is not entirely clear the earlier sources assert that he advocated life imprisonment without trial the later sources assert he instead wanted the conspirators imprisoned pending trial Most accounts agree that Caesar supported confiscation of the conspirator s property 53 Caesar likely advocated the former which was a compromise position that would place the senate within the bounds of the lex Sempronia de capite civis and was initially successful in swaying the body a later intervention by Cato however swayed the senate at the end for execution 54 nbsp Cicero consul in 63 BC depicted in an 1889 fresco denouncing Catiline and exposing his conspiracy before the senate When conspirators within the city were later arrested Cicero referred their fate to the senate triggering a debate in which Caesar as praetor elect participated During his year as praetor Caesar first attempted to deprive his enemy Catulus of the honour of completing the rebuilt Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus accusing him of embezzling funds and threatening to bring legislation to reassign it to Pompey This proposal was quickly dropped amid near universal opposition 55 He then supported the attempt by plebeian tribune Metellus Nepos to transfer the command against Catiline from the consul of 63 Gaius Antonius Hybrida to Pompey After a violent meeting of the comitia tributa in the forum where Metellus came into fisticuffs with his tribunician colleagues Cato and Quintus Minucius Thermus 56 the senate passed a decree against Metellus Suetonius claims that both Nepos and Caesar were deposed from their magistracies this would have been a constitutional impossibility 57 which led Caesar to distance himself from the proposals hopes for a provincial command and need to repair relations with the aristocracy took priority 58 He also was engaged in the Bona Dea affair where Publius Clodius Pulcher snuck into Caesar s house sacrilegiously during a female religious observance Caesar avoided any part of the affair by divorcing his wife immediately claiming that his wife needed to be above suspicion 59 but there is no indication that Caesar supported Clodius in any way 60 nbsp Bronze bust of Cato Caesar s principal opponent in the Catilinarian debate and also a personal enemy Cato may have been responsible for the law requiring declarations of candidacy in person within the pomerium 61 After his praetorship Caesar was appointed to govern Hispania Ulterior pro consule 62 Deeply indebted from his campaigns for the praetorship and for the pontificate Caesar required military victory beyond the normal provincial extortion to pay them off 63 He campaigned against the Callaeci and Lusitani and seized the Callaeci capital in northwestern Spain bringing Roman troops to the Atlantic and seizing enough plunder to pay his debts 64 Claiming to have completed the peninsula s conquest he made for home after having been hailed imperator 65 When he arrived home in the summer of 60 BC he was then forced to choose between a triumph and election to the consulship either he could remain outside the pomerium Rome s sacred boundary awaiting a triumph or cross the boundary giving up his command and triumph to make a declaration of consular candidacy 66 Attempts to waive the requirement for the declaration to be made in person were filibustered in the senate by Caesar s enemy Cato even though the senate seemed to support the exception 67 Faced with the choice between a triumph and the consulship Caesar chose the consulship 68 First consulship and the Gallic warsMain articles Military campaigns of Julius Caesar and First Triumvirate nbsp A denarius depicting Julius Caesar dated to February March 44 BC the goddess Venus is shown on the reverse holding Victoria and a scepter Caption CAESAR IMP M L AEMILIVS BVCA Caesar stood for the consulship of 59 BC along with two other candidates His political position at the time was strong he had supporters among the families which had supported Marius or Cinna his connection with the Sullan aristocracy were good his support of Pompey had won him support in turn His support for reconciliation in continuing aftershocks of the civil war were popular in all parts of society 69 With the support of Crassus who supported Caesar s joint ticket with one Lucius Lucceius Caesar won Lucceius however did not and the voters returned Marcus Calpurnius Bibulus instead one of Caesar s long standing personal and political enemies 70 71 First consulship Further information First Triumvirate After the elections Caesar reconciled Pompey and Crassus two political foes in a three way alliance misleadingly 72 termed the First Triumvirate in modern times Caesar was still at work in December of 60 BC attempting to find allies for his consulship and the alliance was finalised only some time around its start 73 Pompey and Crassus joined in pursuit of two respective goals the ratification of Pompey s eastern conquests and the bailing out of tax farmers in Asia many of whom were Crassus clients All three sought the extended patronage of land grants with Pompey especially seeking the promised land grants for his veterans 74 Caesar s first act was to publish the minutes of the senate and the assemblies signalling the senate s accountability to the public He then brought in the senate a bill crafted to avoid objections to previous land reform proposals and any indications of radicalism to purchase property from willing sellers to distribute to Pompey s veterans and the urban poor It would be administered by a board of twenty Caesar would be excluded and financed by Pompey s plunder and territorial gains 75 Referring it to the senate in hopes that it would take up the matter to show its beneficence for the people 76 there was little opposition and the obstructionism that occurred was largely unprincipled firmly opposing it not on grounds of public interest but rather opposition to Caesar s political advancement 75 Unable to overcome Cato s filibustering he moved the bill before the people at a public meeting Caesar s co consul Bibulus threatened a permanent veto for the entire year This clearly violated the people s well established legislative sovereignty 77 and triggered a riot in which his fasces were broken symbolising popular rejection of his magistracy 78 The bill was then voted through Bibulus attempted to induce the senate to nullify it on grounds it was passed by violence and contrary to the auspices the senate refused 79 Caesar also brought and passed a one third write down of tax farmers arrears for Crassus and ratification of Pompey s eastern settlements Both bills were passed with little or no debate in the senate 80 Caesar then moved to lift the extend his agrarian bill to Campania some time in May this may be when Bibulus withdrew to his house 81 Pompey shortly thereafter also wed Caesar s daughter Julia to seal their alliance 82 An ally of Caesar s plebeian tribune Publius Vatinius moved the lex Vatinia assigning the provinces of Illyricum and Cisalpine Gaul to Caesar for five years 83 84 Suetonius claim that the senate had assigned to Caesar the silvae callesque woods and tracks is likely an exaggeration fear of Gallic invasion had grown in 60 BC and it is more likely that the consuls had been assigned to Italy and that Caesarian partisans dismissed this defensive posture as mere forest tracks 85 The senate was also persuaded to assign to Caesar the Transalpine Gaul as well subject to annual renewal likely to control his ability to make war on the far side of the Alps 86 Some time in the year perhaps after the passage of bill distributing the Campanian land 87 after these political defeats Bibulus to withdraw to his house to issue edicts in absentia purporting unprecedentedly to cancel all days on which Caesar or his allies could hold votes for religious reasons 88 Cato too attempted symbolic gestures against it which allowed him and his allies allowing them to feign victimisation these tactics were successful in building revulsion to Caesar and his allies through the year 89 90 This opposition caused serious political difficulties to Caesar and his allies belying the common depiction of triumviral political supremacy 91 When his consulship ended Caesar s legislation was challenged by two of the new praetors but discussion in the senate stalled and was regardless dropped He stayed near the city until some time around mid March 92 Caesar in Gaul Main article Gallic Wars nbsp The extent of the Roman Republic in 40 BC after Caesar s conquestsDuring the Gallic Wars Caesar wrote his Commentaries thereon which were acknowledged even in his time as a Latin literary masterwork Meant to document Caesar s campaigns in his own words and maintain support in Rome for his military operations and career he produced some ten volumes covering operations in Gaul from 58 to 52 BC 93 Each was likely produced in the year following the events described and was likely aimed at the general or at least literate population in Rome 94 the account is naturally partial to Caesar his defeats are excused and victories highlighted but it is almost the sole source for events in Gaul in this period 95 Gaul in 58 BC was in the midst of some instability Tribes had raided into Transalpine Gaul and there was an on going struggle between two tribes in central Gaul which collaterally involved Roman alliances and politics The divisions within the Gauls they were no unified bloc would be exploited in the coming years 96 The first engagement was in April 58 BC when Caesar met the migrating Helvetii from moving through Roman territory allegedly because he feared they would unseat a Roman ally 97 Building a wall he stopped their movement near Geneva and after raising two legions defeated them in at the Battle of Bibracte before forcing them to return to their original homes 98 He was drawn further north responding to requests of Gallic tribes including the Aedui for aid against Ariovistus king of the Suebi and a declared friend of Rome by the senate during Caesar s own consulship and he defeated them at the Battle of Vosges 99 Wintering in northeastern Gaul near the Belgae in the winter of 58 57 Caesar s forward military position triggered an uprising to remove his troops able to eke out a victory at the Battle of the Sabis Caesar spent much of 56 BC suppressing the Belgae and dispersing his troops to campaign across much of Gaul including against the Veneti in what is now Brittany 100 At this point almost all of Gaul except its central regions falling under Roman subjugation 101 nbsp Vercingetorix throws down his arms at the feet of Julius Caesar painting by Lionel Royer in 1899 Musee Crozatier Le Puy en Velay France Seeking to buttress his military reputation he engaged Germans attempting to cross the Rhine which marked it as a Roman frontier 101 displaying Roman engineering