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Marcus Junius Brutus

Marcus Junius Brutus (/ˈbrtəs/; Latin pronunciation: [ˈmaːrkʊs juːniʊs ˈbruːtʊs]; c. 85 BC – 23 October 42 BC) was a Roman politician, orator,[2] and the most famous of the assassins of Julius Caesar. After being adopted by a relative, he used the name Quintus Servilius Caepio Brutus, which was retained as his legal name. He is often referred to simply as Brutus.[3]

Marcus Junius Brutus
Brutus on the Ides of March coin, issued shortly before his death
Bornc. 85 BC[a]
Died23 October 42 BC (aged 42/43)
Cause of deathSuicide
NationalityRoman
Other namesQuintus Servilius Caepio Brutus
Occupation(s)Politician, orator and general
Known forAssassination of Julius Caesar
Office
Spouses
Parent(s)M. Junius Brutus and Servilia

Early in his political career, Brutus opposed Pompey,[4] who was responsible for Brutus' father's death.[5] He also was close to Caesar. However, Caesar's attempts to evade accountability in the law courts put him at greater odds with his opponents in the Roman elite and the senate.[6] Brutus eventually came to oppose Caesar and sided with Pompey against Caesar's forces during the ensuing civil war (49–45 BC). Pompey was defeated at the Battle of Pharsalus in 48, after which Brutus surrendered to Caesar, who granted him amnesty.[7]

With Caesar's increasingly monarchical and autocratic behaviour after the civil war, several senators who later called themselves liberatores (Liberators), plotted to assassinate him. Brutus took a leading role in the assassination, which was carried out successfully on the Ides of March (15 March) of 44 BC.[8][9] In a settlement between the liberatores and the Caesarians, an amnesty was granted to the assassins while Caesar's acts were upheld for two years.[10]

Popular unrest forced Brutus and his brother-in-law, fellow assassin Gaius Cassius Longinus, to leave Rome in April 44.[11] After a complex political realignment, Octavian – Caesar's adoptive son – made himself consul and, with his colleague, passed a law retroactively making Brutus and the other conspirators murderers.[12] This led to a second civil war, in which Mark Antony and Octavian fought the liberatores led by Brutus and Cassius. The Caesarians decisively defeated the outnumbered armies of Brutus and Cassius at the two battles at Philippi in October 42.[13] After the defeat, Brutus committed suicide.[14]

His name has been condemned for betrayal of his friend and benefactor Caesar, and is perhaps only rivalled in this regard by the name of Judas Iscariot (famously in Dante's Inferno).[15] He also has been praised in various narratives, both ancient and modern, as a virtuous and committed republican who fought – however futilely – for freedom and against tyranny.[16]

Early life

 
The Capitoline Brutus, supposedly depicting Brutus' ancestor Lucius Junius Brutus who expelled the kings from Rome.[17]

Marcus Junius Brutus belonged to the illustrious plebeian gens Junia. Its semi-legendary founder was Lucius Junius Brutus, who played a pivotal role during the overthrow of Tarquinius Superbus, the last Roman king, and was afterward one of the two first consuls of the new Roman Republic in 509 BC, taking the opportunity also to have the people swear an oath never to have a king in Rome.[18]

Brutus' homonymous father was tribune of the plebs in 83 BC,[19][20] but he was killed by Pompey in 77 while serving as legate[21] in the rebellion of Marcus Aemilius Lepidus.[22] He had married Servilia of the Servilii Caepiones who was the half-sister of Cato the Younger,[23] and later Julius Caesar's mistress.[24] Some ancient sources refer to the possibility of Caesar being Brutus' real father,[25] despite Caesar being only fifteen years old when Brutus was born. Ancient historians were sceptical of this possibility and "on the whole, scholars have rejected the possibility that Brutus was the love-child of Servilia and Caesar on the grounds of chronology".[26][27][28]

A relative of Brutus, Quintus Servilius Caepio, adopted him posthumously around 59 BC, and Brutus was known officially as Quintus Servilius Caepio Brutus, though he hardly used his legal name.[29] In 59, when Caesar was consul, Brutus also was implicated by Lucius Vettius in the Vettius affair as a member of a conspiracy plotting to assassinate Pompey in the forum.[30] Vettius was detained for admitting possession of a weapon within the city, and quickly changed this story the next day, dropping Brutus' name from his accusations.[31]

Brutus' first appearance in public life was as an assistant to Cato, when the latter was appointed by the senate acting at the bequest of Publius Clodius Pulcher, as governor of Cyprus in 58.[32] According to Plutarch, Brutus was instrumental in assisting the administration of the province (specifically by converting treasure of the former king of the island into usable money); his role in administering the province, however, has "almost certainly been exaggerated".[33]

Triumvir monetalis

 
Denarius minted by Brutus, 54 BC, with the portraits of Lucius Junius Brutus (obverse) and Gaius Servilius Ahala (reverse).[34][35]
 
Denarius of Brutus, 44 BC, depicting the personification of Libertas and Lucius Junius Brutus with lictors.[34][36]

In 54 BC, Brutus served as triumvir monetalis, one of the three men appointed annually for producing coins, even though only another colleague is known: Quintus Pompeius Rufus. Moneyers in Brutus' day frequently issued coins commemorating their ancestors; Pompeius Rufus thus put the portraits of his two grandfathers (the dictator Sulla and Pompeius Rufus) on his denarii.[37] Brutus, like his colleague, designed a denarius with the portraits of his paternal ancestor Lucius Junius Brutus and maternal ancestor Gaius Servilius Ahala, both of whom were widely recognised in the late Republic as defenders of liberty (for, respectively, expelling the kings and killing Spurius Maelius).[38] He also made a second type featuring Libertas, the goddess of liberty, and Lucius Brutus.[34] These coins show Brutus' admiration for the tyrannicides of the early republic, already mentioned by Cicero as early as 59 BC. In addition, Brutus' denarii and their message against tyranny participated in the propaganda against Pompey and his ambitions to rule alone or become dictator.[39]

Cilicia

Brutus married Appius Claudius Pulcher's daughter Claudia, likely in 54 during Pulcher's consulship. He was elected as quaestor (and automatically enrolled in the senate) in 53.[40] Brutus then travelled with his father-in-law to Cilicia during the latter's proconsulship in the next year.[41] While in Cilicia, he spent some time as a money-lender, which was discovered two years later when Cicero was appointed proconsul between 51 and 50 BC.[42] Brutus asked Cicero to help collect two debts which Brutus had made: one to Ariobarzanes,[b] the king of Cappadocia, and one to the town of Salamis.[43] Brutus' loan to Ariobarzanes was bundled with a loan also made by Pompey and both received some repayment on the debt.[43]

The loan to Salamis was more complex: officially, the loan was made by two of Brutus' friends, who requested repayment at 48 per cent per annum, which was far in excess of Cicero's previously imposed interest cap of 12 per cent. The loan dated back to 56, shortly after Brutus returned to Rome from Cyprus.[43] Salamis had sent a delegation asking to borrow money, but under the lex Gabinia it was illegal for Romans to lend to provincials in the capital, but Brutus was able to find "friends" to loan this money on his behalf, which was approved under his influence in the senate. Because the lex Gabinia also invalidated such contracts, Brutus also had his contract – officially his friends' contract – confirmed by the senate.[44] One of Brutus' friends in whose name the debt was officially issued, Marcus Scaptius, was in Cilicia during Cicero's proconsulship using force to coerce repayment, which Cicero stopped; Cicero, not seeking to endanger his friendship with Brutus, but also disappointed and angry at Brutus' mischaracterisation of the loan and the exorbitant interest rate attached,[45] was persuaded by Scaptius to defer a decision on the loan to the next governor.[44]

Opposition to Pompey

In 52, in the aftermath of the death of his uncle-in-law, Publius Clodius Pulcher (brother of his wife's father), he wrote a pamphlet, De Dictatura Pompei (On the Dictatorship of Pompey), opposing demands for Pompey to be made dictator, writing "it is better to rule no one than to be another man's slave, for one can live honourably without power but to live as a slave is impossible".[4] He was in this episode more radical than Cato the Younger, who supported Pompey's elevation as sole consul for 52, saying "any government at all is better than no government".[46] Soon after Pompey was made sole consul, Pompey passed the lex Pompeia de vi, which targeted Titus Annius Milo, for which Cicero would write a speech pro Milone.[46] Brutus also wrote for Milo, writing (a now lost) pro T Annio Milone,[c] in which he connected Milo's killing of Clodius explicitly to the welfare of the state and possibly also criticising what he saw as Pompey's abuses of power.[47] This speech or pamphlet was very well received and positively viewed by later teachers of rhetoric.[48]

In the late 50s, Brutus was elected as a pontifex, one of the public priests in charge of supervising the calendar and maintaining Rome's peaceful relationship with the gods.[49] It is likely that Caesar supported his election.[50] Caesar had previously invited Brutus, after his quaestorship, to join him as a legate in Gaul, but Brutus declined, instead going with Appius Pulcher to Cilicia, possibly out of loyalty thereto.[51] During the 50s, Brutus also was involved in some major trials, working alongside famous advocates like Cicero and Quintus Hortensius. In 50, he – with Pompey and Hortensius – played a significant role in defending Brutus' father-in-law Appius Claudius from charges of treason and electoral malpractice.[52]

In the political crisis running up to Caesar's Civil War in 49, Brutus' views are mostly unknown. While he did oppose Pompey until 52, Brutus may have simply taken a tactical silence.[53] Cicero's letters also indicate that Brutus may have been courted by Caesar – who is said to have spoken about avenging the death of Brutus' father – in the run-up to the civil war.[54]

Caesar's civil war

 
Marble bust, so-called Brutus, at the Palazzo Massimo alle Terme in the National Museum of Rome

When Caesar's Civil War broke out in January 49 BC[7] between Pompey and Caesar, Brutus faced a choice betwene one or the other.[55] Pompey and his allies fled the city before Caesar's army arrived in March.[7] Brutus decided to support his father's killer, Pompey; this choice may have had mostly to do with Brutus' closest allies – Appius Claudius, Cato, Cicero, etc. – also all joining Pompey.[55] He did not, however, immediately join Pompey, instead travelling to Cilicia as legate for Publius Sestius before joining Pompey in winter 49 or spring 48.[56]

It is not known whether Brutus fought in the ensuing battles at Dyrrhachium and Pharsalus.[56] Plutarch says that Caesar ordered his officers to take Brutus prisoner if he gave himself up voluntarily, but to leave him alone and do him no harm if he persisted in fighting against capture.[57] After the massive Pompeian defeat at Pharsalus on 9 August 48, Brutus fled through marshland to Larissa, where he wrote to Caesar, who welcomed him graciously into his camp.[58] Plutarch also implies that Brutus told Caesar of Pompey's withdrawal plans to Egypt, but this is unlikely, as Brutus was not present when Pompey's decision to go to Egypt was made.[58]

While Caesar followed Pompey to Alexandria in 48–7, Brutus worked to effect a reconciliation between various Pompeians and Caesar.[59] He arrived back in Rome in December 47.[59] Caesar appointed Brutus as governor (likely as legatus pro praetore) for Cisalpine Gaul while he left for Africa in pursuit of Cato and Metellus Scipio.[59] After Cato's suicide following defeat at the battle of Thapsus on 6 April 46,[60] Brutus was one of Cato's eulogisers writing a pamphlet entitled Cato in which he reflected positively both on Cato's life while highlighting Caesar's clementia.[61]

After Caesar's last battle against the republican remnant in March 45, Brutus divorced his wife Claudia in June and promptly remarried his cousin Porcia, Cato's daughter, late in the same month.[62] According to Cicero the marriage caused a semi-scandal as Brutus failed to state a valid reason for his divorce from Claudia other than he wished to marry Porcia.[63] Brutus' reasons for marrying Porcia are unclear, he may have been in love or it could have been a politically motivated marriage to position Brutus as heir to Cato's supporters.[64] The marriage also caused a rift between Brutus and his mother,[64] who was resentful of the affection Brutus had for Porcia.[65]

Brutus also was promised the prestigious urban praetorship for 44 BC and possibly earmarked for the consulship in 41.[64]

Assassination of Julius Caesar

 
Death of Caesar (1804–05) by Vincenzo Camuccini.

There are various different traditions describing the way in which Brutus arrived to the decision to assassinate Caesar. Plutarch, Appian, and Cassius Dio, all writing in the imperial period, focused on "pressure from [Brutus'] peers and his own philosophical conviction that awakened.... a sense of duty both to this country and to his family name".[66]

Conspiracy

By autumn 45, public opinion of Caesar was starting to sour: Plutarch, Appian, and Dio all reported graffiti glorifying Brutus' ancestor Lucius Junius Brutus, panning Caesar's kingly ambitions, and derogatory comments made to Marcus Junius Brutus in Rome's open-air courts that he was failing to live up to his ancestors.[67] Dio reports this public support came from the people of Rome; Plutarch however has the graffiti created by elites to shame Brutus into action.[68] Regardless of the specific impetus, modern historians believe that at least some portion of popular opinion had turned against Caesar by early 44.[68]

Caesar deposed two plebeian tribunes in late January 44 for removing a crown from one of his statues; this attack on the tribunes undermined one of his main arguments – defending the rights of the tribunes – for going to civil war in 49.[69] In February 44, Caesar thrice rejected a crown from Marcus Antonius to cheering crowds,[69] but later accepted the title dictator perpetuo, which in Latin translated either to dictator for life or as dictator for an undetermined term.[70]

Cicero also wrote letters asking Brutus to reconsider his association with Caesar.[71] Cassius Dio claims that Brutus' wife Porcia spurred Brutus' conspiracy, but evidence is unclear as to the extent of her influence.[72] Gaius Cassius Longinus, also one of the praetors for that year and a former legate of Caesar's,[70] also was involved in the formation of the conspiracy. Plutarch has Brutus approach Cassius at his wife's urging, while Appian and Dio have Cassius approaching Brutus (and in Dio, Cassius does so after opposing further honours for Caesar publicly).[73]

The extent of Caesar's control over the political system also stymied the ambitions of many aristocrats of Brutus' generation: Caesar's dictatorship precluded many of the avenues for success which Romans recognised. The reduction of the senate to a rubber stamp ended political discussion in Caesar's senate; there was no longer any room for anyone to shape policy except by convincing Caesar; political success became a grant of Caesar's rather than something won competitively from the people.[74] The Platonian philosophical tradition, of which Brutus was an active writer and thinker, also emphasised a duty to restore justice and to overthrow tyrants.[75]

Regardless of how the conspiracy was initially formed, Brutus and Cassius, along with Brutus' cousin and close ally of Caesar's, Decimus Junius Brutus, started to recruit to the conspiracy in late February 44.[76] They recruited men including Gaius Trebonius, Publius Servilius Casca, Servius Sulpicius Galba, and others.[77] There was a discussion late in the conspiracy as to whether Antony should be killed, which Brutus forcefully rejected: Plutarch says Brutus thought Antony could be turned to the tyrannicides; Appian says Brutus thought of the optics of purging the Caesarian elite rather than only removing a tyrant.[78]

Various plans were proposed – an ambush on the via sacra, an attack at the elections, or killing at a gladiator match – eventually, however, the conspiracy settled on a senate meeting on the Ides of March.[79] The specific date carried symbolic importance, as consuls until the mid-2nd century BC had assumed their offices on that day (instead of early January).[80] The reasons for choosing the Ides are unclear: Nicolaus of Damascus (writing in the Augustan period) assumed that a senate meeting would isolate Caesar from support; Appian reports on the possibility of other senators coming to the assassins' aid. Both possibilities "are unlikely" due to Caesar's expansion of the senate and the low number of conspirators relative to the whole senate body.[80] More likely is Dio's suggestion that a senate meeting would give the conspirators a tactical advantage as, by smuggling weapons, only the conspirators would be armed.[80]

Ides of March

The ancient sources embellish the Ides with omens ignored, soothsayers spurned, and notes to Caesar spilling the conspiracy unread, all contributing "to the tragedy of Caesar as recorded in the literature and propaganda following his death".[80] The specific implementation of the conspiracy had Trebonius detain Antony – then serving as co-consul with Caesar – outside the senate house; Caesar was then stabbed to death almost immediately.[81] The specific details of the assassination vary between authors: Nicolaus of Damascus reports some eighty conspirators, Appian only listed fifteen, the number of wounds on Caesar ranges from twenty-three to thirty-five.[82]

Plutarch reports that Caesar yielded to the attack after seeing Brutus' participation; Dio reported that Caesar shouted in Greek kai su teknon ("You too, child?").[83] Suetonius' account, however, also cites Lucius Cornelius Balbus, a friend of Caesar's, as saying that the dictator fell in silence,[84] with the possibility that Caesar spoke kai su teknon as a postscript.[85] As dramatic death quotes were a staple of Roman literature, the historicity of the quote is unclear. The use of kai su, however, "always has a strongly negative tone in[] other contemporary[] evidence", indicating the possibility of a curse, per classicists James Russell and Jeffrey Tatum.[86]

Immediately after Caesar's death, senators fled the chaos. None attempted to aid Caesar or to move his body. Cicero reported that Caesar fell at the foot of the statue of Pompey.[87] His body was only moved after night fell, carried home to Caesar's wife Calpurnia.[87] The conspirators travelled to the Capitoline hill; Caesar's deputy in the dictatorship, Marcus Aemilius Lepidus, moved a legion of troops from the Tiber Island into the city and surrounded the forum.[88] Suetonius reports that Brutus and Cassius initially planned to seize Caesar's property and revoke his decrees, but stalled out of fear of Lepidus and Antony.[88]

Before Lepidus' troops arrived to the forum, Brutus spoke before the people in a contio. The text of that speech is lost. Dio says the liberatores promoted their support of democracy and liberty and told the people not to expect harm; Appian says the liberatores merely congratulated each other and recommended the recall of Sextus Pompey and the tribunes Caesar had recently deposed.[89] The support of the people was tepid, even though other speeches followed supporting the tyrannicide. Publius Cornelius Dolabella, who was to become consul in a few days on the 18th, decided immediately to assume the consulship illegally, expressed his support of Brutus and Cassius before the people, and joined the liberatores on hill.[90]

Cicero urged the tyrannicides to call a meeting of the senate to gather its support; Brutus however, "perhaps trusting too much in the character of Antony [or] hoping that he could win round Lepidus" who was married to one of Brutus' half-sisters, sent a delegation to the Caesarians asking for a negotiated settlement.[90] The Caesarians delayed for a day, moving troops and gathering weapons and supplies for a possible conflict.[90]

After Caesar's death, Dio reports a series of prodigies and miraculous occurrences which are "self-evidently fantastic" and likely fictitious.[91] Some of the supposed prodigies did in fact occur, but were actually unrelated to Caesar's death: Cicero's statue was knocked over but only in the next year, Mt Etna in Sicily did erupt but not contemporaneously, a comet was seen in the sky but only months later.[91]

Settlement

The initial plan from Brutus and Cassius seems to have been to establish a period of calm and then to work towards a general reconciliation.[92] While the Caesarians had troops near the capital at hand, the liberatores were soon to assume control of vast provincial holdings in the east which would provide them within the year of large armies and resources.[93] Seeing that the military situation was initially problematic, the liberatores decided then to ratify Caesar's decrees so that they could hold on to their magistracies and provincial assignments to protect themselves and rebuild the republican front.[92]

Cicero acted as an honest broker and hammered out a compromise solution: general amnesty for the assassins, ratification of Caesar's acts and appointments for the next two years, and guarantees to Caesar's veterans that they would receive their promised land grants. Caesar also was to receive a public funeral.[94] If the settlement had held, there would have been a general resumption of the republic: Decimus would go to Gaul that year and be confirmed as consul in 42, where he would then hold elections for 41.[94] The people celebrated the reconciliation but some of the hard-core Caesarians were convinced that civil war would follow.[95]

Caesar's funeral occurred on 20 March, with a rousing speech by Antony mourning the dictator and energising opposition against the tyrannicides. Various ancient sources report that the crowd set the senate house on fire and started a witch-hunt for the tyrannicides, but these may have been spurious embellishments added by Livy, according to T.P. Wiseman.[96] Contrary to what is reported by Plutarch, the assassins stayed in Rome for a few weeks after the funeral until April 44, indicating some support among the population for the tyrannicides.[97] A person calling himself Marius, claiming he was a descendant of Gaius Marius), started a plan to ambush Brutus and Cassius. Brutus, as urban praetor in charge of the city's courts, was able to get a special dispensation to leave the capital for more than 10 days, and he withdrew to one of his estates in Lanuvium, 20 miles south-east of Rome.[98] This fake Marius, for his threats to the tyrannicides (and to Antony's political base), was executed by being thrown from the Tarpeian Rock in mid- or late April.[99] Dolabella, the other consul, acting on this own initiative, took down an altar and column dedicated to Caesar.[99]

By early May, Brutus was considering exile. Octavian's arrival, along with the fake Marius, caused Antony to lose some of the support of his veterans, he responded by touring Campania – officially to settle Caesar's veterans – but actually to buttress military support.[100] Dolabella at this time was on the side of the liberatores and also was the only consul at Rome; Antony's brother Lucius Antonius helped Octavian to announce publicly that he was to fulfil the conditions of Caesar's will,[101] handing an enormous amount of wealth to the citizenry. Brutus also wrote a number of speeches disseminated to the public defending his actions, emphasising how Caesar had invaded Rome, killed prominent citizens, and suppressed the popular sovereignty of the people.[102]

By mid-May, Antony started on designs against Decimus Brutus' governorship in Cisalpine Gaul. He bypassed the senate and took the matter to the popular assemblies in June an enacted the reassignment of the Gallic province by law. At the same time, he proposed reassigning Brutus and Cassius from their provinces to instead purchase grain in Asia and Sicily.[103] There was a meeting at Brutus' house attended by Cicero, Brutus and Cassius (and wives), and Brutus' mother, in which Cassius announced his intention to go to Syria while Brutus wanted to return to Rome, but ended up going to Greece.[104] His initial plan to go to Rome, however, was to put on games in early July commemorating his ancestor Lucius Junius Brutus and promoting his cause; he instead delegated the games to a friend.[105] Octavian also held games commemorating Caesar late in the month; around this time also, the liberatores started to prepare in earnest for civil war.[106]

Liberatores' civil war

 
Ides of March coin minted by Brutus in 43–42 BC. The daggers and pileus celebrate the assassination of Julius Caesar.[107]

Preparations in the East

The senate assigned Brutus to Crete (and Cassius to Cyrene) in early August, both small and insignificant provinces with few troops.[108] Later in the month, Brutus left Italy for the east.[109] He was acclaimed in Greece by the younger Romans there and recruited many supporters from the young Roman aristocrats being educated in Athens.[110] He discussed with the governor of Macedonia handing the province over to him; while Antony in Rome allocated the province to his brother Gaius, Brutus travelled north with an army to Macedonia, buoyed by funds collected by two outgoing quaestores at the end of the year.[111]

In January 43, Brutus entered Macedonia and with his army, took Antony's brother Gaius captive. At the same time, the political situation in Rome turned against Antony, as Cicero was delivering his Phillipics. Over the next few months, Brutus spent his time in Greece building strength. In Italy, the senate at Cicero's urging fought against Antony at the battle of Mutina, where both consuls (Hirtius and Pansa) were killed.[111] During this time, the republicans enjoyed the support of the senate, which confirmed Brutus and Cassius' commands in Macedonia and Syria, respectively.[112][d]