prowess he here built a bridge across the Rhine in a feat of engineering meant to show Rome s ability to project power 102 Ostensibly seeking to interdict British aid to his Gallic enemies he led expeditions into southern Britain in 55 and 54 BC perhaps seeking further conquests or otherwise wanting to impress readers in Rome Britain at the time was to the Romans an island of mystery and a land of wonder 103 He however withdrew from the island in the face of winter uprisings in Gaul led by the Eburones and Belgae starting in late 54 BC which ambushed and virtually annihilated a legion and five cohorts 104 Caesar was however able to lure the rebels into unfavourable terrain and routed them in battle 105 The next year a greater challenge emerged with the uprising of most of central Gaul led by Vercingetorix of the Averni Caesar was initially defeated at Gergovia before besieging Vercingetorix at Alesia after becoming himself besieged Caesar won a major victory which forced Vercingetorix s surrender Caesar then spent much of his time into 51 BC suppressing any remaining resistance 106 Politics Gaul and Rome In the initial years from the end of Caesar s consulship in 59 BC the three so called triumvirs sought to maintain the goodwill of the extremely popular Publius Clodius Pulcher 107 who was plebeian tribune in 58 BC and in that year successfully sent Cicero into exile When Clodius took an anti Pompeian stance later that year he unsettled Pompey s eastern arrangements started attacking the validity of Caesar s consular legislation and by August 58 forced Pompey into seclusion Caesar and Pompey responded by successfully backing the election of magistrates to recall Cicero from exile on the condition that Cicero would refrain from criticism or obstruction of the allies 108 109 110 With politics in Rome falling into violent street clashes between Clodius and two tribunes who were friends of Cicero now supporting the allies Caesar sent to Rome news of his victories in Gaul along with the claim of total victory and pacification The senate at Cicero s motion voted him an unprecedented fifteen days of thanksgiving 111 Such reports were necessary for Caesar especially in light of senatorial opponents to prevent the senate from reassigning his command in Transalpine Gaul even if his position in Cisalpine Gaul and Illyricum was guaranteed by the lex Vatinia until 54 BC 112 His success was evidently recognised when the senate voted state funds for some of Caesar s legions which until this time Caesar paid for personally 113 The three allies relations broke down in 57 BC one of Pompey s allies challenged Caesar s land reform bill and the allies had a poor showing in the elections that year 114 With a real threat to Caesar s command and acta brewing in 56 BC under the aegis of the unfriendly consuls Caesar needed his allies political support 115 Pompey and Crassus too wanted military commands they pooled their political resources again Drawing in the support of Appius Claudius Pulcher and his younger brother Clodius for the consulship of 54 BC they planned second consulships with following governorships in 55 BC for both Pompey and Crassus along with a five year extension of Caesar s command 116 Cicero was inducted to oppose reassignment of Caesar s provinces and to defend a number of the allies clients his gloomy predictions of a triumviral set consuls designate for years on end proved an exaggeration when only by desperate tactics bribery intimidation and violence were Pompey and Crassus elected consuls for 55 BC 117 During their consulship Pompey and Crassus passed with some tribunician support the lex Pompeia Licinia extending Caesar s command and the lex Trebonia giving them respective commands in Spain and Syria 118 though Pompey never left for the province and remained politically active at Rome 119 The opposition again unified against their heavy handed political tactics though not against Caesar s activities in Gaul 120 and defeated the allies in the elections of that year 121 The ambush and destruction in Gaul of a legion and five cohorts in the winter of 55 54 BC produced substantial concern in Rome about Caesar s command and competence evidenced by the highly defensive narrative in Caesar s Commentaries 122 The death of Caesar s daughter and Pompey s wife Julia in childbirth c late August 54 did not create a rift between Caesar and Pompey 123 124 125 At the start of 53 BC Caesar sought and received reinforcements by recruitment and a private deal with Pompey before two years of largely unsuccessful campaigning against Gallic insurgents 126 In the same year Crassus s campaign ended in disaster at the Battle of Carrhae culminating in his death amongst the Parthians When in 52 BC Pompey started the year with a sole consulship to restore order to the city 127 Caesar was in Gaul suppressing insurgencies after news of his victory at Alesia with the support of Pompey he received twenty days of thanksgiving and pursuant to the Law of the Ten Tribunes the right to stand for the consulship in absentia 128 129 Civil warMain article Caesar s Civil War Further information Alexandrine war Early life of Cleopatra VII and Reign of Cleopatra VII nbsp A Roman bust of Pompey the Great made during the reign of Augustus 27 BC 14 AD a copy of an original bust from 70 to 60 BC Venice National Archaeological Museum ItalyFrom the period 52 to 49 BC trust between Caesar and Pompey disintegrated 130 In 51 BC the consul Marcellus proposed recalling Caesar arguing that his provincia here meaning task in Gaul due to his victory against Vercingetorix in 52 was complete it evidently was incomplete as Caesar was that year fighting the Bellovaci 131 and regardless the proposal was vetoed 132 That year it seemed that the conservatives around Cato in the Senate would seek to enlist Pompey to force Caesar to return from Gaul without honours or a second consulship 133 Cato Bibulus and their allies however were successful in winning Pompey over to take a hard line against Caesar s continued command 134 As 50 BC progressed fears of civil war grew both Caesar and his opponents started building up troops in southern Gaul and northern Italy respectively 135 In the autumn Cicero and others sought disarmament by both Caesar and Pompey and on 1 December 50 BC this was formally proposed in the Senate 136 It received overwhelming support 370 to 22 but was not passed when one of the consuls dissolved the meeting 137 That year when a rumour came to Rome that Caesar was marching into Italy both consuls instructed Pompey to defend Italy a charge he accepted as a last resort 138 At the start of 49 BC Caesar s renewed offer that he and Pompey disarm was read to the Senate which was rejected by the hardliners 139 A later compromise given privately to Pompey was also rejected at their insistence 140 On 7 January his supportive tribunes were driven from Rome the Senate then declared Caesar an enemy and it issued its senatus consultum ultimum 141 There is scholarly disagreement as to the specific reasons why Caesar marched on Rome A very popular theory is that Caesar was forced to choose when denied the immunity of his proconsular tenure between prosecution conviction and exile or civil war in defence of his position 142 143 Whether Caesar actually would have been prosecuted and convicted is debated Some scholars believe the possibility of successful prosecution was extremely unlikely 144 145 Caesar s main objectives were to secure a second consulship first mooted in 52 as colleague to Pompey s sole consulship 146 and a triumph He feared that his opponents then holding both consulships for 50 BC would reject his candidacy or refuse to ratify an election he won 147 This also was the core of his war justification that Pompey and his allies were planning by force if necessary indicated in the expulsion of the tribunes 148 to suppress the liberty of the Roman people to elect Caesar and honour his accomplishments 149 Italy Spain and Greece Around 10 or 11 January 49 BC 150 151 in response to the Senate s final decree 152 Caesar crossed the Rubicon the river defining the northern boundary of Italy with a single legion the Legio XIII Gemina and ignited civil war Upon crossing the Rubicon Caesar according to Plutarch and Suetonius is supposed to have quoted the Athenian playwright Menander in Greek let the die be cast 153 Pompey and many senators fled south believing that Caesar was marching quickly for Rome 154 Caesar after capturing communication routes to Rome paused and opened negotiations but they fell apart amid mutual distrust 155 Caesar responded by advancing south seeking to capture Pompey to force a conference 156 Pompey withdrew to Brundisium and was able to escape to Greece abandoning Italy in face of Caesar s superior forces evading Caesar s pursuit 157 Caesar stayed near Rome for about two weeks during his stay his forceful seizure of the treasury over tribunician veto put the lie to his pro tribunician war justifications and left Lepidus in charge of Italy while he attacked Pompey s Spanish provinces 158 159 He defeated two of Pompey s legates at the Battle of Ilerda before forcing surrender of the third his legates moved into Sicily and into Africa though the African expedition failed 160 Returning to Rome in the autumn Caesar had Lepidus as praetor bring a law appointing Caesar dictator to conduct the elections he along with Publius Servilius Isauricus won the following elections and would serve as consuls for 48 BC 161 Resigning the dictatorship after eleven days 162 Caesar then left Italy for Greece to stop Pompey s preparations arriving in force in early 48 BC 163 Caesar besieged Pompey at Dyrrhachium but Pompey was able to break out and force Caesar s forces to flee Following Pompey southeast into Greece and to save one of his legates he engaged and decisively defeated Pompey at Pharsalus on 9 August 48 BC Pompey then fled for Egypt Cato fled for Africa others like Cicero and Marcus Junius Brutus begged for Caesar s pardon 164 Alexandrine war and Asia Minor nbsp Cleopatra and Caesar 1866 painting by Jean Leon Gerome nbsp This mid 1st century BC Roman wall painting in Pompeii is probably a depiction of Cleopatra VII as Venus Genetrix with her son Caesarion as Cupid Its owner Marcus Fabius Rufus most likely ordered its concealment behind a wall in reaction to the execution of Caesarion on orders of Octavian in 30 BC 165 166 Pompey was killed when he arrived in Alexandria the capital of Egypt Caesar arrived three days later on 2 October 48 BC Prevented from leaving the city by Etesian winds Caesar decided to arbitrate an Egyptian civil war between the child pharaoh Ptolemy XIII Theos Philopator and Cleopatra his sister wife and co regent queen 167 In late October 48 BC Caesar was appointed in absentia to a year long dictatorship 168 after news of his