Dolabella switched sides in 43, killing Trebonius in Syria and raising an army against Cassius.[111] Brutus decamped for Syria in early May, writing letters to Cicero criticising Cicero's policy to support Octavian against Antony;[113] at the same time, the senate had declared Antony an enemy of the state.[114] In late May, Lepidus (married to Brutus' half-sister) – possibly forced by his own troops – joined Antony against Cicero, Octavian, and the senate, leading Brutus to write to Cicero asking him to protect both his own and Lepidus' family.[115] The next month, Brutus' wife Porcia died.[115]

Cicero's policy of attempting to unify Octavian with the senate against Antony and Lepidus started to fail in May; he requested Brutus to take his forces and march to his aid in Italy in mid-June.[116] It seems that Brutus and Cassius in the east had substantial communications delays and failed to recognise that Antony had not been defeated, contra earlier assurances after Mutina.[116][e] Over the next few months from June to 19 August, Octavian marched on Rome and forced his election as consul.[117] Shortly afterwards, Octavian and his colleague, Quintus Pedius, passed the lex Pedia making the murder of a dictator retroactively illegal, and convicting Brutus and the assassins in absentia.[12] The new consuls also lifted the senate's decrees against Lepidus and Antony, clearing the way for a general Caesarian rapprochement.[118] Under that law, Decimus was killed in the west some time in autumn, defeating the republican cause in the west;[12] by 27 November 43, the Caesarians had fully settled their differences and passed the lex Titia, forming the Second Triumvirate and instituting a series of brutal proscriptions.[119] The proscriptions claimed many lives, including that of Cicero.[120]

When news of the triumvirate and their proscriptions reached Brutus in the east, he marched across the Hellespont into Macedonia to quell rebellion and conquered a number of cities in Thrace.[121] After meeting Cassius in Smyrna in January 42,[122] both generals also went on a campaign through southern Asia minor sacking cities which had aided their enemies.[123]

Brutus' depiction among certain authors, like Appian, suffered considerably from this eastern campaign: where Brutus marched into cities like Xanthus enslaving their populations and plundering their wealth.[124] Other ancient historians, including Plutarch, take a more apologetic tone, having Brutus "cry in anguish at the sufferings of his victims" a common theme used by ancient historians "to turn an otherwise condemnable action [sacking cities] into something that could be praised or even used as a positive moral example".[125] The campaign continued with less sacking but more coerced payments; the ancient tradition on this turn also is divided, with Appian seeing eastern willingness to surrender emerging from stories of Xanthus' destruction contra Cassius Dio and Plutarch viewing the later portions of the campaign as emblematic of Brutus' virtues of moderation, justice, and honour.[126]

By the end of the campaign in Asia minor, both Brutus and Cassius were tremendously rich.[127] They reconvened at Sardis and marched into Thrace in August 42.[128]

Philippi

 
Brutus and his companions after the battle of Philippi

The Caesarians also marched into Greece, evading the naval patrols of Sextus Pompey, Lucius Staius Murcus [de], and Gnaeus Domitius Ahenobarbus.[129] The liberatores had positioned themselves west of Neapolis with clear lines of communication back to their supplies in the east.[129] Octavian and Antony, leading the Caesarian forces, were not so lucky, as their supply lines were harassed by the superior republican fleets, leading the liberatores to adopt a strategy of attrition.[129]

Octavian and Antony had some 95,000 legionaries with 13,000 horsemen, while Brutus and Cassius had some 85,000 legionnaires and 20,000 cavalry. Flush with cash, the liberatores also had a substantial financial advantage, paying their soldiers in advance of the battle with 1,500 denarii a man and more for officers.[130] Antony moved quickly to force an engagement immediately, building a causeway under cover of darkness into the swamps that anchored the republican left flank; Cassius, commanding the republican left, countered with a wall to cut off Antony from his men and to defend his own flank.[131]

In the ensuing first Battle of Philippi, the start of the battle is unclear. Appian says Antony attacked Cassius whereas Plutarch reports battle was joined more-or-less simultaneously. [132] Brutus' forces defeated Octavian's troops on the republican right flank, sacking Octavian's camp and forcing the young Caesar to withdraw.[132] Cassius' troops fared poorly against Antony's men, forcing Cassius to withdraw to a hill. Two stories then follow: Appian reports that Cassius heard of Brutus' victory and killed himself from shame while "otherwise our sources preserve a largely unanimous account" of how one of Cassius' legates failed to convey news of Brutus' victory, leading Cassius to believe that Brutus was defeated and consequently commit suicide.[133]

Following the first battle, Brutus assumed command of Cassius' army with the promise of a substantial cash reward.[134] He also possibly promised his soldiers that he would allow them to plunder Thessalonica and Sparta after victory, as the cities had supported the triumvirs in the conflict.[135] Fearful of defections among his troops and the possibility of Antony cutting his supply lines, Brutus joined battle after attempting for some time to continue the original strategy of starving the enemy out.[136] The resulting second Battle of Philippi was a head-on-head struggle in which the sources report little tactical manoeuvres while reporting heavy casualties, especially among eminent republican families.[137]

After the defeat, Brutus fled into the nearby hills with about four legions.[138] Knowing his army had been defeated and that he would be captured, he committed suicide by falling on his sword.[14] Among his last words were, according to Plutarch, "By all means must we fly, but with our hands, not our feet".[14] Brutus reportedly also uttered the well-known verse calling down a curse quoted from Euripides' Medea: "O Zeus, do not forget who has caused all these woes".[138] It is, however, unclear whether Brutus was referring to Antony, as claimed by Appian, or otherwise Octavian, as Kathryn Tempest believes.[138] Also according to Plutarch, he praised his friends for not deserting him before encouraging them to save themselves.[14]

Some sources report that Antony, upon discovering Brutus' body, as a show of great respect, ordered Brutus' body to be wrapped in Antony's most expensive purple mantle and cremated with the ashes to be sent to Brutus' mother Servilia.[14] Suetonius, however, reports that Octavian had Brutus' head cut off and planned to have it displayed before a statue of Caesar until it was thrown overboard during a storm in the Adriatic.[139]

Chronology

  • 85 BC: Brutus is born to Marcus Junius Brutus and Servilia.
  • 58 BC: Serves as assistant to Cato, the governor of Cyprus, helping him start his political career.[5]
  • 54 BC: Marries Claudia, daughter of Appius Claudius Pulcher.[7]
  • 53 BC: Quaestorship in Cilicia, where his father-in-law is governor.
  • 52 BC: Opposes Pompey and defends Milo after the death of Publius Clodius Pulcher.[7]
  • 49 BC: The Civil War begins in January. Brutus joins the Pompeian party against Caesar, serving as legate to Publius Sestius in Cilicia, then joining Pompey in Greece late in the year.[7]
  • 48 BC: Pompey is defeated at Pharsalus on 9 August; Brutus is pardoned by Caesar.[7]
  • 46 BC: Caesar appoints Brutus governor of Cisalpine Gaul, before defeating the remnants of the Pompeians at Thapsus in April.[7]
  • 45 BC: Caesar appoints him praetor urbanus for 44.
  • 44 BC: Caesar takes title of dictator perpetuo.[7] Brutus and the other liberatores assassinate Caesar on the ides of March. He leaves Italy for Athens in late August, thence travels to Macedonia.[111]
  • 42 BC: Brutus campaigns successfully in southern Asia minor in January.[119] In September and October his forces are defeated by the triumvirs, and he commits suicide.[140]

Family

Legacy

  • This was the noblest Roman of them all:
  • All the conspirators save only he
  • Did that they did in envy of great Caesar;
  • He only, in a general honest thought
  • And common good to all, made one of them.
  • His life was gentle, and the elements
  • So mix'd in him that Nature might stand up
  • And say to all the world "This was a man!"

Shakespeare, Julius Caesar, 5.5.69–76.

Brutus' historical character has undergone numerous revisions and remains divisive. Dominant views of Brutus vary by time and geography.

Ancient views

In the ancient world, Brutus' legacy was a topic of substantial debate. Starting from his own times and shortly after his death, he was already viewed as having killed Caesar for virtuous reasons rather than envy or hatred. For example, Plutarch, in his Life of Brutus, mentions that Brutus' enemies respected him, recounting that Antony once said that "Brutus was the only man to have slain Caesar because he was driven by the splendour and nobility of the deed, while the rest conspired against the man because they hated and envied him".[141]

Even when he was still alive, Brutus' literary output, especially the pamphlets of 52 BC against Pompey's dictatorship (De dictatura Pompei) and in support of Milo (Pro T Annio Milone) coloured him as philosophically consistent: "Brutus had singled himself out as a man who acted upon an ideal code of conduct".[142] The main charge against him in the ancient world was that of ingratitude, viewing Brutus as ungrateful in taking Caesar's goodwill and support and then killing him.[143] An even more negative historiographical tradition viewed Brutus and his compatriots as criminal murderers.[144]

The divisive views of Brutus in the early Principate had little changed by the reign of Tiberius; the historian Cremutius Cordus was charged with treason for having written a history too friendly to Brutus and Cassius.[145] Around the same time, Valerius Maximus, writing with the support of the imperial regime, believed Brutus' memory suffered from "irreversible curses".[146] Of course, that the Julio-Claudio regime would have had a negative view of Brutus is expected: "admiration of Brutus and Cassius was more sinisterly interpreted as a cry of protest against the imperial system".[147] Similarly, the Forum of Augustus, which included statues of various republican heroes, omitted men such as Cato Uticensis, Cicero, Brutus, and Cassius.[148] The stoic, Seneca the Younger, argued that since Caesar was a good king, Brutus' fear was unfounded, and that he did not think through the consequences of Caesar's death.[149] Incidentally, Seneca himself was later killed by the last Julio-Claudian, Nero.

But by the time that Plutarch was actually writing his Life of Brutus, "the oral and written tradition had been worked over to create a streamlined, and largely positive, narrative of Brutus' motives".[66] Some high imperial writers also admired his rhetorical skills, especially Pliny the Younger and Tacitus, with the latter writing, "in my opinion, Brutus alone among them laid bare the convictions of his heart frankly and ingeniously, with neither ill-will nor spite".[142]

Renaissance and early modern views

Dante Alighieri's Inferno notably placed Brutus in the lowest circle of Hell for his betrayal of Caesar, where he (along with Cassius and Judas Iscariot) is personally tortured by Satan. Dante's views gave a further theological bent as well: "Brutus, Dante believed, was resisting God's 'historical design'" by killing Caesar, a "quasi-prototype for all contemporary monarchs".[15]

The moral acceptance of tyrannicide also changed. Thomas Aquinas, in On the government of princes, while accepting that tyrants should be overthrown under certain circumstances, also argued mild tyrants ought to be tolerated out of fear of unintended consequences.[150]

Renaissance writers, however, tended to view him more positively, as "it was Brutus who came to symbolise the tradition of ancient republicanism through the ages".[151] Various men in the renaissance and early modern periods were called or adopted the name Brutus: the pseudonym Stephanus Junius Brutus in 16th century France published a pamphlet Vindiciae contra tyrannos (Defences against tyrants); the "British Brutus" Algernon Sidney was executed for allegedly plotting against Charles II; the "Florentine Brutus", Lorenzino de' Medici, killed his cousin Duke Alessandro allegedly to free Florence.[151]

Of course, also in the early modern period is Shakespeare's depiction of Brutus in Julius Caesar, which depicts him "more of a troubled soul than a public symbol... [and] often sympathetic".[152]

Modern views

Views of Brutus as a symbol of republicanism have remained through the modern period. For example, the Anti-Federalist Papers in 1787 were written under the pseudonym "Brutus". Similar anti-federalist letters and pamphlets were written by other Roman republican names such as Cato and Poplicola.[153]

Conyers Middleton and Edward Gibbon, writing in the late 18th century, had negative views. Middleton believed Brutus' vacillations in correspondence with Cicero betrayed his claims to philosophical consistency. Gibbon conceived of Brutus' actions in terms of their results: the destruction of the republic, civil war, death, and future tyranny.[154] More teleological views of Brutus' actions are viewed sceptically by historians today: Ronald Syme, for example, pointed out "to judge Brutus because he failed is simply to judge from the results".[149]

The influential History of Rome by Theodor Mommsen in the late 19th century "cast a damning verdict on Brutus" by ending with Caesar's reforms in 46 BC, along with advancing a view that Caesar "had some sort of solution to the problem of how to deal with Rome's growing empire" (of which there is no surviving description).[155] Similarly, views of Brutus are also bound up with assessment of the republic: those who believe the republic was not worth saving or in an inevitable decline, views perhaps coloured by hindsight, view him more negatively.[155]

There remains little consensus or finality on Brutus' actions as a whole.[152]

In popular culture

  • In Jonathan Swift's 1726 satire Gulliver's Travels, Gulliver arrives at the island of Glubbdubdrib and is invited by a sorcerer to visit with several historical figures brought back from the dead. Among them, Caesar and Brutus are evoked, and Caesar confesses that all his glory doesn't equal the glory Brutus gained by murdering him.
  • In the Masters of Rome novels of Colleen McCullough, Brutus is portrayed as a timid intellectual whose relationship with Caesar is deeply complex. He resents Caesar for breaking his marriage arrangement with Caesar's daughter, Julia, whom Brutus deeply loved so that she could be married instead to Pompey the Great. However, Brutus enjoys Caesar's favor after he receives a pardon for fighting with Republican forces against Caesar at the Battle of Pharsalus. In the lead-up to the Ides of March, Cassius and Trebonius use him as a figurehead because of his family connections to the founder of the Republic. He appears in Fortune's Favourites, Caesar's Women, Caesar and The October Horse.
  • Brutus is an occasional supporting character in Asterix comics, most notably Asterix and Son in which he is the main antagonist. The character appears in the first three live Asterix film adaptations – though briefly in the first two – Asterix and Obelix vs Caesar (played by Didier Cauchy) and Asterix at the Olympic Games. In the latter film, he is portrayed as a comical villain by Belgian actor Benoît Poelvoorde: he is a central character to the film, even though he was not depicted in the original Asterix at the Olympic Games comic book. He is implied in that film to be Julius Caesar's biological son.
  • In the TV series Rome, Brutus, portrayed by Tobias Menzies, is depicted as a young man torn between what he believes is right, and his loyalty to and love of a man who has been like a father to him. In the series, his personality and motives are somewhat inaccurate, as Brutus is portrayed as an unwilling participant in politics. In the earlier episodes, he is frequently inebriated and easily ruled by emotion. Brutus' relationship to Cato is not mentioned; his three sisters and wife, Porcia, are omitted.
  • The Hives' song "B is for Brutus" contains titular and lyrical references to Junius Brutus.
  • Red Hot Chili Peppers song "Even You Brutus?" from their 2011 album I'm with You makes reference to Brutus and Judas Iscariot.
  • The Buttress song "Brutus" is inspired by Brutus
  • The video game Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood features a small side story in the form of the "Scrolls of Romulus" written by Brutus, which reveals that Caesar was a Templar, and Brutus and the conspirators were members of the Roman Brotherhood of Assassins. At the end of the side quest, the player is able to get Brutus' armour and dagger. Later at Assassin's Creed Origins, Brutus and Cassius make an appearance as Aya's earliest recruits and is the one who give the killing blow to Caesar, though his armour from Brotherhood does not make an appearance here.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Cicero, Brutus, 324 says he was born ten years after the debut of Hortensius, in 95 BC, but Velleius Paterculus has Brutus aged 36 at death. Velleius's date would make Brutus too young to hold the offices he is known to have held. Tempest 2017, pp. 262–263.
  2. ^ Possibly Ariobarzanes II. Cicero's time as governor overlaps with the death of Ariobarzanes II and the accession of Ariobarzanes III.
  3. ^ The speech Brutus wrote for Milo is also called the exercitatio Bruti pro Milone. Balbo 2013, p. 320.
  4. ^ Cicero made the proposal, "referring to Brutus by his official name",

    "that as proconsul Quintus Caepio Brutus shall protect, defend, guard, and keep safe Macedonia, Illyricum, and the whole of Greece; that he will command the army which he himself has established and raised... and see to it that, together with his army, he be as close as possible to Italy".

    Tempest 2017, p. 150.

  5. ^ "Evidently there was little understanding in the east of the effect of Lepidus' defection [by 30 May 43] and the potential crisis awaiting Rome; likewise, in the west, the problem of Dolabella [who was posing an immediate threat to Cassius and Brutus' forces] was remote and incomprehensible". Tempest 2017, p. 168.

References

Citations

  1. ^ Broughton 1952, p. 576. "M. Iunius Brutus ... (53) Monetal. ca. 60 ... Q. 53 (Cilicia), Leg., Lieut. 49, 48 ?, Propr. ? or Leg., Lieut. ? Gall. Cisalp. 46–45 (early), Pr. Urb. 44, Cur. annon. 44, Procos. Crete 44, Procos. (with imperium maius) Macedonia and the East 43–42".
  2. ^ Balbo 2013, p. 317.
  3. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 25, 150.
  4. ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 50.
  5. ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 238.
  6. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 58–59.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i Tempest 2017, p. 239.
  8. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 1–3.
  9. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 97–104.
  10. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 241.
  11. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 117.
  12. ^ a b c Tempest 2017, p. 169.
  13. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 200–208.
  14. ^ a b c d e Tempest 2017, p. 208.
  15. ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 218.
  16. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 229–30.
  17. ^ Tempest 2017, Plate 3.
  18. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 17–8.
  19. ^ Broughton 1952, p. 63.
  20. ^ Treggiari, Susan (2019). "Adolescence and Marriage to Brutus (c. 88–78)". Servilia and her Family. Oxford University Press. pp. 70–87. doi:10.1093/oso/9780198829348.003.0004. ISBN 978-0-19-186792-7.
  21. ^ Valerius Maximus (2004). Memorable deeds and sayings : one thousand tales from ancient Rome. Translated by Walker, Henry J. Indianapolis: Hackett Publishing. p. 205. ISBN 0-87220-675-0. OCLC 53231884. Pompey killed Marcus Junius Brutus, a rebel legate in northern Italy, in 77 BC.
  22. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 24.
  23. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 25.
  24. ^ Flower, Harriet (7 March 2016). "Servilia". Oxford Classical Dictionary. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199381135.013.5854. ISBN 9780199381135. Retrieved 21 May 2021.
  25. ^ Plut. Brut., 5.2.
  26. ^ 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.
  27. ^ 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.
  28. ^ 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.
  29. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 25, citing Cic. Att., 2.24.3.
  30. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 36.
  31. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 37, citing Cicero's allegation of a "nocturnal intervention" altering Vettius' testimony at Cic. Att., 2.24.3.
  32. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 40.
  33. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 40, citing Plut. Brut., 3.1–4.
  34. ^ a b c Crawford 1974, p. 455.
  35. ^ Tempest 2017, Plate 5.
  36. ^ Tempest 2017, Plate 4.
  37. ^ Crawford 1974, pp. 456, 734. Quintus Pompeius Rufus was a supporter of Pompey.
  38. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 41.
  39. ^ Crawford 1974, pp. 455, 456, 734, also mentioning other moneyers minting coins for and against Pompey in the 50s BC.
  40. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 43, citing Cic. Fam., 3.4.2 (relation to Appius) and Broughton 1952, p. 229 (dating of quaestorship).
  41. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 42–3.
  42. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 45.
  43. ^ a b c Tempest 2017, p. 46.
  44. ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 47.
  45. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 48–49.
  46. ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 51.
  47. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 52.
  48. ^ Balbo 2013, p. 319.
  49. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 53, noting also that Broughton 1952, p. 254 dates elevation to 51 BC.
  50. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 53.
  51. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 43–4.
  52. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 53–4, citing Cic. Att., 3.11.1–3 and 3.12.1.
  53. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 59.
  54. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 60, citing Cic. Att., 8.14.2.
  55. ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 60.
  56. ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 61.
  57. ^ Plut. Brut., 5.1.
  58. ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 63.
  59. ^ a b c Tempest 2017, p. 70.
  60. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 71.
  61. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 74.
  62. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 75.
  63. ^ Cic. Att. 13.16.
  64. ^ a b c Tempest 2017, p. 76.
  65. ^ Cic. Att. 13.22.
  66. ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 84.
  67. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 86.
  68. ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 87.
  69. ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 81.
  70. ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 82.
  71. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 87–8.
  72. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 89–90.
  73. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 91.
  74. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 93.
  75. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 95–6.
  76. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 97–8.
  77. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 98.
  78. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 99.
  79. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 99–100.
  80. ^ a b c d Tempest 2017, p. 100.
  81. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 101.
  82. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 3–4, citing at Tempest 2017, p. 261 n. 1 the various ancient accounts: Nic. Dam., 58–106; Plut. Caes., 60–8; Plut. Brut., 8–20; Suet. Iul., 76–85; App. B Civ., 2.106–47; Cass. Dio, 44.9–19.
  83. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 3.
  84. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 101, citing Suet. Iul., 81–82.
  85. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 102.
  86. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 103.
  87. ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 107.
  88. ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 108.
  89. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 109.
  90. ^ a b c Tempest 2017, p. 110.
  91. ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 106.
  92. ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 113.
  93. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 112–3.
  94. ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 114.
  95. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 114–5.
  96. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 119.
  97. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 119–20.
  98. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 116–7.
  99. ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 124.
  100. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 126–7.
  101. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 127.
  102. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 129.
  103. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 132.
  104. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 133.
  105. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 134–5.
  106. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 137.
  107. ^ Crawford 1974, p. 518.
  108. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 140.
  109. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 142.
  110. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 144–146.
  111. ^ a b c d Tempest 2017, p. 243.
  112. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 150.
  113. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 161.
  114. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 243–244.
  115. ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 244.
  116. ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 166.
  117. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 244–5.
  118. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 170.
  119. ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 245.
  120. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 171.
  121. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 177.
  122. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 178.
  123. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 179.
  124. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 182.
  125. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 183–4.
  126. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 189–191.
  127. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 191.
  128. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 193.
  129. ^ a b c Tempest 2017, p. 197.
  130. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 198.
  131. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 200.
  132. ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 201.
  133. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 202.
  134. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 203.
  135. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 204.
  136. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 205.
  137. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 206.
  138. ^ a b c Tempest 2017, p. 207.
  139. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 209.
  140. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 248–58.
  141. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 211.
  142. ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 213.
  143. ^ Tempest 2017, pp. 216–17.
  144. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 175.
  145. ^ Gowing 2005, p. 26.
  146. ^ Gowing 2005, p. 55.
  147. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 5.
  148. ^ Gowing 2005, p. 145.
  149. ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 219.
  150. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 215.
  151. ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 230.
  152. ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 231.
  153. ^ Dry, Murray; Storing, Herbert J, eds. (1985). The anti-Federalist: an abridgement. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-77562-3. OCLC 698669562.
  154. ^ Tempest 2017, p. 10.
  155. ^ a b Tempest 2017, p. 220.

Sources

  • Balbo, Andrea (2013). "Marcus Junius Brutus the orator: between philosophy and rhetoric". In Steel, Catherine; van der Blom, Henriette (eds.). Community and communication: oratory and politics in republican Rome. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-964189-5.
  • Broughton, Thomas Robert Shannon (1952). The magistrates of the Roman republic. Vol. 2. New York: American Philological Association.
  • Crawford, Michael Hewson (1974). Roman republican coinage. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-07492-6.
  • Gowing, Alain M (2005). Empire and memory: the representation of the Roman republic in imperial culture. Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511610592. ISBN 0-511-12792-8. OCLC 252514679.
  • Plutarch (1918) [2nd century AD]. "Life of Brutus". Parallel Lives. Loeb Classical Library. Vol. 6. Translated by Perrin, Bernadotte. Harvard University Press. OCLC 40115288 – via Perseus Digital Library.
  • Tempest, Kathryn (2017). Brutus: the noble conspirator. London: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-18009-1.