victory at Pharsalus arrived to Rome 169 While in Alexandria he started an affair with Cleopatra and withstood a siege by Ptolemy and his other sister Arsinoe until March 47 BC Reinforced by eastern client allies under Mithridates of Pergamum he then defeated Ptolemy at the Battle of the Nile and installed Cleopatra as ruler 170 Caesar and Cleopatra celebrated the victory with a triumphal procession on the Nile he stayed in Egypt with Cleopatra until June or July that year though the relevant commentaries attributed to him give no such impression Some time in late June Cleopatra gave birth to a child by Caesar called Caesarion 171 When Caesar landed at Antioch he learnt that during his time in Egypt the king of what is now Crimea Pharnaces had attempted to seize what had been his father s kingdom Pontus across the Black Sea in northern Anatolia His invasion had swept aside Caesar s legates and the local client kings but Caesar engaged him at Zela and defeated him immediately leading Caesar to write veni vidi vici I came I saw I conquered downplaying Pompey s previous Pontic victories He then left quickly for Italy 172 Italy Africa and Spain Caesar s absence from Italy put Mark Antony as magister equitum in charge His rule was unpopular Publius Cornelius Dolabella serving as plebeian tribune in 47 BC agitated for debt relief and after that agitation got out of hand the senate moved for Antony to restore order Delayed by a mutiny in southern Italy he returned and suppressed the riots by force killing many and delivering a similar blow to his popularity Cato had marched to Africa 173 and there Metellus Scipio was in charge of the remaining republicans they allied with Juba of Numidia what used to be Pompey s fleet also raided the central Mediterranean islands Caesar s governor in Spain moreover was sufficiently unpopular that the province revolted and switched to the republican side 174 Caesar demoted Antony on his return and pacified the mutineers without violence 175 before overseeing the election of the rest of the magistrates for 47 BC no elections had yet been held and also for those of 46 BC Caesar would serve with Lepidus as consul in 46 he borrowed money for the war confiscated and sold the property of his enemies at fair prices and then left for Africa on 25 December 47 BC 176 Caesar s landing in Africa was marked with some difficulties establishing a beachhead and logistically He was defeated by Titus Labienus at Ruspina on 4 January 46 BC and thereafter took a rather cautious approach 177 After inducing some desertions from the republicans Caesar ended up surrounded at Thapsus His troops attacked prematurely on 6 April 46 BC starting a battle they then won it and massacred the republican forces without quarter Marching on Utica where Cato commanded Caesar arrived to find that Cato had killed himself rather than receive Caesar s clemency 178 Many of the remaining anti Caesarian leaders including Metellus Scipio and Juba also committed suicide shortly afterwards 179 Labienus and two of Pompey s sons however had moved to the Spain provinces in revolt Caesar started a process of annexing parts of Numidia and returned to Italy via Sardinia in June 46 BC 180 Caesar stayed in Italy to celebrate four triumphs in late September supposedly over four foreign enemies Gaul Egypt Pharnaces Asia and Juba Africa He led Vercingetorix Cleopatra s younger sister Arsinoe and Juba s son before his chariot Vercingetorix was executed 180 According to Appian in some of the triumphs Caesar paraded pictures and models of his victories over fellow Romans in the civil wars to popular dismay 181 The soldiers were each given 24 000 sesterces a lifetime s worth of pay further games and celebrations were put on for the plebs Near the end of the year Caesar heard bad news from Spain and with an army left for the peninsula leaving Lepidus in charge as magister equitum 182 At a bloody battle at Munda on 17 March 45 BC Caesar narrowly found victory 183 his enemies were treated as rebels and he had them massacred 184 Labienus died on the field While one of Pompey s sons Sextus escaped the war as effectively over 185 He remained in the province until June before setting out for Rome He arrived in Rome in October of the same year and celebrated an unseemly triumph over fellow Romans 184 By this point he had started preparations for war on the Parthians to avenge Crassus death at Carrhae in 53 BC with wide ranging objectives that would take him into Dacia for three or more years It was set to start on 18 March 44 BC 186 Assassination nbsp The Green Caesar posthumous portrait from the 1st century AD now located at the Altes Museum in Berlin Dictatorships and honours Prior to Caesar s assumption of the title dictator perpetuo in February 44 BC he had been appointed dictator some four times since his first dictatorship in 49 BC After occupying Rome he engineered this first appointment largely to hold elections after 11 days he resigned The other dictatorships lasted for longer periods up to a year and by April 46 he was given a new dictatorship annually 187 The task he was assigned revived that of the Sulla s dictatorship rei publicae constituendae 188 These appointments however were not the source of legal power themselves in the eyes of the literary sources they were instead honours and titles which reflected Caesar s dominant position in the state secured not by extraordinary magistracy or legally powers but by personal status as victor over other Romans 189 Through the period after Pharsalus the senate showered Caesar with honours 190 including the title praefectus moribus lit prefect of morals which historically was associated with the censorial power to revise the senate rolls He was also granted power over war and peace 191 usurping a power traditionally held by the comitia centuriata 192 These powers attached to Caesar personally 193 Similarly extraordinary were a number of symbolic honours which saw Caesar s image put onto Roman coinage the first for a living Roman with special rights to wear royal dress sit atop a golden chair in the senate and have his statues erected in public temples The month Quintilis in which he was born was renamed Julius now July 194 These were symbols of divine monarchy and later objects of resentment The decisions on the normal operation of the state justice legislation administration and public works were concentrated into Caesar s person without regard for or even notice given to the traditional institutions of the republic 195 Caesar s domination over public affairs and his competitive instinct to preclude all others alienated the political class and led eventually to the conspiracy against his life 196 Legislation Caesar as far as is attested in evidence did not intend to restructure Roman society Ernst Badian writing in the Oxford Classical Dictionary noted that although Caesar did implement a series of reforms they did not touch on the core of the republican system he had no plans for basic social and constitutional reform and that the extraordinary honours heaped upon him merely grafted him as an ill fitting head on to the body of the traditional structure 188 The most important of Caesar s reforms was to the calendar which saw the abolition of the traditional republican lunisolar calendar and its replacement with a solar calendar now called the Julian calendar 197 He also increased the number of magistrates and senators from 600 to 900 to better administer the empire and reward his supporters with offices Colonies also were founded outside Italy notably on the sites of Carthage and Corinth which had both been destroyed during Rome s 2nd century BC conquests to discharge Italy s population into the provinces and reduce unrest 198 The royal power of naming patricians was revived to benefit the families of his men 199 and the permanent courts jury pools were also altered to remove the tribuni aerarii leaving only the equestrians and senators 200 He also took further administrative actions to stabilise his rule and that of the state 201 Caesar reduced the size of the grain dole from 320 000 down to around 150 000 by tightening the qualifications special bonuses were offered to families with many children to stall depopulation 202 Plans were drawn for the conduct of a census Citizenship was extended to a number of communities in Cisalpine Gaul and to Cadiz 203 During the civil wars Caesar had also instituted a novel debt repayment programme no debts would be forgiven but they could be paid in kind remitted rents up to a certain amount and thrown games distributing food 204 Many of his enemies during the civil wars were pardoned Caesar s clemency was exalted in his propaganda and temple works with the intent to cultivate gratitude and draw a contrast between himself and the vengeful dictatorship of Sulla 205 The building programmes started prior to his expedition to Spain continued with the construction of the Forum of Caesar and the Temple of Venus Genetrix therein Other public works including an expansion of Ostia s port and a canal through the Corinthian Isthmus were also planned citation needed Very busy with this work the heavy handedness with which he ignored the senate magistrates and those who came to visit him also alienated many in Rome 206 The collegia civic associations restored by Clodius in 58 BC were again abolished 202 His actions to reward his supporters saw him allow his subordinates illegal triumphal processions and resign the consulship on the last day of the year so any ally could be elected as suffect consul for a single day 207 Corruption on the part of his partisans was also overlooked to ensure their support provincial cities and client kingdoms were extorted for favours to pay his bills 208 Conspiracy and death nbsp Denarius 42 BC of Cassius and Lentulus Spinther depicting the crowned head of Liberty and on the reverse a sacrificial jug and lituus 209 nbsp An 1867 depiction of Caesar s death The Death of Caesar by Jean Leon Gerome Further information Assassination of Julius Caesar Attempts in January 44 BC to call Caesar rex lit king a title associated with arbitrary oppression against citizens were shut down by two tribunes before a supportive crowd Caesar claiming that the two tribunes infringed on his honour by doing so had them deposed from office and ejected from the senate 210 The incident both undermined Caesar s original arguments for pursuing the civil war protecting the tribunes and angered a public which still revered the tribunes as protectors of popular freedom 211 Shortly before 15 February 44 BC he assumed the dictatorship for life putting an end to any hopes that his powers would be merely temporary 212 Just days after his assumption of the life dictatorship he publicly rejected a diadem from Antony at celebrations for the Lupercalia Interpretations of the