Further reading

  • Badian, Ernst (2012). "Iunius Brutus (2), Marcus". In Hornblower, Simon; et al. (eds.). The Oxford classical dictionary (4th ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199381135.013.3440. ISBN 978-0-19-954556-8. OCLC 959667246.
  • Clarke, M. L. (1981). The noblest Roman. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
  • Syme, Ronald (1939). The Roman revolution. Oxford University Press.
  • Volk, Katharina (2018). "Review of 'Brutus: the noble conspirator'". Bryn Mawr Classical Review. ISSN 1055-7660.
  • Wistrand, Erik (1981). The policy of Brutus the tyrannicide. Goteborg: Kungl.

External links

  • Marcus Junius Brutus in the Digital Prosopography of the Roman Republic.
  • on Livius.org


marcus, junius, brutus, brutus, redirects, here, other, people, with, same, name, brutus, disambiguation, latin, pronunciation, ˈmaːrkʊs, juːniʊs, ˈbruːtʊs, october, roman, politician, orator, most, famous, assassins, julius, caesar, after, being, adopted, rel. Brutus redirects here For other people with the same name see Brutus disambiguation Marcus Junius Brutus ˈ b r uː t e s Latin pronunciation ˈmaːrkʊs juːniʊs ˈbruːtʊs c 85 BC 23 October 42 BC was a Roman politician orator 2 and the most famous of the assassins of Julius Caesar After being adopted by a relative he used the name Quintus Servilius Caepio Brutus which was retained as his legal name He is often referred to simply as Brutus 3 Marcus Junius BrutusBrutus on the Ides of March coin issued shortly before his deathBornc 85 BC a Died23 October 42 BC aged 42 43 Near Philippi MacedoniaCause of deathSuicideNationalityRomanOther namesQuintus Servilius Caepio BrutusOccupation s Politician orator and generalKnown forAssassination of Julius CaesarOfficeGovernor Cisalpine Gaul 47 45 BC Praetor urbanus 44 BC Proconsul 43 42 BC Consul designate 41 BC 1 Spouses 1 Claudia 2 PorciaParent s M Junius Brutus and ServiliaEarly in his political career Brutus opposed Pompey 4 who was responsible for Brutus father s death 5 He also was close to Caesar However Caesar s attempts to evade accountability in the law courts put him at greater odds with his opponents in the Roman elite and the senate 6 Brutus eventually came to oppose Caesar and sided with Pompey against Caesar s forces during the ensuing civil war 49 45 BC Pompey was defeated at the Battle of Pharsalus in 48 after which Brutus surrendered to Caesar who granted him amnesty 7 With Caesar s increasingly monarchical and autocratic behaviour after the civil war several senators who later called themselves liberatores Liberators plotted to assassinate him Brutus took a leading role in the assassination which was carried out successfully on the Ides of March 15 March of 44 BC 8 9 In a settlement between the liberatores and the Caesarians an amnesty was granted to the assassins while Caesar s acts were upheld for two years 10 Popular unrest forced Brutus and his brother in law fellow assassin Gaius Cassius Longinus to leave Rome in April 44 11 After a complex political realignment Octavian Caesar s adoptive son made himself consul and with his colleague passed a law retroactively making Brutus and the other conspirators murderers 12 This led to a second civil war in which Mark Antony and Octavian fought the liberatores led by Brutus and Cassius The Caesarians decisively defeated the outnumbered armies of Brutus and Cassius at the two battles at Philippi in October 42 13 After the defeat Brutus committed suicide 14 His name has been condemned for betrayal of his friend and benefactor Caesar and is perhaps only rivalled in this regard by the name of Judas Iscariot famously in Dante s Inferno 15 He also has been praised in various narratives both ancient and modern as a virtuous and committed republican who fought however futilely for freedom and against tyranny 16 Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Triumvir monetalis 1 2 Cilicia 1 3 Opposition to Pompey 2 Caesar s civil war 3 Assassination of Julius Caesar 3 1 Conspiracy 3 2 Ides of March 3 3 Settlement 4 Liberatores civil war 4 1 Preparations in the East 4 2 Philippi 5 Chronology 6 Family 7 Legacy 7 1 Ancient views 7 2 Renaissance and early modern views 7 3 Modern views 8 In popular culture 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 11 1 Citations 11 2 Sources 12 Further reading 13 External linksEarly life Edit The Capitoline Brutus supposedly depicting Brutus ancestor Lucius Junius Brutus who expelled the kings from Rome 17 Marcus Junius Brutus belonged to the illustrious plebeian gens Junia Its semi legendary founder was Lucius Junius Brutus who played a pivotal role during the overthrow of Tarquinius Superbus the last Roman king and was afterward one of the two first consuls of the new Roman Republic in 509 BC taking the opportunity also to have the people swear an oath never to have a king in Rome 18 Brutus homonymous father was tribune of the plebs in 83 BC 19 20 but he was killed by Pompey in 77 while serving as legate 21 in the rebellion of Marcus Aemilius Lepidus 22 He had married Servilia of the Servilii Caepiones who was the half sister of Cato the Younger 23 and later Julius Caesar s mistress 24 Some ancient sources refer to the possibility of Caesar being Brutus real father 25 despite Caesar being only fifteen years old when Brutus was born Ancient historians were sceptical of this possibility and on the whole scholars have rejected the possibility that Brutus was the love child of Servilia and Caesar on the grounds of chronology 26 27 28 A relative of Brutus Quintus Servilius Caepio adopted him posthumously around 59 BC and Brutus was known officially as Quintus Servilius Caepio Brutus though he hardly used his legal name 29 In 59 when Caesar was consul Brutus also was implicated by Lucius Vettius in the Vettius affair as a member of a conspiracy plotting to assassinate Pompey in the forum 30 Vettius was detained for admitting possession of a weapon within the city and quickly changed this story the next day dropping Brutus name from his accusations 31 Brutus first appearance in public life was as an assistant to Cato when the latter was appointed by the senate acting at the bequest of Publius Clodius Pulcher as governor of Cyprus in 58 32 According to Plutarch Brutus was instrumental in assisting the administration of the province specifically by converting treasure of the former king of the island into usable money his role in administering the province however has almost certainly been exaggerated 33 Triumvir monetalis Edit Denarius minted by Brutus 54 BC with the portraits of Lucius Junius Brutus obverse and Gaius Servilius Ahala reverse 34 35 Denarius of Brutus 44 BC depicting the personification of Libertas and Lucius Junius Brutus with lictors 34 36 In 54 BC Brutus served as triumvir monetalis one of the three men appointed annually for producing coins even though only another colleague is known Quintus Pompeius Rufus Moneyers in Brutus day frequently issued coins commemorating their ancestors Pompeius Rufus thus put the portraits of his two grandfathers the dictator Sulla and Pompeius Rufus on his denarii 37 Brutus like his colleague designed a denarius with the portraits of his paternal ancestor Lucius Junius Brutus and maternal ancestor Gaius Servilius Ahala both of whom were widely recognised in the late Republic as defenders of liberty for respectively expelling the kings and killing Spurius Maelius 38 He also made a second type featuring Libertas the goddess of liberty and Lucius Brutus 34 These coins show Brutus admiration for the tyrannicides of the early republic already mentioned by Cicero as early as 59 BC In addition Brutus denarii and their message against tyranny participated in the propaganda against Pompey and his ambitions to rule alone or become dictator 39 Cilicia Edit Brutus married Appius Claudius Pulcher s daughter Claudia likely in 54 during Pulcher s consulship He was elected as quaestor and automatically enrolled in the senate in 53 40 Brutus then travelled with his father in law to Cilicia during the latter s proconsulship in the next year 41 While in Cilicia he spent some time as a money lender which was discovered two years later when Cicero was appointed proconsul between 51 and 50 BC 42 Brutus asked Cicero to help collect two debts which Brutus had made one to Ariobarzanes b the king of Cappadocia and one to the town of Salamis 43 Brutus loan to Ariobarzanes was bundled with a loan also made by Pompey and both received some repayment on the debt 43 The loan to Salamis was more complex officially the loan was made by two of Brutus friends who requested repayment at 48 per cent per annum which was far in excess of Cicero s previously imposed interest cap of 12 per cent The loan dated back to 56 shortly after Brutus returned to Rome from Cyprus 43 Salamis had sent a delegation asking to borrow money but under the lex Gabinia it was illegal for Romans to lend to provincials in the capital but Brutus was able to find friends to loan this money on his behalf which was approved under his influence in the senate Because the lex Gabinia also invalidated such contracts Brutus also had his contract officially his friends contract confirmed by the senate 44 One of Brutus friends in whose name the debt was officially issued Marcus Scaptius was in Cilicia during Cicero s proconsulship using force to coerce repayment which Cicero stopped Cicero not seeking to endanger his friendship with Brutus but also disappointed and angry at Brutus mischaracterisation of the loan and the exorbitant interest rate attached 45 was persuaded by Scaptius to defer a decision on the loan to the next governor 44 Opposition to Pompey Edit In 52 in the aftermath of the death of his uncle in law Publius Clodius Pulcher brother of his wife s father he wrote a pamphlet De Dictatura Pompei On the Dictatorship of Pompey opposing demands for Pompey to be made dictator writing it is better to rule no one than to be another man s slave for one can live honourably without power but to live as a slave is impossible 4 He was in this episode more radical than Cato the Younger who supported Pompey s elevation as sole consul for 52 saying any government at all is better than no government 46 Soon after Pompey was made sole consul Pompey passed the lex Pompeia de vi which targeted Titus Annius Milo for which Cicero would write a speech pro Milone 46 Brutus also wrote for Milo writing a now lost pro T Annio Milone c in which he connected Milo s killing of Clodius explicitly to the welfare of the state and possibly also criticising what he saw as Pompey s abuses of power 47 This speech or pamphlet was very well received and positively viewed by later teachers of rhetoric 48 In the late 50s Brutus was elected as a pontifex one of the public priests in charge of supervising the calendar and maintaining Rome s peaceful relationship with the gods 49 It is likely that Caesar supported his election 50 Caesar had previously invited Brutus after his quaestorship to join him as a legate in Gaul but Brutus declined instead going with Appius Pulcher to Cilicia possibly out of loyalty thereto 51 During the 50s Brutus also was involved in some major trials working alongside famous advocates like Cicero and Quintus Hortensius In 50 he with Pompey and Hortensius played a significant role in defending Brutus father in law Appius Claudius from charges of treason and electoral malpractice 52 In the political crisis running up to Caesar s Civil War in 49 Brutus views are mostly unknown While he did oppose Pompey until 52 Brutus may have simply taken a tactical silence 53 Cicero s letters also indicate that Brutus may have been courted by Caesar who is said to have spoken about avenging the death of Brutus father in the run up to the civil war 54 Caesar s civil war Edit Marble bust so called Brutus at the Palazzo Massimo alle Terme in the National Museum of Rome When Caesar s Civil War broke out in January 49 BC 7 between Pompey and Caesar Brutus faced a choice betwene one or the other 55 Pompey and his allies fled the city before Caesar s army arrived in March 7 Brutus decided to support his father s killer Pompey this choice may have had mostly to do with Brutus closest allies Appius Claudius Cato Cicero etc also all joining Pompey 55 He did not however immediately join Pompey instead travelling to Cilicia as legate for Publius Sestius before joining Pompey in winter 49 or spring 48 56 It is not known whether Brutus fought in the ensuing battles at Dyrrhachium and Pharsalus 56 Plutarch says that Caesar ordered his officers to take Brutus prisoner if he gave himself up voluntarily but to leave him alone and do him no harm if he persisted in fighting against capture 57 After the massive Pompeian defeat at Pharsalus on 9 August 48 Brutus fled through marshland to Larissa where he wrote to Caesar who welcomed him graciously into his camp 58 Plutarch also implies that Brutus told Caesar of Pompey s withdrawal plans to Egypt but this is unlikely as Brutus was not present when Pompey