episode vary he may have been rejecting the diadem publicly only because the crowd was insufficiently supportive he could have done it performatively to signal he was no monarch alternatively Antony could have acted on his own initiative By this point however rumour was rife that Caesar already wearing the dress of a monarch sought a formal crown and the episode did little to reassure 213 The plan to assassinate Caesar had started by the summer of 45 BC An attempt to recruit Antony was made around that time though he declined and gave Caesar no warning By February 44 BC there were some sixty conspirators 214 It is clear that by this time the victorious Caesarian coalition from the civil war had broken apart 215 While most of the conspirators were former Pompeians they were joined by a substantial number of Caesarians 216 Among their leaders were Gaius Trebonius consul in 45 Decimus Brutus consul designate for 42 as well as Cassius and Brutus both praetors in 44 BC 217 Trebonius and Decimus had joined Caesar during the war while Brutus and Cassius had joined Pompey other Caesarians involved included Servius Sulpicius Galba Lucius Minucius Basilus Lucius Tullius Cimber and Gaius Servilius Casca 218 Many of the conspirators would have been candidates in the consular elections for 43 to 41 BC 219 likely dismayed by Caesar s sham elections in early 44 BC that produced advance results for the years 43 41 BC Those electoral results came from the grace of the dictator and not that of the people for the republican elite this was no substitute for actual popular support 220 Nor is it likely that the subordination of the normal magistrates to Caesar s masters of horse Latin magistri equitum was appreciated 221 Brutus who claimed descent from the Lucius Junius Brutus who had driven out the kings and the Gaius Servilius Ahala who had freed Rome from incipient tyranny was the main leader of the conspiracy 222 By late autumn 45 BC graffiti 223 and some public comments at Rome were condemning Caesar as a tyrant and insinuating the need for a Brutus to remove the dictator The ancient sources excepting Nicolaus of Damascus are unanimous that this reflected a genuine turn in public opinion against Caesar 224 Popular indignation at Caesar was likely rooted in his debt policies too friendly to lenders use of lethal force to suppress protests for debt relief his reduction in the grain dole his abolition of the collegia restored by Clodius his abolition of the poorest panel of jurors in the permanent courts and his abolition of open elections which deprived the people of their ancient right of decision 225 A popular turn against Caesar is also observed with reports that the two deposed tribunes were written in on ballots at Caesar s advance consular elections in place of Caesar s candidates 226 Whether there was a tradition of tyrannicide at Rome is unclear Cicero wrote in private as if the duty to kill tyrants was already given he however made no public speeches to that effect and there is little evidence that the public accepted the logic of preventive tyrannicide 227 The philosophical tradition of the Platonic Old Academy was also a factor driving Brutus to action due to its emphasis on a duty to free the state from tyranny 228 While some news of the conspiracy did leak out Caesar refused to take precautions and rejected escort by a bodyguard The date decided upon by the conspirators was 15 March the Ides of March three days before Caesar intended to leave for his Parthian campaign 229 News of his imminent departure forced the conspirators to move up their plans the senate meeting on the 15th would be the last before his departure 230 They had decided that a senate meeting was the best place to frame the killing as political rejecting the alternatives at games elections or on the road 231 That only the conspirators would be armed at the senate meeting per Dio also would have been an advantage The day 15 March was also symbolically important as it was the day on which consuls took office until the mid 2nd century BC 232 nbsp The Ides of March coin minted in 42 BC depicts Marcus Junius Brutus The reverse depicts daggers and a pileus symbolising their use to win back freedom Various stories purport that Caesar was on the cusp of not attending or otherwise being warned about the plot 232 233 Approached on his golden chair at the foot of the statue of Pompey the conspirators attacked him with daggers Whether he fell in silence per Suetonius or after reply to Brutus appearance kai su teknon you too child is variantly recorded 234 Between twenty three and thirty five wounds later the dictator for life was dead 235 236 Aftermath of the assassination Further information War of Mutina Second Triumvirate and Liberators civil war nbsp Marc Antony s Oration at Caesar s Funeral by George Edward Robertson late 19th or early 20th century The assassins seized the Capitoline hill after killing the dictator They then summoned a public meeting in the Forum where they were coldly received by the population They were also unable to fully secure the city as Lepidus Caesar s lieutenant in the dictatorship moved troops from the Tiber Island into the city proper Antony the consul who escaped the assassination urged an illogical compromise position in the senate 237 Caesar was not declared a tyrant and the conspirators were not punished 238 Caesar s funeral was then approved At the funeral Antony inflamed the public against the assassins which triggered mob violence that lasted for some months before the assassins were forced to flee the capital and Antony then finally acted to suppress it by force 239 On the site of his cremation the Temple of Caesar was begun by the triumvirs in 42 BC at the east side of the main square of the Roman Forum Only its altar now remains 240 The terms of the will were also read to the public it gave a generous donative to the plebs at large and left as principal heir one Gaius Octavius Caesar s great nephew then at Apollonia and adopted him in the will 241 Resumption of the pre existing republic proved impossible as various actors appealed in the aftermath of Caesar s death to liberty or to vengeance to mobilise huge armies that led to a series of civil wars 242 The first war was between Antony in 43 BC and the senate including senators of both Caesarian and Pompeian persuasion which resulted in Octavian Caesar s heir exploiting the chaos to seize the consulship and join with Antony and Lepidus to form the Second Triumvirate 243 After purging their political enemies in a series of proscriptions 244 the triumvirs secured the deification of Caesar the senate declared on 1 January 42 BC that Caesar would be placed among the Roman gods 245 and marched on the east where a second war saw the triumvirs defeat the tyrannicides in battle 246 resulting in a final death of the republican cause and a three way division of much of the Roman world 247 By 31 BC Caesar s heir had taken sole control of the empire ejecting his triumviral rivals after two decades of civil war Pretending to restore the republic his masked autocracy was acceptable to the war weary Romans and marked the establishment of a new Roman monarchy 248 Personal lifeHealth and physical appearance nbsp The Chiaramonti Caesar bust a posthumous portrait in marble 44 30 BC Museo Pio Clementino Vatican MuseumsBased on remarks by Plutarch 249 Caesar is sometimes thought to have suffered from epilepsy Modern scholarship is sharply divided on the subject and some scholars believe that he was plagued by malaria particularly during the Sullan proscriptions of the 80s BC 250 Other scholars contend his epileptic seizures were due to a parasitic infection in the brain by a tapeworm 251 252 Caesar had four documented episodes of what may have been complex partial seizures He may additionally have had absence seizures in his youth The earliest accounts of these seizures were made by the biographer Suetonius who was born after Caesar died The claim of epilepsy is countered among some medical historians by a claim of hypoglycemia which can cause epileptoid seizures 253 254 A line from Shakespeare has sometimes been taken to mean that he was deaf in one ear Come on my right hand for this ear is deaf 255 No classical source mentions hearing impairment in connection with Caesar The playwright may have been making metaphorical use of a passage in Plutarch that does not refer to deafness at all but rather to a gesture Alexander of Macedon customarily made By covering his ear Alexander indicated that he had turned his attention from an accusation in order to hear the defence 256 Francesco M Galassi and Hutan Ashrafian suggest that Caesar s behavioral manifestations headaches vertigo falls possibly caused by muscle weakness due to nerve damage sensory deficit giddiness and insensibility and syncopal episodes were the results of cerebrovascular episodes not epilepsy Pliny the Elder reports in his Natural History that Caesar s father and forefather died without apparent cause while putting on their shoes 257 These events can be more readily associated with cardiovascular complications from a stroke episode or lethal heart attack Caesar possibly had a genetic predisposition for cardiovascular disease 258 Suetonius writing more than a century after Caesar s death describes Caesar as tall of stature with a fair complexion shapely limbs a somewhat full face and keen black eyes 259 Name and family The name Gaius Julius Caesar Main article Gaius Julius Caesar name Using the Latin alphabet of the period which lacked the letters J and U Caesar s name would be rendered GAIVS IVLIVS CAESAR the form CAIVS is also attested using the older Roman representation of G by C The standard abbreviation was C IVLIVS CAESAR reflecting the older spelling The letterform AE is a ligature of the letters A and E and is often used in Latin inscriptions to save space In Classical Latin it was pronounced ˈɡaː i ʊs ˈjuːl i ʊs ˈkae sar In the days of the late Roman Republic many historical writings were done in Greek a language most educated Romans studied Young wealthy Roman boys were often taught by Greek slaves and sometimes sent to Athens for advanced training as was Caesar s principal assassin Brutus In Greek during Caesar s time his family name was written Kaisar Kaisar reflecting its contemporary pronunciation Thus his name is pronounced in a similar way to the pronunciation of the German Kaiser kaɪ zɐ or Dutch keizer kɛizɛr In Vulgar Latin the original diphthong ae first began to be pronounced as a simple long vowel ɛː Then the plosive k before front vowels began due to palatalization to be pronounced as an affricate hence renderings like ˈtʃeːsar in Italian and ˈtseːzar in German regional pronunciations of Latin as well as the title of Tsar With the evolution of the Romance languages the affricate ts became a fricative