s decision to go to Egypt was made 58 While Caesar followed Pompey to Alexandria in 48 7 Brutus worked to effect a reconciliation between various Pompeians and Caesar 59 He arrived back in Rome in December 47 59 Caesar appointed Brutus as governor likely as legatus pro praetore for Cisalpine Gaul while he left for Africa in pursuit of Cato and Metellus Scipio 59 After Cato s suicide following defeat at the battle of Thapsus on 6 April 46 60 Brutus was one of Cato s eulogisers writing a pamphlet entitled Cato in which he reflected positively both on Cato s life while highlighting Caesar s clementia 61 After Caesar s last battle against the republican remnant in March 45 Brutus divorced his wife Claudia in June and promptly remarried his cousin Porcia Cato s daughter late in the same month 62 According to Cicero the marriage caused a semi scandal as Brutus failed to state a valid reason for his divorce from Claudia other than he wished to marry Porcia 63 Brutus reasons for marrying Porcia are unclear he may have been in love or it could have been a politically motivated marriage to position Brutus as heir to Cato s supporters 64 The marriage also caused a rift between Brutus and his mother 64 who was resentful of the affection Brutus had for Porcia 65 Brutus also was promised the prestigious urban praetorship for 44 BC and possibly earmarked for the consulship in 41 64 Assassination of Julius Caesar EditMain article Assassination of Julius Caesar Death of Caesar 1804 05 by Vincenzo Camuccini The Death of Caesar 1867 by Jean Leon Gerome There are various different traditions describing the way in which Brutus arrived to the decision to assassinate Caesar Plutarch Appian and Cassius Dio all writing in the imperial period focused on pressure from Brutus peers and his own philosophical conviction that awakened a sense of duty both to this country and to his family name 66 Conspiracy Edit By autumn 45 public opinion of Caesar was starting to sour Plutarch Appian and Dio all reported graffiti glorifying Brutus ancestor Lucius Junius Brutus panning Caesar s kingly ambitions and derogatory comments made to Marcus Junius Brutus in Rome s open air courts that he was failing to live up to his ancestors 67 Dio reports this public support came from the people of Rome Plutarch however has the graffiti created by elites to shame Brutus into action 68 Regardless of the specific impetus modern historians believe that at least some portion of popular opinion had turned against Caesar by early 44 68 Caesar deposed two plebeian tribunes in late January 44 for removing a crown from one of his statues this attack on the tribunes undermined one of his main arguments defending the rights of the tribunes for going to civil war in 49 69 In February 44 Caesar thrice rejected a crown from Marcus Antonius to cheering crowds 69 but later accepted the title dictator perpetuo which in Latin translated either to dictator for life or as dictator for an undetermined term 70 Cicero also wrote letters asking Brutus to reconsider his association with Caesar 71 Cassius Dio claims that Brutus wife Porcia spurred Brutus conspiracy but evidence is unclear as to the extent of her influence 72 Gaius Cassius Longinus also one of the praetors for that year and a former legate of Caesar s 70 also was involved in the formation of the conspiracy Plutarch has Brutus approach Cassius at his wife s urging while Appian and Dio have Cassius approaching Brutus and in Dio Cassius does so after opposing further honours for Caesar publicly 73 The extent of Caesar s control over the political system also stymied the ambitions of many aristocrats of Brutus generation Caesar s dictatorship precluded many of the avenues for success which Romans recognised The reduction of the senate to a rubber stamp ended political discussion in Caesar s senate there was no longer any room for anyone to shape policy except by convincing Caesar political success became a grant of Caesar s rather than something won competitively from the people 74 The Platonian philosophical tradition of which Brutus was an active writer and thinker also emphasised a duty to restore justice and to overthrow tyrants 75 Regardless of how the conspiracy was initially formed Brutus and Cassius along with Brutus cousin and close ally of Caesar s Decimus Junius Brutus started to recruit to the conspiracy in late February 44 76 They recruited men including Gaius Trebonius Publius Servilius Casca Servius Sulpicius Galba and others 77 There was a discussion late in the conspiracy as to whether Antony should be killed which Brutus forcefully rejected Plutarch says Brutus thought Antony could be turned to the tyrannicides Appian says Brutus thought of the optics of purging the Caesarian elite rather than only removing a tyrant 78 Various plans were proposed an ambush on the via sacra an attack at the elections or killing at a gladiator match eventually however the conspiracy settled on a senate meeting on the Ides of March 79 The specific date carried symbolic importance as consuls until the mid 2nd century BC had assumed their offices on that day instead of early January 80 The reasons for choosing the Ides are unclear Nicolaus of Damascus writing in the Augustan period assumed that a senate meeting would isolate Caesar from support Appian reports on the possibility of other senators coming to the assassins aid Both possibilities are unlikely due to Caesar s expansion of the senate and the low number of conspirators relative to the whole senate body 80 More likely is Dio s suggestion that a senate meeting would give the conspirators a tactical advantage as by smuggling weapons only the conspirators would be armed 80 Ides of March Edit The ancient sources embellish the Ides with omens ignored soothsayers spurned and notes to Caesar spilling the conspiracy unread all contributing to the tragedy of Caesar as recorded in the literature and propaganda following his death 80 The specific implementation of the conspiracy had Trebonius detain Antony then serving as co consul with Caesar outside the senate house Caesar was then stabbed to death almost immediately 81 The specific details of the assassination vary between authors Nicolaus of Damascus reports some eighty conspirators Appian only listed fifteen the number of wounds on Caesar ranges from twenty three to thirty five 82 Plutarch reports that Caesar yielded to the attack after seeing Brutus participation Dio reported that Caesar shouted in Greek kai su teknon You too child 83 Suetonius account however also cites Lucius Cornelius Balbus a friend of Caesar s as saying that the dictator fell in silence 84 with the possibility that Caesar spoke kai su teknon as a postscript 85 As dramatic death quotes were a staple of Roman literature the historicity of the quote is unclear The use of kai su however always has a strongly negative tone in other contemporary evidence indicating the possibility of a curse per classicists James Russell and Jeffrey Tatum 86 Immediately after Caesar s death senators fled the chaos None attempted to aid Caesar or to move his body Cicero reported that Caesar fell at the foot of the statue of Pompey 87 His body was only moved after night fell carried home to Caesar s wife Calpurnia 87 The conspirators travelled to the Capitoline hill Caesar s deputy in the dictatorship Marcus Aemilius Lepidus moved a legion of troops from the Tiber Island into the city and surrounded the forum 88 Suetonius reports that Brutus and Cassius initially planned to seize Caesar s property and revoke his decrees but stalled out of fear of Lepidus and Antony 88 Before Lepidus troops arrived to the forum Brutus spoke before the people in a contio The text of that speech is lost Dio says the liberatores promoted their support of democracy and liberty and told the people not to expect harm Appian says the liberatores merely congratulated each other and recommended the recall of Sextus Pompey and the tribunes Caesar had recently deposed 89 The support of the people was tepid even though other speeches followed supporting the tyrannicide Publius Cornelius Dolabella who was to become consul in a few days on the 18th decided immediately to assume the consulship illegally expressed his support of Brutus and Cassius before the people and joined the liberatores on hill 90 Cicero urged the tyrannicides to call a meeting of the senate to gather its support Brutus however perhaps trusting too much in the character of Antony or hoping that he could win round Lepidus who was married to one of Brutus half sisters sent a delegation to the Caesarians asking for a negotiated settlement 90 The Caesarians delayed for a day moving troops and gathering weapons and supplies for a possible conflict 90 After Caesar s death Dio reports a series of prodigies and miraculous occurrences which are self evidently fantastic and likely fictitious 91 Some of the supposed prodigies did in fact occur but were actually unrelated to Caesar s death Cicero s statue was knocked over but only in the next year Mt Etna in Sicily did erupt but not contemporaneously a comet was seen in the sky but only months later 91 Settlement Edit The initial plan from Brutus and Cassius seems to have been to establish a period of calm and then to work towards a general reconciliation 92 While the Caesarians had troops near the capital at hand the liberatores were soon to assume control of vast provincial holdings in the east which would provide them within the year of large armies and resources 93 Seeing that the military situation was initially problematic the liberatores decided then to ratify Caesar s decrees so that they could hold on to their magistracies and provincial assignments to protect themselves and rebuild the republican front 92 Cicero acted as an honest broker and hammered out a compromise solution general amnesty for the assassins ratification of Caesar s acts and appointments for the next two years and guarantees to Caesar s veterans that they would receive their promised land grants Caesar also was to receive a public funeral 94 If the settlement had held there would have been a general resumption of the republic Decimus would go to Gaul that year and be confirmed as consul in 42 where he would then hold elections for 41 94 The people celebrated the reconciliation but some of the hard core Caesarians were convinced that civil war would follow 95 Caesar s funeral occurred on 20 March with a rousing speech by Antony mourning the dictator and energising opposition against the tyrannicides Various ancient sources report that the crowd set the senate house on fire and started a witch hunt for the tyrannicides but these may have been spurious embellishments added by Livy according to T P Wiseman 96 Contrary to what is reported by Plutarch the assassins stayed in Rome for a few weeks after the funeral until April 44 indicating some support among the population for the tyrannicides 97 A person calling himself Marius claiming he was a descendant of Gaius Marius started a plan to ambush Brutus and Cassius Brutus as urban praetor in charge of the city s courts was able to get a special dispensation to leave the capital for more than 10 days and he withdrew to one of his estates in Lanuvium 20 miles south east of Rome 98 This fake Marius for his threats to the tyrannicides and to Antony s political base was executed by being thrown from the Tarpeian Rock in mid or late April 99 Dolabella the other consul acting on this own initiative took down an altar and column dedicated to Caesar 99 By early May Brutus was considering exile Octavian s arrival along with the fake Marius caused Antony to lose some of the support of his veterans he responded by touring Campania officially to settle Caesar s veterans but actually to buttress military support 100 Dolabella at this time was on the side of the liberatores and also was the only consul at Rome Antony s brother Lucius Antonius helped Octavian to announce publicly that he was to fulfil the conditions of Caesar s will 101 handing an enormous amount of wealth to the citizenry Brutus also wrote a number of speeches disseminated to the public defending his actions emphasising how Caesar had invaded Rome killed prominent citizens and suppressed the popular sovereignty of the people 102 By mid May Antony started on designs against Decimus Brutus governorship in Cisalpine Gaul He bypassed the senate and took the matter to the popular assemblies in June an enacted the reassignment of the Gallic province by law At the same time he proposed reassigning Brutus and Cassius from their provinces to instead purchase grain in Asia and Sicily 103 There was a meeting at Brutus house attended by Cicero Brutus and Cassius and wives and Brutus mother in which Cassius announced his intention to go to Syria while Brutus wanted to return to Rome but ended up going to Greece 104 His initial plan to go to Rome however was to put on games in early July commemorating his ancestor Lucius Junius Brutus and promoting his cause he instead delegated the