s thus ˈseːsar in many regional pronunciations including the French one from which the modern English pronunciation is derived Caesar s cognomen itself became a title it was promulgated by the Bible which contains the famous verse Render unto Caesar the things which are Caesar s and unto God the things that are God s The title became from the late first millennium Kaiser in German and through Old Church Slavic cesarĭ Tsar or Czar in the Slavic languages The last Tsar in nominal power was Simeon II of Bulgaria whose reign ended in 1946 but is still alive in 2023 This means that for approximately two thousand years there was at least one head of state bearing his name As a term for the highest ruler the word Caesar constitutes one of the earliest best attested and most widespread Latin loanwords in the Germanic languages being found in the text corpora of Old High German keisar Old Saxon kesur Old English casere Old Norse keisari Old Dutch keisere and through Greek Gothic kaisar 260 Posterity Main article Julio Claudian family tree nbsp Julio Claudian family tree WivesFirst marriage to Cornelia from 84 BC until her death in 69 BC Second marriage to Pompeia from 67 BC until he divorced her around 61 BC over the Bona Dea scandal Third marriage to Calpurnia from 59 BC until Caesar s death nbsp Reliefs of Cleopatra and her son by Julius Caesar Caesarion at the Temple of Dendera nbsp Roman painting from the House of Giuseppe II Pompeii early 1st century AD most likely depicting Cleopatra VII wearing her royal diadem consuming poison in an act of suicide while her son Caesarion also wearing a royal diadem stands behind her 261 ChildrenJulia by Cornelia born in 83 or 82 BC Caesarion by Cleopatra VII born 47 BC and killed at age 17 by Caesar s adopted son Octavianus Posthumously adopted Gaius Julius Caesar Octavianus his great nephew by blood grandson of Julia his sister who later became Emperor Augustus Suspected childrenSome ancient sources refer to the possibility of the tyrannicide Marcus Junius Brutus being one of Julius Caesar s illegitimate children 262 Caesar at the time Brutus was born was 15 Most ancient historians were sceptical of this and on the whole scholars have rejected the possibility that Brutus was the love child of Servilia and Caesar on the grounds of chronology 263 264 265 GrandchildrenGrandchild from Julia and Pompey dead at several days unnamed 266 LoversCleopatra mother of Caesarion Servilia mother of Brutus Eunoe queen of Mauretania and wife of BogudesRumors of passive homosexuality Roman society viewed the passive role during sexual activity regardless of gender to be a sign of submission or inferiority Indeed Suetonius says that in Caesar s Gallic triumph his soldiers sang that Caesar may have conquered the Gauls but Nicomedes conquered Caesar 267 According to Cicero Bibulus Gaius Memmius and others mainly Caesar s enemies he had an affair with Nicomedes IV of Bithynia early in his career The stories were repeated referring to Caesar as the Queen of Bithynia by some Roman politicians as a way to humiliate him Caesar himself denied the accusations repeatedly throughout his lifetime and according to Cassius Dio even under oath on one occasion 268 This form of slander was popular during this time in the Roman Republic to demean and discredit political opponents Catullus wrote a poem suggesting that Caesar and his engineer Mamurra were lovers 269 but later apologised 270 Mark Antony charged that Octavian had earned his adoption by Caesar through sexual favors Suetonius described Antony s accusation of an affair with Octavian as political slander Octavian eventually became the first Roman Emperor as Augustus 271 Literary works nbsp Julii Caesaris quae exstant 1678 nbsp A 1783 edition of The Gallic WarsDuring his lifetime Caesar was regarded as one of the best orators and prose authors in Latin even Cicero spoke highly of Caesar s rhetoric and style 272 Only Caesar s war commentaries have survived A few sentences from other works are quoted by other authors Among his lost works are his funeral oration for his paternal aunt Julia and his Anticato a document attacking Cato in response to Cicero s eulogy Poems by Julius Caesar are also mentioned in ancient sources 273 Memoirs The Commentarii de Bello Gallico usually known in English as The Gallic Wars seven books each covering one year of his campaigns in Gaul and southern Britain in the 50s BC with the eighth book written by Aulus Hirtius on the last two years The Commentarii de Bello Civili The Civil War events of the Civil War from Caesar s perspective until immediately after Pompey s death in Egypt Other works historically have been attributed to Caesar but their authorship is in doubt De Bello Alexandrino On the Alexandrine War campaign in Alexandria De Bello Africo On the African War campaigns in North Africa and De Bello Hispaniensi On the Hispanic War campaigns in the Iberian Peninsula These narratives were written and published annually during or just after the actual campaigns as a sort of dispatches from the front They were important in shaping Caesar s public image and enhancing his reputation when he was away from Rome for long periods They may have been presented as public readings 274 As a model of clear and direct Latin style The Gallic Wars traditionally has been studied by first or second year Latin students LegacyHistoriography nbsp Flowers placed on the remains of the altar of Caesar in the Roman Forum of Rome ItalyThe texts written by Caesar an autobiography of the most important events of his public life are the most complete primary source for the reconstruction of his biography However Caesar wrote those texts with his political career in mind 275 Julius Caesar is also considered one of the first historical figures to fold his message scrolls into a concertina form which made them easier to read 276 The Roman emperor Augustus began a cult of personality of Caesar which described Augustus as Caesar s political heir The modern historiography is influenced by this tradition 277 Many rulers in history became interested in the historiography of Caesar Napoleon III wrote the scholarly work Histoire de Jules Cesar which was not finished The second volume listed previous rulers interested in the topic Charles VIII ordered a monk to prepare a translation of the Gallic Wars in 1480 Charles V ordered a topographic study in France to place the Gallic Wars in context which created forty high quality maps of the conflict The contemporary Ottoman sultan Suleiman the Magnificent catalogued the surviving editions of the Commentaries and translated them to Turkish language Henry IV and Louis XIII of France translated the first two commentaries and the last two respectively Louis XIV retranslated the first one afterwards 278 Politics Main article Caesarism Julius Caesar is seen as the main example of Caesarism a form of political rule led by a charismatic strongman whose rule is based upon a cult of personality whose rationale is the need to rule by force establishing a violent social order and being a regime involving prominence of the military in the government 279 Other people in history such as the French Napoleon Bonaparte and the Italian Benito Mussolini have defined themselves as Caesarists 280 281 Bonaparte did not focus only on Caesar s military career but also on his relation with the masses a predecessor to populism 282 The word is also used in a pejorative manner by critics of this type of political rule Depictions Main article Cultural depictions of Julius Caesar nbsp Bust in the National Archaeological Museum of Naples nbsp Modern bronze statue of Julius Caesar Rimini Italy nbsp Portrait at the Archaeological Museum of Sparta nbsp Bronze statue at the Porta Palatina in Turin nbsp Bust in the Archaeological Museum of Corinth nbsp Bust in Naples National Archaeological Museum photograph published in 1902Battle record Date War Action Opponents Type Present day areas Outcome58 BC 58 BC Gallic Wars Arar Battle of the Arar Helvetii Battle France Victory 58 BC 58 BC Mount Haemus Battle of Bibracte Helvetii Boii Tulingi Rauraci Battle France Victory 58 BC 58 BC Vosges Battle of Vosges Suebi Battle France Victory 57 BC 57 BC Battle of the Axona Belgae Battle France Victory 57 BC 57 BC Battle of the Sabis Battle of the Sabis Nervii Viromandui Atrebates Aduatuci Battle France Victory 55 and 54 BC 55 and 54 BC Julius Caesar s invasions of Britain Julius Caesar s invasions of Britain Celtic Britons Campaign England Victory 54 BC 53 BC 54 BC 53 BC Ambiorix s revolt Ambiorix s revolt Eburones Campaign Belgium France Victory 52 BC 52 BC Avaricum Avaricum Bituriges Arverni Siege France Victory 52 BC 52 BC Battle of Gergovia Battle of Gergovia Gallic tribes Battle France DefeatSeptember 52 BC Battle of Alesia Battle of Alesia Gallic Confederation Siege and Battle Alise Sainte Reine France Decisive victory 51 BC 51 BC Siege of Uxellodunum Siege of Uxellodunum Gallic Siege Vayrac France Victory June August 49 BC June August 49 BC Caesar s Civil War Battle of Ilerda Battle of Ilerda Optimates Battle Catalonia Spain Victory 10 July 48 BC 10 July 48 BC Battle of Dyrrhachium 48 BC Optimates Battle Durres Albania Defeat 9 August 48 BC 9 August 48 BC Battle of Pharsalus Pompeians Battle Greece Decisive Victory 47 BC 47 BC Battle of the Nile Ptolemaic Kingdom Battle Alexandria Egypt Victory 2 August 47 BC 2 August 47 BC Battle of Zela Kingdom of Pontus Battle Zile Turkey Victory 4 January 46 BC 4 January 46 BC Battle of Ruspina Battle of Ruspina Optimates Numidia Battle Ruspina Africa Defeat 6 April 46 BC 6 April 46 BC Battle of Thapsus Battle of Thapsus Optimates Numidia Battle Tunisia Decisive Victory 17 March 45 BC 17 March 45 BC Battle of Munda Battle of Munda Pompeians Battle Andalusia Spain Victory ChronologySee alsoEt tu Brute Julius Caesar a play by William Shakespeare c 1599 Giulio Cesare an opera by Handel 1724 Veni vidi vici Caesar cipher Caesareum of AlexandriaReferences Badian 2009 p 16 All ancient sources place his birth in 100 BC Some historians have argued against this the consensus of opinion places it in 100 BC Goldsworthy 2006 p 30 Broughton 1952 p 574 Keppie Lawrence 1998 The approach of civil war The Making of the Roman Army From Republic to Empire Norman OK University of Oklahoma Press p 102 ISBN 978 0 8061 3014 9 Suet Iul 81 82 Plut Caes 64 67 Tucker Spencer 2010 Battles That Changed History An Encyclopedia of World Conflict ABC CLIO p 68 ISBN 978 1 59884 430 6 Badian 2009 p 16 pursuant to Macr Sat 1 12 34 quoting a law by Mark Antony noting the date as the fourth day before the Ides of Quintilis Only Dio gives 13 July All sources give the year 100 BC Goldsworthy 2006 pp 32 33 Goldsworthy 2006 p 35 Badian 2009 p 14 Goldsworthy 2006 pp 31 32 The consul of 157 BC was Sextus Caesar the consuls of 91 and 90 were Sextus Caesar