games to a friend 105 Octavian also held games commemorating Caesar late in the month around this time also the liberatores started to prepare in earnest for civil war 106 Liberatores civil war EditMain article Liberators civil war Ides of March coin minted by Brutus in 43 42 BC The daggers and pileus celebrate the assassination of Julius Caesar 107 Preparations in the East Edit The senate assigned Brutus to Crete and Cassius to Cyrene in early August both small and insignificant provinces with few troops 108 Later in the month Brutus left Italy for the east 109 He was acclaimed in Greece by the younger Romans there and recruited many supporters from the young Roman aristocrats being educated in Athens 110 He discussed with the governor of Macedonia handing the province over to him while Antony in Rome allocated the province to his brother Gaius Brutus travelled north with an army to Macedonia buoyed by funds collected by two outgoing quaestores at the end of the year 111 In January 43 Brutus entered Macedonia and with his army took Antony s brother Gaius captive At the same time the political situation in Rome turned against Antony as Cicero was delivering his Phillipics Over the next few months Brutus spent his time in Greece building strength In Italy the senate at Cicero s urging fought against Antony at the battle of Mutina where both consuls Hirtius and Pansa were killed 111 During this time the republicans enjoyed the support of the senate which confirmed Brutus and Cassius commands in Macedonia and Syria respectively 112 d Dolabella switched sides in 43 killing Trebonius in Syria and raising an army against Cassius 111 Brutus decamped for Syria in early May writing letters to Cicero criticising Cicero s policy to support Octavian against Antony 113 at the same time the senate had declared Antony an enemy of the state 114 In late May Lepidus married to Brutus half sister possibly forced by his own troops joined Antony against Cicero Octavian and the senate leading Brutus to write to Cicero asking him to protect both his own and Lepidus family 115 The next month Brutus wife Porcia died 115 Cicero s policy of attempting to unify Octavian with the senate against Antony and Lepidus started to fail in May he requested Brutus to take his forces and march to his aid in Italy in mid June 116 It seems that Brutus and Cassius in the east had substantial communications delays and failed to recognise that Antony had not been defeated contra earlier assurances after Mutina 116 e Over the next few months from June to 19 August Octavian marched on Rome and forced his election as consul 117 Shortly afterwards Octavian and his colleague Quintus Pedius passed the lex Pedia making the murder of a dictator retroactively illegal and convicting Brutus and the assassins in absentia 12 The new consuls also lifted the senate s decrees against Lepidus and Antony clearing the way for a general Caesarian rapprochement 118 Under that law Decimus was killed in the west some time in autumn defeating the republican cause in the west 12 by 27 November 43 the Caesarians had fully settled their differences and passed the lex Titia forming the Second Triumvirate and instituting a series of brutal proscriptions 119 The proscriptions claimed many lives including that of Cicero 120 When news of the triumvirate and their proscriptions reached Brutus in the east he marched across the Hellespont into Macedonia to quell rebellion and conquered a number of cities in Thrace 121 After meeting Cassius in Smyrna in January 42 122 both generals also went on a campaign through southern Asia minor sacking cities which had aided their enemies 123 Brutus depiction among certain authors like Appian suffered considerably from this eastern campaign where Brutus marched into cities like Xanthus enslaving their populations and plundering their wealth 124 Other ancient historians including Plutarch take a more apologetic tone having Brutus cry in anguish at the sufferings of his victims a common theme used by ancient historians to turn an otherwise condemnable action sacking cities into something that could be praised or even used as a positive moral example 125 The campaign continued with less sacking but more coerced payments the ancient tradition on this turn also is divided with Appian seeing eastern willingness to surrender emerging from stories of Xanthus destruction contra Cassius Dio and Plutarch viewing the later portions of the campaign as emblematic of Brutus virtues of moderation justice and honour 126 By the end of the campaign in Asia minor both Brutus and Cassius were tremendously rich 127 They reconvened at Sardis and marched into Thrace in August 42 128 Philippi Edit Brutus and his companions after the battle of Philippi The Caesarians also marched into Greece evading the naval patrols of Sextus Pompey Lucius Staius Murcus de and Gnaeus Domitius Ahenobarbus 129 The liberatores had positioned themselves west of Neapolis with clear lines of communication back to their supplies in the east 129 Octavian and Antony leading the Caesarian forces were not so lucky as their supply lines were harassed by the superior republican fleets leading the liberatores to adopt a strategy of attrition 129 Octavian and Antony had some 95 000 legionaries with 13 000 horsemen while Brutus and Cassius had some 85 000 legionnaires and 20 000 cavalry Flush with cash the liberatores also had a substantial financial advantage paying their soldiers in advance of the battle with 1 500 denarii a man and more for officers 130 Antony moved quickly to force an engagement immediately building a causeway under cover of darkness into the swamps that anchored the republican left flank Cassius commanding the republican left countered with a wall to cut off Antony from his men and to defend his own flank 131 In the ensuing first Battle of Philippi the start of the battle is unclear Appian says Antony attacked Cassius whereas Plutarch reports battle was joined more or less simultaneously 132 Brutus forces defeated Octavian s troops on the republican right flank sacking Octavian s camp and forcing the young Caesar to withdraw 132 Cassius troops fared poorly against Antony s men forcing Cassius to withdraw to a hill Two stories then follow Appian reports that Cassius heard of Brutus victory and killed himself from shame while otherwise our sources preserve a largely unanimous account of how one of Cassius legates failed to convey news of Brutus victory leading Cassius to believe that Brutus was defeated and consequently commit suicide 133 Following the first battle Brutus assumed command of Cassius army with the promise of a substantial cash reward 134 He also possibly promised his soldiers that he would allow them to plunder Thessalonica and Sparta after victory as the cities had supported the triumvirs in the conflict 135 Fearful of defections among his troops and the possibility of Antony cutting his supply lines Brutus joined battle after attempting for some time to continue the original strategy of starving the enemy out 136 The resulting second Battle of Philippi was a head on head struggle in which the sources report little tactical manoeuvres while reporting heavy casualties especially among eminent republican families 137 After the defeat Brutus fled into the nearby hills with about four legions 138 Knowing his army had been defeated and that he would be captured he committed suicide by falling on his sword 14 Among his last words were according to Plutarch By all means must we fly but with our hands not our feet 14 Brutus reportedly also uttered the well known verse calling down a curse quoted from Euripides Medea O Zeus do not forget who has caused all these woes 138 It is however unclear whether Brutus was referring to Antony as claimed by Appian or otherwise Octavian as Kathryn Tempest believes 138 Also according to Plutarch he praised his friends for not deserting him before encouraging them to save themselves 14 Some sources report that Antony upon discovering Brutus body as a show of great respect ordered Brutus body to be wrapped in Antony s most expensive purple mantle and cremated with the ashes to be sent to Brutus mother Servilia 14 Suetonius however reports that Octavian had Brutus head cut off and planned to have it displayed before a statue of Caesar until it was thrown overboard during a storm in the Adriatic 139 Chronology Edit85 BC Brutus is born to Marcus Junius Brutus and Servilia 58 BC Serves as assistant to Cato the governor of Cyprus helping him start his political career 5 54 BC Marries Claudia daughter of Appius Claudius Pulcher 7 53 BC Quaestorship in Cilicia where his father in law is governor 52 BC Opposes Pompey and defends Milo after the death of Publius Clodius Pulcher 7 49 BC The Civil War begins in January Brutus joins the Pompeian party against Caesar serving as legate to Publius Sestius in Cilicia then joining Pompey in Greece late in the year 7 48 BC Pompey is defeated at Pharsalus on 9 August Brutus is pardoned by Caesar 7 46 BC Caesar appoints Brutus governor of Cisalpine Gaul before defeating the remnants of the Pompeians at Thapsus in April 7 45 BC Caesar appoints him praetor urbanus for 44 44 BC Caesar takes title of dictator perpetuo 7 Brutus and the other liberatores assassinate Caesar on the ides of March He leaves Italy for Athens in late August thence travels to Macedonia 111 42 BC Brutus campaigns successfully in southern Asia minor in January 119 In September and October his forces are defeated by the triumvirs and he commits suicide 140 Family EditvteBrutus family treeThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Salonia 2 Cato the ElderLicinia 1 Marcus Porcius Cato SalonianusMarcus Porcius Cato LicinianusMarcus Livius DrususMarcus Porcius Cato 2 LiviaQuintus Servilius Caepio 1 Marcus Livius DrususAtilia 1 Cato the YoungerMarcus Livius Drusus Claudianus adopted sonMarcus Junius Brutus 1 ServiliaDecimus Junius Silanus 2 ServiliaGnaeus Servilius CaepioPorciaMarcus Junius Brutus Junia PrimaJunia TertiaGaius Cassius Longinus xMarcus Porcius CatoJunia SecundaMarcus Aemilius Lepidus triumvir Descendant of Pompey and SullasonManius Aemilius LepidusAemilia Lepida II 1 1st spouse 2 2nd spouse assassin of CaesarNotes Legacy EditThis was the noblest Roman of them all All the conspirators save only heDid that they did in envy of great Caesar He only in a general honest thoughtAnd common good to all made one of them His life was gentle and the elementsSo mix d in him that Nature might stand upAnd say to all the world This was a man Shakespeare Julius Caesar 5 5 69 76 Brutus historical character has undergone numerous revisions and remains divisive Dominant views of Brutus vary by time and geography Ancient views Edit In the ancient world Brutus legacy was a topic of substantial debate Starting from his own times and shortly after his death he was already viewed as having killed Caesar for virtuous reasons rather than envy or hatred For example Plutarch in his Life of Brutus mentions that Brutus enemies respected him recounting that Antony once said that Brutus was the only man to have slain Caesar because he was driven by the splendour and nobility of the deed while the rest conspired against the man because they hated and envied him 141 Even when he was still alive Brutus literary output especially the pamphlets of 52 BC against Pompey s dictatorship De dictatura Pompei and in support of Milo Pro T Annio Milone coloured him as philosophically consistent Brutus had singled himself out as a man who acted upon an ideal code of conduct 142 The main charge against him in the ancient world was that of ingratitude viewing Brutus as ungrateful in taking Caesar s goodwill and support and then killing him 143 An even more negative historiographical tradition viewed Brutus and his compatriots as criminal murderers 144 The divisive views of Brutus in the early Principate had little changed by the reign of Tiberius the historian Cremutius Cordus was charged with treason for having written a history too friendly to Brutus and Cassius 145 Around the same time Valerius Maximus writing with the support of the imperial regime believed Brutus memory suffered from irreversible curses 146 Of course that the Julio Claudio regime would have had a negative view of Brutus is expected admiration of Brutus and Cassius was more sinisterly interpreted as a cry of protest against the imperial system 147 Similarly the Forum of Augustus which included statues of various republican heroes omitted men such as Cato Uticensis Cicero Brutus and Cassius 148 The stoic Seneca the Younger argued that since Caesar was a good king Brutus fear was unfounded and that he did not think through the consequences of Caesar s death 149 Incidentally Seneca himself was later killed by the last Julio Claudian Nero But by the time that Plutarch was actually writing his Life of Brutus the oral and written tradition had been worked over to create a streamlined and largely positive narrative of Brutus motives 66 Some high imperial