and Lucius Caesar respectively Badian 2009 p 15 dates the land commission to 103 per MRR 3 109 Goldsworthy 2006 pp 33 34 Broughton 1952 p 22 dating the proconsulship to 91 with praetorship in 92 BC and citing among others CIL I 705 and CIL I 706 Badian 2009 p 16 Badian 2009 p 16 Badian cites Suet Iul 1 2 arguing that Caesar was actually appointed because a divorced man could not be flamen Dialis the assertion that Caesar married one Cossutia then divorced her to marry Cornelia and become flamen in Plut Caes 5 3 is incorrect Goldsworthy 2006 p 34 Badian 2009 pp 16 17 stating Caesar was placed on the lists Cf stating Caesar was only summoned for interrogation Hinard Francois 1985 Les proscriptions de la Rome republicaine in French Ecole francaise de Rome p 64 ISBN 978 2 7283 0094 5 OCLC 1006100534 Badian 2009 pp 16 17 also rejecting claims that Caesar hid by bribing his pursuers this is an example of how the Caesar myth pervades our accounts and makes it difficult to get at the facts that he bribed his pursuers cannot be true since confiscation of his fortune went with his proscription Plut Caes 1 4 Suet Iul 1 3 Badian 2009 p 17 noting also that Sulla never killed any fellow patricians Badian 2009 pp 17 18 Suet Iul 2 3 Plut Caes 2 3 Dio 43 20 Badian 2009 p 17 Badian 2009 p 18 citing Suet Iul 3 Morstein Marx 2021 p 35 Alexander 1990 p 71 Trial 140 noting also that Tac Dial 34 7 wrongly places the trial in 79 BC Alexander 1990 pp 71 72 Trial 141 Badian 2009 p 18 Pelling C B R 2011 Plutarch Caesar Oxford Oxford University Press pp 139 41 ISBN 978 0 19 814904 0 OCLC 772240772 Pelling agrees with Vell Pat 2 42 3 over Plut Caes 1 8 2 7 and Suet Iul 4 Badian 2009 p 19 calling the story in Suet Iul 4 2 that Caesar called up auxiliaries and with them drove Mithridates prefect from the province of Asia a striking example of the Caesar myth that is difficult to believe Goldsworthy 2006 p 78 Badian 2009 p 19 Broughton 1952 pp 114 125 Vell Pat 2 43 1 pontificate Plut Caes 5 1 and Suet Iul 5 military tribunate Badian 2009 p 19 citing Suet Iul 5 Morstein Marx 2021 p 63 Badian 2009 pp 19 20 also noting senatorial support for the pardons Broughton 1952 pp 126 128 130 n 4 argues the tribunician law recalling the Lepidan exiles must postdate the consular law in 70 which removed Sulla s suppression of tribunician legislative initiative Badian 2009 p 20 Broughton 1952 p 132 Badian 2009 p 21 cites Suet Iul 6 1 for the incipit of Caesar s eulogy Morstein Marx 2021 p 43 Plut Caes 5 2 3 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 43 46 Morstein Marx 2021 p 46 noting also that Plutarch omits this detail likely because it would indeed have been embarrassing for his Marian representation of Caesar internal citations and quotation marks omitted Gruen 1995 p 79 80 Mouritsen Henrik 2001 Plebs and politics in the late Roman Republic Cambridge University Press p 97 ISBN 0 511 04114 4 OCLC 56761502 See also Broughton 1952 p 158 and Plut Caes 6 1 4 Broughton 1952 p 158 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 46 47 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 48 49 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 64 64 n 129 noting that it is not clear which election was first it is more likely however that elections were late and therefore that the pontifical election occurred first Dio s claim of elections in December is clearly erroneous Broughton 1952 p 172 n 3 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 64 65 noting the victory of curule aedile Publius Licinius Crassus in 212 over senior consulars and plebeian tribune Gnaeus Domitius Ahenobarbus over consulars Morstein Marx 2021 p 66 citing Suet Iul 13 Plut Caes 7 1 4 Dio 37 37 1 3 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 67 68 Gruen 1995 pp 80 81 Morstein Marx 2021 p 69 n 148 Morstein Marx 2021 p 71 Alexander 1990 p 110 Trials 220 21 Gruen 1995 p 80 citing Sall Cat 49 1 2 See also Suet Iul 17 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 72 77 placing it around 2 5 per cent Gruen 1995 p 429 n 107 calls the view that Caesar was one of the masterminds of the conspiracy long discredited and requires no further refutation Morstein Marx 2021 pp 85 86 90 Morstein Marx 2021 p 92 Earlier sources being Cic Cat 4 8 10 and Sall Cat 51 42 Later sources include Plut Caes 7 9 and App BCiv 2 6 Gruen 1995 pp 281 82 Morstein Marx 2021 p 102 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 102 04 Morstein Marx 2021 p 107 citing Suet Iul 16 Dio reports a senatus consultum ultimum Broughton 1952 p 173 citing Dio 37 41 Morstein Marx 2021 p 109 Plut Caes 10 9 Morstein Marx 2021 p 110 adding in notes that the affair is usually interpreted as an attempt to destroy Clodius career and that Caesar may have been a secondary target due to expectations that he would reject political pressure for a divorce Drogula 2019 pp 97 98 Broughton 1952 pp 173 180 Most sources give a proconsular dignity After the Sullan era all magistrates were prorogued pro consule Badian Ernst Lintott Andrew 2016 pro consule pro praetore Oxford Classical Dictionary Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199381135 013 5337 ISBN 978 0 19 938113 5 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 109 10 Broughton 1952 p 180 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 110 11 Morstein Marx 2021 p 111 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 112 13 Morstein Marx 2021 p 114 Plut Caes 13 Suet Iul 18 2 Gruen 2009 p 28 Gruen 2009 pp 30 31 Gruen 2009 p 28 Broughton 1952 pp 158 173 Bibulus was Caesar s colleague both in the curule aedileship and the praetorship They clashed politically in both magistracies On credit for the aedilican games see Suet Iul 10 Dio 37 8 2 and Plut Caes 5 5 Morstein Marx 2021 p 119 A n alliance which in modern times has come quite misleadingly to be called the First Triumvirate the very phrase invokes a misleading teleology Furthermore it is almost impossible to use it without adopting some version of the view that it was a kind of conspiracy against the republic Gruen 2009 p 31 Gruen 2009 p 31 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 121 22 noting that the senate had approved distribution of lands to Pompey s veterans from the Sertorian War all the way back in 70 BC a b Gruen 2009 p 32 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 125 29 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 130 132 Morstein Marx 2021 p 138 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 139 40 Wiseman 1994 p 372 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 143 Bibulus 147 dating to May Wiseman 1994 p 374 Drogula 2019 p 137 Gruen 2009 p 33 noting that the lex Vatinia was no means unprecedented or even controversial Morstein Marx 2021 p 175 citing Balsdon J P V D 1939 Consular provinces under the late Republic II Caesar s Gallic command Journal of Roman Studies 29 167 83 doi 10 2307 297143 ISSN 0075 4358 JSTOR 297143 S2CID 163892529 Transalpine and Cisalpine Gaul had been assigned to the consuls of 60 and therefore would have been unavailable Rafferty David 2017 Cisalpine Gaul as a consular province in the late Republic Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 66 2 147 172 doi 10 25162 historia 2017 0008 ISSN 0018 2311 JSTOR 45019257 S2CID 231088284 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 176 77 Gruen 2009 p 34 Morstein Marx 2021 p 143 Dio 38 6 5 and Suet Iul 20 1 say around late January Plut Pomp 48 5 says in early May Vell Pat 2 44 5 says May Morstein Marx 2021 pp 142 44 Gruen 2009 p 34 also citing Suet Iul 20 2 the consulship of Julius and Caesar as part of Catonian propaganda Morstein Marx 2021 pp 150 51 noting that Bibulus voluntary seclusion presented the image of the city dominated by one man Caesar unchecked by a colleague Gruen 2009 p 34 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 182 83 182 n 260 citing Suet Iul 23 1 pace Ramsey 2009 p 38 Goldsworthy 2006 pp 186 87 Goldsworthy 2006 p 188 89 Goldsworthy 2006 pp 189 90 Goldsworthy 2006 p 204 Goldsworthy 2006 pp 205 208 10 Goldsworthy 2016 pp 212 15 Goldsworthy 2016 p 217 Goldsworthy 2016 p 220 a b Boatwright 2004 p 242 Goldsworthy 2016 p 203 Goldsworthy 2016 pp 221 22 Boatwright 2004 p 242 Goldsworthy 2016 p 222 Goldsworthy 2016 p 223 Goldsworthy 2016 pp 229 32 233 38 Boatwright 2004 p 242 Gruen 1995 p 98 It should no longer be necessary to refute the older notion that Clodius acted as agent or tool of the triumvirate Clodius was an independent agent not beholden to the triumvirs or any putative popular party Gruen Erich S 1966 P Clodius Instrument or Independent Agent Phoenix 20 2 120 30 doi 10 2307 1086053 ISSN 0031 8299 JSTOR 1086053 Ramsey 2009 pp 37 38 Morstein Marx 2021 p 194 noting Caesar s opposition in early 58 BC to Cicero s banishment Caesar offered Cicero a position on his staff which would have conferred immunity from prosecution but Cicero refused Ramsey 2009 p 37 Ramsey 2009 p 39 Morstein Marx 2021 p 220 citing Gelzer this extraordinary honour cut the ground from under the feet of those who maintained that since 58 Caesar had held his position illegally Morstein Marx also rejects the claim of senatorial duress at Plut Caes 21 7 9 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 196 220 Ramsey 2009 pp 39 40 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 220 21 Ramsey 2009 pp 39 40 Morstein Marx 2021 p 229 Ramsey 2009 pp 41 42 Morstein Marx 2021 p 232 Ramsey 2009 p 43 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 232 33 Ramsey 2009 p 44 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 232 33 Gruen 1995 p 451 Morstein Marx 2021 p 238 citing Cic Sest 51 hardly anyone has lost popularity among the citizens for winning wars Ramsey 2009 p 44 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 241ff citing Caes BGall 5 26 52 Morstein Marx 2021 p 272 n 42 Gruen and Raaflaub have effectively disposed of the old idea too heavily influenced by Plutarch citing Plut Caes 28 1 and Plut Pomp 53 6 54 2 that Pompey had now turned against Caesar since Julia s death in 54 Ramsey 2009 p 46 Despite the fact that Pompey declined Caesar s later offer to form another marriage connection their political alliance showed no signs of strain for the next several years Gruen 1995 pp 451 52 453 Julia s death came in the late summer of 54 if it opened a breach between Pompey and Caesar there is no sign of it in subsequent months The evidence indicates no change in the relationship during 53 Julia s death provoked no change in the contract Caesar did not cut Pompey out of his will until the outbreak of civil war Morstein Marx 2021 pp 243 44 Ramsey J T 2016 How and why was Pompey made sole consul in 52 BC Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 65 3 298 324 doi 10 25162 historia 2016 0017 ISSN 0018 2311 JSTOR 45019234 S2CID 252459421 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 247 48 260 265 66 Wiseman 1994 p 412 Morstein Marx 2021 p 258 See also Appendix 4 in the same book analysing the conflict between Caesar and Pompey in terms of a Prisoner s dilemma Wiseman 1994 p 414 citing Caes BGall 8 2 16 Morstein Marx 2021 p 270 Drogula 2019 p 223 Morstein Marx 2021 p 273 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 272 276 295 identities of Cato s allies Morstein Marx 2021 p 291 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 292 93 Morstein Marx 2021 p 297 Wiseman 1994 pp 412 22 citing App BCiv 2 30 31 and Dio 40 64 1 66 5 Morstein Marx 2021 p 304 Morstein Marx 2021 p 306 Morstein Marx 2021 p 308 Boatwright 2004 p 247 Meier 1995 pp 1 4 Mackay 2009 pp 279 81 Wiseman 1994 p 419 Ehrhardt C T H R 1995 Crossing the Rubicon Antichthon 29 30 41 doi 10 1017 S0066477400000927 ISSN 0066 4774 S2CID 142429003 Archived from the original on 21 November 2021 Retrieved 26 April 2022 Everyone knows that Caesar crossed the Rubicon because he would have been put on trial found guilty and have his political career ended Yet over thirty years ago Shackleton Bailey in less than two pages of his introduction to Cicero s Letters to Atticus destroyed the basis for this belief and no one has been able to rebuild it Morstein Marx Robert 2007 Caesar s alleged fear of prosecution and his ratio absentis in the approach to the civil war Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 56 2 159 78 doi 10 25162 historia 2007 0013 ISSN 0018 2311 JSTOR 25598386 S2CID 159090397 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 262 63 explaining Any prosecution was extremely unlikely to succeed No contemporary source expresses dissatisfaction with an inability to prosecute No timely charges could have been brought The possibility of conviction for irregularities during his consulship in 59 was a fantasy when none of Caesar s actions in 59 were overturned Morstein Marx 2021 p 624 Caesar proposed giving up his command opening himself up to prosecution in January 49 BC as part of peace negotiations something he would not have proposed if he were worried about a sure fire conviction See also Morstein Marx 2021 Appendix 2 and contra Morstein Marx Girardet Klaus Martin 2020 Januar 49 v Chr Vorgeschichte Rechtslage politische Aspekte in German Bonn doi 10 22028 d291 30177 ISBN 978 3 7749 4068 0 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Morstein Marx 2021 p 247 n 234 citing Suet Iul 26 1 Plut Pomp 56 1 3 Morstein Marx 2021 p 288 Caesar feared that the only guarantee of his rights to stand for election in absentia under the protection of the Law of the Ten Tribunes and to receive a triumph was his army Morstein Marx 2021 p 309 Morstein Marx 2021 p 320 Beard Mary 2016 SPQR a history of ancient Rome W W Norton p 286 ISBN 978 1 84668 381 7 The exact date is unknown Morstein Marx 2021 p 322 Morstein Marx 2021 p 331 Boatwright 2004 p 246 citing Plut Caes 32 8 Rawson 1994a p 424 gives the same translation Morstein Marx 2021 p 336 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 340 Caesar s pause 342 Caesar s offer 343 Pompey s counter offer 345 negotiations collapse Morstein Marx 2021 p 347 Rawson 1994a pp 424 25 427 Abandoning Italy was probably justified from a military point of view but Cicero was doubtless right in seeing it as politically and psychologically very damaging to abandon the capital and indeed all Italy intending to starve and then invade it Rawson 1994a p 430 citing Cic Att 10 4 8 Dio 41 15 16 App BCiv 2 41 Boatwright 2004 p 252 Rawson 1994a p 431 citing Caes BCiv 2 17 20 Rawson 1994a p 431 He also passed laws removing civil disabilities from the descendants of those proscribed by Sulla and recalling all exiles on specious claims of unfair trials Wilson 2021 p 309 citing among others Caes BCiv 3 1 1 Plut Caes 37 1 2 App BCiv 2 48 Dio 41 36 1 4 He had no magister equitum Rawson 1994a p 432 Boatwright 2004 p 252 Rawson 1994a p 433 Boatwright 2004 pp 252 53 Plut Caes 42 45 Roller Duane W 2010 Cleopatra a biography Oxford Oxford University Press p 175 ISBN 978 0 19 536553 5 OCLC 405105996 Walker Susan 2008 Cleopatra in Pompeii Papers of the British School at Rome 76 35 46 doi 10 1017 S0068246200000404 ISSN 2045 239X S2CID 62829223 Rawson 1994a pp 433 34 noting that both children were left under Roman protection under their father s will Boatwright 2004 Wilson 2021 p 309 citing Plut Caes 51 1 and Dio 42 17 1 22 2 Rawson 1994a p 435 citing Dio 42 18 Rawson 1994a p 434 At the battle Ptolemy drowned Boatwright 2004 p 253 Rawson 1994a p 434 Boatwright 2004 p 253 Rawson 1994a p 434 citing Plut Caes 50 2 and Suet Iul 35 2 37 2 Rawson 1994a p 435 noting an epic march through the desert from Cyrenaica to the province of Africa citing Lucan Pharsalia 9 Rawson 1994a p 435 Rawson also notes claims Dio 42 56 4 that the republicans were planning a naval invasion of Italy Rawson 1994a p 435 n 58 citing Suet Iul 70 Rawson 1994a p 435 Rawson 1994a pp 435 36 Rawson 1994a p 436 citing Plut Cat Min 58 70 see also Plut Caes 52 54 Rawson 1994a p 436 Boatwright 2004 p 253 a b Rawson 1994a p 436 Rawson 1994a p 436 citing App BCiv 2 101 2 Rawson 1994a pp 436 37 Rawson 1994a p 436 citing Plut Caes 56 a b Rawson 1994a p 437 Rawson 1994a p 436 noting that Sextus fomented a momentary rebellion and that Quintus Caecilius Bassus led a revolt in Syria which continued until after Caesar s death in 44 BC Rawson 1994a pp 437 38 Boatwright 2004 pp 253 54 Wilson 2021 p 309 a b Badian 2012 Wilson 2021 pp 311 13 In the view of the ancient historians and biographers self tasked with assessing Caesar s rule his dictatorships and indeed his consulships were incidental to the authority he possessed on account of being himself See Wilson 2021 p 313 n 46 Meier 1995 pp 474 75 notes that senators may have wanted to curry favour or otherwise by giving him excessive honours show the public Caesar s tyrannical ambitions Wilson 2021 p 314 Lintott 1999 p 21 eg Livy 1905 1st century AD From the Founding of the City Translated by Roberts Canon 31 5 7 via Wikisource Wilson 2021 pp 314 15 Meier 1995 pp 473 74 Meier 1995 p 448 He acted as he saw fit Others had no right even to be informed of his intentions Rome still had a senate and magistrates but they were not free in their decision making in all matters the decisive authority lay with Caesar alone Badian 2012 Meier 1995 pp 447 48 Wilson 2021 p 318 Badian 2012 Meier 1995 p 447 Badian 2012 for administration and colonial activity Wilson 2021 p 318 noting Suetonius viewing the expansion of the magistracies and senate as constitutional reform with Dio believing it a means to reward followers Meier 1995 p 464 notes such a large membership in the senate would certainly make the house incapable of functioning properly but it enabled Caesar to show favour to many Meier 1995 p 464 Wilson 2021 p 318 Lintott 1999 p 160 Wilson 2021 p 318 a b Meier 1995 p 447 Wilson 2021 pp 319 321 Wilson 2021 p 319 Wilson 2021 pp 321 22 Meier 1995 pp 447 49 Meier 1995 p 462 Wilson 2021 p 322 n 92 on favours for clients Wilson 2021 p 322 n 94 noting Suet Iul 54 1 3 reporting on Caesar looting and extorting client states and Dio 42 49 50 43 24 on Caesar s forced loans to pay soldiers Crawford Michael Hewson 1974 Roman republican coinage Cambridge University Press p 514 ISBN 978 0 521 07492 6 Meier 1995 p 476 Morstein Marx 2021 p 522 noting attempts to restore the tribunes to office after Caesar s death Tempest 2017 p 81 Meier 1995 pp 474 476 Meier 1995 pp 476 77 Meier 1995 p 479 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 561 62 Morstein Marx 2021 p 556 Meier 1995 p 480 Morstein Marx 2021 p 556 noting Basilus and Cimber as praetors in 45 and Casca as plebeian tribune in 44 or 43 Morstein Marx 2021 p 560 Tempest 2017 p 93 Meier 1995 p 465 their dignity would have been spurious Morstein Marx 2021 pp 547 48 549 50 honores obtained as a personal favour rather than by a judgment of the People were in fact no honour at all Morstein Marx 2021 p 553 Tempest 2017 p 41 Meier 1995 pp 480 81 Morstein Marx 2021 p 524 25 gives a number of examples Plut Brut 9 6 If only you lived now Brutus on the Capitoline statue of Lucius Brutus Suet Iul 80 3 If only you Lucius Brutus were alive App BCiv 2 112 Lucius Brutus your descendants are unworthy of you challenging Marcus Brutus to act Suet Iul 80 3 Brutus became the first consul since he had expelled the kings This man Caesar at last became king since he had expelled the consuls on a statue of Caesar Plut Brut 9 7 Plut Caes 62 7 App BCiv 2 112 Dio 44 12 3 graffiti at Marcus Brutus praetorian seat in the forum challenging him as asleep corrupt or not a true descendant of the Lucius Brutus who founded the republic Morstein Marx 2021 pp 523 526 27 528 calling the belief in modern scholarship that Caesar remained the darling of the People unsupported by the evidence and infantilising Tempest 2017 pp 86 87 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 528 debts 529 lethal force corn dole collegia 530 juries elections Morstein Marx 2021 pp 548 the two candidates for the consulship of 43 BC were the only two men allowed to stand 550 Morstein Marx 2021 pp 318 573 75 Tempest 2017 pp 95 99 Meier 1995 p 485 Morstein Marx 2021 p 563 Tempest 2017 pp 99 100 a b Tempest 2017 p 100 Meier 1995 pp 485 86 noting three Caesar felt unwell and had to be persuaded by a conspirator to attend the senate one Artemidorus of Knidos gave Caesar a scroll informing on the conspiracy the augur Spurinna allegedly prophesied misfortune for Caesar on the Ides Tempest 2017 p 101 3 citing Suet Iul 81 82 Tempest 2017 p 3 4 261 n 1 Meier 1995 p 486 reporting 23 wounds Tempest 2017 p 261 n 1 cites all ancient accounts Nic Dam 58 106 Plut Caes 60 68 Plut Brut 8 20 Suet Iul 76 85 App BCiv 2 106 147 Dio 44 9 19 Mackay 2009 p 316 Rawson 1994b p 469 Antony pointed out that logically if Caesar was a tyrant his body should be thrown into the Tiber and all his measures rescinded if he was not his murderers should be punished Rawson 1994b p 470 Richardson L 1992 Iulius Divus Aedes A new topographical dictionary of ancient Rome Johns Hopkins University Press pp 213 14 ISBN 0 8018 4300 6 Mackay 2009 pp 318 19 Rawson 1994b p 471 Mackay 2009 pp 315 16 Boatwright 2004 pp 270 72 Mackay 2009 p 332 Mackay 2009 p 334 Caesar s heir then took the style divi filius meaning son of the deified one Boatwright 2004 p 273 Mackay 2009 p 335 Boatwright 2004 p 274 Meier 1995 pp 494 496 Plut Caes 17 45 60 Suet Iul 45 Ridley Ronald T 2000 The Dictator s Mistake Caesar s Escape from Sulla Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 49 2 211 29 ISSN 0018 2311 JSTOR 4436576 Ridley cites Kanngiesser F 1912 Notes on the pathology of the Julian dynasty Glasgow Medical Journal 77 428 32 Cawthorne Terence 1958 Julius caesar and the falling sickness The Laryngoscope 68 8 1442 1450 doi 10 1288 00005537 195808000 00005 PMID 13576900 S2CID 34788441 Temkin Owsei 1971 1945 The falling sickness a history of epilepsy from the Greeks to the beginnings of modern neurology Revised ed Johns Hopkins University Press p 162 ISBN 0 8018 1211 9 OCLC 208839 Bruschi Fabrizio 2011 Was Julius Caesar s epilepsy due to neurocysticercosis Trends in Parasitology 27 9 373 74 doi 10 1016 j pt 2011 06 001 PMID 21757405 McLachlan Richard S 2010 Julius Caesar s late onset epilepsy a case of historic proportions Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences 37 5 557 561 doi 10 1017 S0317167100010696 ISSN 0317 1671 PMID 21059498 S2CID 24082872 Hughes John R et al 2004 Dictator perpetuus Julius Caesar Did he have seizures If so what was the etiology Epilepsy amp Behavior 5 5 756 64 doi 10 1016 j yebeh 2004 05 006 PMID 15380131 S2CID 34640921 Gomez J G et al 1995 Was Julius Caesar s epilepsy due to a brain tumor Journal of the Florida Medical Association 82 3 199 201 ISSN 0015 4148 PMID 7738524 William Shakespeare Julius Caesar I ii 209 Paterson 2009 p 130 Pliny Natural History vii 181 Galassi Francesco M Ashrafian Hutan 2015 Has the diagnosis of a stroke been overlooked in the symptoms of Julius Caesar Neurological Sciences 36 8 1521 22 doi 10 1007 s10072 015 2191 4 ISSN 1590 3478 PMID 25820216 S2CID 11730078 Suet Iul 45 excelsa statura colore candido teretibus membris ore paulo pleniore nigris vegetisque oculis M Philippa F Debrabandere A Quak T Schoonheim en N van der Sijs 2003 2009 Etymologisch Woordenboek van het Nederlands Amsterdam Roller Duane W 2010 Cleopatra a biography Oxford Oxford University Press pp 178 79 ISBN 978 0 19 536553 5 Eg Plut Brut 5 2 Tempest 2017 p 102 noting the almost universally accepted treatment rejecting Caesar s parentage at Fluss Max 1923 Servilius 101 Realencyclopadie der classischen Altertumswissenschaft in German Vol II A 2 Stuttgart Butcher cols 1817 21 via Wikisource Syme Ronald 1960 Bastards in the Roman Aristocracy Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 104 3 326 ISSN 0003 049X JSTOR 985248 Chronology is against Caesar s paternity Syme Ronald 1980 No Son for Caesar Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 29 4 426 ISSN 0018 2311 JSTOR 4435732 Caesar is excluded by plain fact Jimenez 2000 p 55 Suet Iul 49 Suet Iul 49 Dio 43 20 Catullus Carmina 29 Archived 20 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine 57 Archived 4 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine Suet Iul 73 Suet Aug 68 71 Cic Brut 252 Courtney Edward ed 1993 The fragmentary Latin poets Oxford Clarendon Press pp 153 55 187 88 ISBN 0 19 814775 9 OCLC 25628739 Wiseman T P 2009 The publication of De bello Gallico In Welch Kathryn Powell Anton eds Julius Caesar as artful reporter the war commentaries as political instruments Classical Press of Wales ISBN 978 1 905125 28 9 Canfora 2006 pp 10 11 Murray Stuart 2009 The library an illustrated history Skyhorse Publishing ISBN 978 1 60239 706 4 OCLC 277203534 Canfora 2006 p 10 Canfora 2006 pp 11 12 Weber 2008 p 34 Brown Howard G 29 June 2007 Napoleon Bonaparte Political Prodigy History Compass Wiley 5 4 1382 98 doi 10 1111 j 1478 0542 2007 00451 x Hartfield James 2012 Unpatriotic History of the Second World War John Hunt Publishing p 77 ISBN 978 1 78099 379 9 Archived from the original on 28 December 2019 Retrieved 20 August 2019 Canfora 2006 pp 12 13SourcesPrimary sources Own writings Julius Caesar 1859 1st century BC Commentarii de Bello Civili Harper s New Classical Library Translated by McDevitte WA Bohn WS New York Harper amp Brothers via Wikisource Caesar 1917 1st century BC Gallic War Loeb Classical Library Translated by Edwards Henry John Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 99080 7 via LacusCurtius Forum Romanum Index to Caesar s works online Archived 21 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine in Latin and translation Works by Julius Caesar in eBook form at Standard Ebooks Works by Julius Caesar at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Julius Caesar at Internet Archive Works by Julius Caesar at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Ancient historians writings Appian 1913 2nd century AD Civil Wars Loeb Classical Library Translated by White Horace Cambridge via LacusCurtius a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Cassius Dio 1914 1927 c AD 230 Roman History Loeb Classical Library Translated by Cary Earnest via LacusCurtius Published in nine volumes Plutarch 1920 2nd century AD Life of Antony Parallel Lives Loeb Classical Library Vol 9 Translated by Perrin Bernadotte OCLC 40115288 via LacusCurtius Plutarch 1918 2nd century AD Life of Brutus Parallel Lives Loeb Classical Library Vol 6 Translated by Perrin Bernadotte OCLC 40115288 via Perseus Digital Library Plutarch 1919 The Life of Cato the Younger Plutarch Lives Sertorius and Eumenes Phocion and Cato Loeb Classical Library Vol 8 Translated by Perrin Bernadotte via LacusCurtius Plutarch 1919 2nd century AD Life of Caesar Parallel Lives Loeb Classical Library Vol 7 Translated by Perrin Bernadotte OCLC 40115288 via LacusCurtius Plutarch 1916 2nd century AD Life of Crassus Parallel Lives Loeb Classical Library Vol 3 Translated by Perrin Bernadotte OCLC 40115288 via LacusCurtius Plutarch 1917 2nd century AD Life of Pompey Parallel Lives Loeb Classical Library Vol 5 Translated by Perrin Bernadotte OCLC 40115288 via LacusCurtius Suetonius 1913 1914 Life of Augustus Lives of the Twelve Caesars Loeb Classical Library Translated by Rolfe J C Cambridge via LacusCurtius a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Suetonius 1913 1914 Life of Caesar Lives of the Twelve Caesars Loeb Classical Library Translated by Rolfe J C Cambridge via LacusCurtius a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Velleius Paterculus 1924 Roman History Loeb Classical Library Translated by Shipley Frederick W via LacusCurtius Secondary sources Alexander Michael Charles 1990 Trials in the late Roman Republic 149 BC to 50 BC Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 0 8020 5787 X OCLC 41156621 Badian Ernst 2012 Iulius Caesar C 2 In Hornblower Simon et al eds The Oxford classical dictionary 4th ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199381135 013 3394 ISBN 978 0 19 954556 8 OCLC 959667246 Broughton Thomas Robert Shannon 1952 The magistrates of the Roman republic Vol 2 New York American Philological Association Boatwright M T et al 2004 The Romans from village to empire New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 511875 8 OCLC 52728992 Canfora Luciano 2006 Julius Caesar The People s Dictator Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 1936 8 Archived from the original on 26 January 2021 Retrieved 2 September 2017 Crook John et al eds 1994 The last age of the Roman Republic 146 43 BC Cambridge Ancient History Vol 9 2nd ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 85073 8 OCLC 121060 Rawson Elizabeth 1994a Caesar civil war and dictatorship In CAH2 9 1994 pp 424 67 Rawson Elizabeth 1994b The aftermath of the Ides In CAH2 9 1994 pp 468 90 Wiseman TP Caesar Pompey and Rome 59 50 BC In CAH2 9 1994 pp 368 423 Drogula Fred K 2019 Cato the Younger life and death at the end of the Roman republic New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 086902 1 OCLC 1090168108 Goldsworthy Adrian 2006 Caesar Life of a Colossus Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 12048 6 Goldsworthy Adrian 2016 First published 2003 In the name of Rome the men who won the Roman empire New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 22183 1 OCLC 936322646 Griffin Miriam ed 2009 A Companion to Julius Caesar Malden MA Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1 4443 0845 7 Badian Ernst From the Iulii to Caesar In Griffin 2009 pp 11 22 Gruen Erich S Caesar as a politician In Griffin 2009 pp 23 36 Ramsey John T The proconsular years politics at a distance In Griffin 2009 pp 37 56 Paterson Jeremy Caesar the man In Griffin 2009 pp 126 40 Gruen Erich 1995 The last generation of the Roman republic Berkeley CA University of California Press ISBN 0 520 02238 6 Jimenez Ramon L 2000 Caesar Against Rome The Great Roman Civil War Praeger ISBN 978 0 275 96620 1 Lintott Andrew 1999 Constitution of the Roman republic Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 926108 6 Reprinted 2009 Mackay Christopher S 2009 The breakdown of the Roman republic Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 51819 2 Meier Christian 1995 First published in German by Severin und Siedler 1982 Caesar Translated by McLintock David Basic Books ISBN 0 465 00895 X Morstein Marx Robert 2021 Julius Caesar and the Roman People Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 9781108943260 ISBN 978 1 108 83784 2 LCCN 2021024626 S2CID 242729962 Tempest Kathryn 2017 Brutus the noble conspirator London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 18009 1 Weber Max 2008 Caesarism Charisma and Fate Historical Sources and Modern Resonances in the Work of Max Weber Transaction Publishers ISBN 978 1 4128 1214 6 Wilson Mark B 2021 Dictator the evolution of the Roman dictatorship Ann Arbor MI Michigan University Press ISBN 978 0 472 13266 9 OCLC 1197561102 External linksListen to this article 3 parts 1 hour and 3 minutes source source source source source source nbsp These audio files were created from a revision of this article dated 10 January 2007 2007 01 10 and do not reflect subsequent edits Audio help More spoken articles C Iulius 131 C f C n Fab Caesar in the Digital Prosopography of the Roman Republic nbsp Works by or about Gaius Julius Caesar at Wikisource nbsp Works related to Julius Caesar at Wikisource Online books and library resources in your library and in other libraries about Caesar Online books and library resources in your library and in other libraries by Caesar Guide to online resourcesPolitical officesPreceded byLucius AfraniusQuintus Caecilius Metellus Celer Roman consul59 BC With Marcus Calpurnius Bibulus Succeeded byLucius Calpurnius Piso CaesoninusAulus GabiniusPreceded byLucius Cornelius Lentulus CrusGaius Claudius Marcellus Roman consul II48 BC With Publius Servilius Isauricus Succeeded byQuintus Fufius CalenusPublius VatiniusPreceded byQuintus Fufius CalenusPublius Vatinius Roman consul III46 BC With Marcus Aemilius Lepidus Succeeded byHimself without colleaguePreceded byHimselfMarcus Aemilius Lepidus Roman consul IVJanuary September 45 BC Succeeded byHimselfMark AntonyPreceded byHimself without colleague Roman consul V44 BC With Mark Antony Succeeded byPublius Cornelius DolabellaReligious titlesPreceded byQuintus Caecilius Metellus Pius Pontifex maximus63 44 BC Succeeded byMarcus Aemilius Lepidus Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Julius Caesar amp oldid 1172974006, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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