writers also admired his rhetorical skills especially Pliny the Younger and Tacitus with the latter writing in my opinion Brutus alone among them laid bare the convictions of his heart frankly and ingeniously with neither ill will nor spite 142 Renaissance and early modern views Edit Dante Alighieri s Inferno notably placed Brutus in the lowest circle of Hell for his betrayal of Caesar where he along with Cassius and Judas Iscariot is personally tortured by Satan Dante s views gave a further theological bent as well Brutus Dante believed was resisting God s historical design by killing Caesar a quasi prototype for all contemporary monarchs 15 The moral acceptance of tyrannicide also changed Thomas Aquinas in On the government of princes while accepting that tyrants should be overthrown under certain circumstances also argued mild tyrants ought to be tolerated out of fear of unintended consequences 150 Renaissance writers however tended to view him more positively as it was Brutus who came to symbolise the tradition of ancient republicanism through the ages 151 Various men in the renaissance and early modern periods were called or adopted the name Brutus the pseudonym Stephanus Junius Brutus in 16th century France published a pamphlet Vindiciae contra tyrannos Defences against tyrants the British Brutus Algernon Sidney was executed for allegedly plotting against Charles II the Florentine Brutus Lorenzino de Medici killed his cousin Duke Alessandro allegedly to free Florence 151 Of course also in the early modern period is Shakespeare s depiction of Brutus in Julius Caesar which depicts him more of a troubled soul than a public symbol and often sympathetic 152 Modern views Edit Views of Brutus as a symbol of republicanism have remained through the modern period For example the Anti Federalist Papers in 1787 were written under the pseudonym Brutus Similar anti federalist letters and pamphlets were written by other Roman republican names such as Cato and Poplicola 153 Conyers Middleton and Edward Gibbon writing in the late 18th century had negative views Middleton believed Brutus vacillations in correspondence with Cicero betrayed his claims to philosophical consistency Gibbon conceived of Brutus actions in terms of their results the destruction of the republic civil war death and future tyranny 154 More teleological views of Brutus actions are viewed sceptically by historians today Ronald Syme for example pointed out to judge Brutus because he failed is simply to judge from the results 149 The influential History of Rome by Theodor Mommsen in the late 19th century cast a damning verdict on Brutus by ending with Caesar s reforms in 46 BC along with advancing a view that Caesar had some sort of solution to the problem of how to deal with Rome s growing empire of which there is no surviving description 155 Similarly views of Brutus are also bound up with assessment of the republic those who believe the republic was not worth saving or in an inevitable decline views perhaps coloured by hindsight view him more negatively 155 There remains little consensus or finality on Brutus actions as a whole 152 In popular culture EditIn Jonathan Swift s 1726 satire Gulliver s Travels Gulliver arrives at the island of Glubbdubdrib and is invited by a sorcerer to visit with several historical figures brought back from the dead Among them Caesar and Brutus are evoked and Caesar confesses that all his glory doesn t equal the glory Brutus gained by murdering him In the Masters of Rome novels of Colleen McCullough Brutus is portrayed as a timid intellectual whose relationship with Caesar is deeply complex He resents Caesar for breaking his marriage arrangement with Caesar s daughter Julia whom Brutus deeply loved so that she could be married instead to Pompey the Great However Brutus enjoys Caesar s favor after he receives a pardon for fighting with Republican forces against Caesar at the Battle of Pharsalus In the lead up to the Ides of March Cassius and Trebonius use him as a figurehead because of his family connections to the founder of the Republic He appears in Fortune s Favourites Caesar s Women Caesar and The October Horse Brutus is an occasional supporting character in Asterix comics most notably Asterix and Son in which he is the main antagonist The character appears in the first three live Asterix film adaptations though briefly in the first two Asterix and Obelix vs Caesar played by Didier Cauchy and Asterix at the Olympic Games In the latter film he is portrayed as a comical villain by Belgian actor Benoit Poelvoorde he is a central character to the film even though he was not depicted in the original Asterix at the Olympic Games comic book He is implied in that film to be Julius Caesar s biological son In the TV series Rome Brutus portrayed by Tobias Menzies is depicted as a young man torn between what he believes is right and his loyalty to and love of a man who has been like a father to him In the series his personality and motives are somewhat inaccurate as Brutus is portrayed as an unwilling participant in politics In the earlier episodes he is frequently inebriated and easily ruled by emotion Brutus relationship to Cato is not mentioned his three sisters and wife Porcia are omitted The Hives song B is for Brutus contains titular and lyrical references to Junius Brutus Red Hot Chili Peppers song Even You Brutus from their 2011 album I m with You makes reference to Brutus and Judas Iscariot The Buttress song Brutus is inspired by Brutus The video game Assassin s Creed Brotherhood features a small side story in the form of the Scrolls of Romulus written by Brutus which reveals that Caesar was a Templar and Brutus and the conspirators were members of the Roman Brotherhood of Assassins At the end of the side quest the player is able to get Brutus armour and dagger Later at Assassin s Creed Origins Brutus and Cassius make an appearance as Aya s earliest recruits and is the one who give the killing blow to Caesar though his armour from Brotherhood does not make an appearance here See also EditJunia gensNotes Edit Cicero Brutus 324 says he was born ten years after the debut of Hortensius in 95 BC but Velleius Paterculus has Brutus aged 36 at death Velleius s date would make Brutus too young to hold the offices he is known to have held Tempest 2017 pp 262 263 Possibly Ariobarzanes II Cicero s time as governor overlaps with the death of Ariobarzanes II and the accession of Ariobarzanes III The speech Brutus wrote for Milo is also called the exercitatio Bruti pro Milone Balbo 2013 p 320 Cicero made the proposal referring to Brutus by his official name that as proconsul Quintus Caepio Brutus shall protect defend guard and keep safe Macedonia Illyricum and the whole of Greece that he will command the army which he himself has established and raised and see to it that together with his army he be as close as possible to Italy Tempest 2017 p 150 Evidently there was little understanding in the east of the effect of Lepidus defection by 30 May 43 and the potential crisis awaiting Rome likewise in the west the problem of Dolabella who was posing an immediate threat to Cassius and Brutus forces was remote and incomprehensible Tempest 2017 p 168 References EditCitations Edit Broughton 1952 p 576 M Iunius Brutus 53 Monetal ca 60 Q 53 Cilicia Leg Lieut 49 48 Propr or Leg Lieut Gall Cisalp 46 45 early Pr Urb 44 Cur annon 44 Procos Crete 44 Procos with imperium maius Macedonia and the East 43 42 Balbo 2013 p 317 Tempest 2017 pp 25 150 a b Tempest 2017 p 50 a b Tempest 2017 p 238 Tempest 2017 pp 58 59 a b c d e f g h i Tempest 2017 p 239 Tempest 2017 pp 1 3 Tempest 2017 pp 97 104 Tempest 2017 p 241 Tempest 2017 p 117 a b c Tempest 2017 p 169 Tempest 2017 pp 200 208 a b c d e Tempest 2017 p 208 a b Tempest 2017 p 218 Tempest 2017 pp 229 30 Tempest 2017 Plate 3 Tempest 2017 pp 17 8 Broughton 1952 p 63 Treggiari Susan 2019 Adolescence and Marriage to Brutus c 88 78 Servilia and her Family Oxford University Press pp 70 87 doi 10 1093 oso 9780198829348 003 0004 ISBN 978 0 19 186792 7 Valerius Maximus 2004 Memorable deeds and sayings one thousand tales from ancient Rome Translated by Walker Henry J Indianapolis Hackett Publishing p 205 ISBN 0 87220 675 0 OCLC 53231884 Pompey killed Marcus Junius Brutus a rebel legate in northern Italy in 77 BC Tempest 2017 p 24 Tempest 2017 p 25 Flower Harriet 7 March 2016 Servilia Oxford Classical Dictionary doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199381135 013 5854 ISBN 9780199381135 Retrieved 21 May 2021 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 Tempest 2017 p 25 citing Cic Att 2 24 3 Tempest 2017 p 36 Tempest 2017 p 37 citing Cicero s allegation of a nocturnal intervention altering Vettius testimony at Cic Att 2 24 3 Tempest 2017 p 40 Tempest 2017 p 40 citing Plut Brut 3 1 4 a b c Crawford 1974 p 455 Tempest 2017 Plate 5 Tempest 2017 Plate 4 Crawford 1974 pp 456 734 Quintus Pompeius Rufus was a supporter of Pompey Tempest 2017 p 41 Crawford 1974 pp 455 456 734 also mentioning other moneyers minting coins for and against Pompey in the 50s BC Tempest 2017 p 43 citing Cic Fam 3 4 2 relation to Appius and Broughton 1952 p 229 dating of quaestorship Tempest 2017 pp 42 3 Tempest 2017 p 45 a b c Tempest 2017 p 46 a b Tempest 2017 p 47 Tempest 2017 pp 48 49 a b Tempest 2017 p 51 Tempest 2017 p 52 Balbo 2013 p 319 Tempest 2017 p 53 noting also that Broughton 1952 p 254 dates elevation to 51 BC Tempest 2017 p 53 Tempest 2017 pp 43 4 Tempest 2017 pp 53 4 citing Cic Att 3 11 1 3 and 3 12 1 Tempest 2017 p 59 Tempest 2017 p 60 citing Cic Att 8 14 2 a b Tempest 2017 p 60 a b Tempest 2017 p 61 Plut Brut 5 1 a b Tempest 2017 p 63 a b c Tempest 2017 p 70 Tempest 2017 p 71 Tempest 2017 p 74 Tempest 2017 p 75 Cic Att 13 16 a b c Tempest 2017 p 76 Cic Att 13 22 a b Tempest 2017 p 84 Tempest 2017 p 86 a b Tempest 2017 p 87 a b Tempest 2017 p 81 a b Tempest 2017 p 82 Tempest 2017 pp 87 8 Tempest 2017 pp 89 90 Tempest 2017 p 91 Tempest 2017 p 93 Tempest 2017 pp 95 6 Tempest 2017 pp 97 8 Tempest 2017 p 98 Tempest 2017 p 99 Tempest 2017 pp 99 100 a b c d Tempest 2017 p 100 Tempest 2017 p 101 Tempest 2017 pp 3 4 citing at Tempest 2017 p 261 n 1 the various ancient accounts Nic Dam 58 106 Plut Caes 60 8 Plut Brut 8 20 Suet Iul 76 85 App B Civ 2 106 47 Cass Dio 44 9 19 Tempest 2017 p 3 Tempest 2017 p 101 citing Suet Iul 81 82 Tempest 2017 p 102 Tempest 2017 p 103 a b Tempest 2017 p 107 a b Tempest 2017 p 108 Tempest 2017 p 109 a b c Tempest 2017 p 110 a b Tempest 2017 p 106 a b Tempest 2017 p 113 Tempest 2017 pp 112 3 a b Tempest 2017 p 114 Tempest 2017 pp 114 5 Tempest 2017 pp 119 Tempest 2017 pp 119 20 Tempest 2017 pp 116 7 a b Tempest 2017 p 124 Tempest 2017 pp 126 7 Tempest 2017 pp 127 Tempest 2017 p 129 Tempest 2017 p 132 Tempest 2017 p 133 Tempest 2017 pp 134 5 Tempest 2017 p 137 Crawford 1974 p 518 Tempest 2017 p 140 Tempest 2017 p 142 Tempest 2017 pp 144 146 a b c d Tempest 2017 p 243 Tempest 2017 p 150 Tempest 2017 p 161 Tempest 2017 pp 243 244 a b Tempest 2017 p 244 a b Tempest 2017 p 166 Tempest 2017 pp 244 5 Tempest 2017 p 170 a b Tempest 2017 p 245 Tempest 2017 p 171 Tempest 2017 p 177 Tempest 2017 p 178 Tempest 2017 p 179 Tempest 2017 p 182 Tempest 2017 pp 183 4 Tempest 2017 pp 189 191 Tempest 2017 p 191 Tempest 2017 p 193 a b c Tempest 2017 p 197 Tempest 2017 p 198 Tempest 2017 p 200 a b Tempest 2017 p 201 Tempest 2017 p 202 Tempest 2017 p 203 Tempest 2017 p 204 Tempest 2017 p 205 Tempest 2017 p 206 a b c Tempest 2017 p 207 Tempest 2017 p 209 Tempest 2017 pp 248 58 Tempest 2017 p 211 a b Tempest 2017 p 213 Tempest 2017 pp 216 17 Tempest 2017 p 175 Gowing 2005 p 26 Gowing 2005 p 55 Tempest 2017 p 5 Gowing 2005 p 145 a b Tempest 2017 p 219 Tempest 2017 p 215 a b Tempest 2017 p 230 a b Tempest 2017 p 231 Dry Murray Storing Herbert J eds 1985 The anti Federalist an abridgement Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 77562 3 OCLC 698669562 Tempest 2017 p 10 a b Tempest 2017 p 220 Sources Edit Balbo Andrea 2013 Marcus Junius Brutus the orator between philosophy and rhetoric In Steel Catherine van der Blom Henriette eds Community and communication oratory and politics in republican Rome Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 964189 5 Broughton Thomas Robert Shannon 1952 The magistrates of the Roman republic Vol 2 New York American Philological Association Crawford Michael Hewson 1974 Roman republican coinage Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 07492 6 Gowing Alain M 2005 Empire and memory the representation of the Roman republic in imperial culture Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 CBO9780511610592 ISBN 0 511 12792 8 OCLC 252514679 Plutarch 1918 2nd century AD Life of Brutus Parallel Lives Loeb Classical Library Vol 6 Translated by Perrin Bernadotte Harvard University Press OCLC 40115288 via Perseus Digital Library Tempest Kathryn 2017 Brutus the noble conspirator London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 18009 1 Further reading EditBadian Ernst 2012 Iunius Brutus 2 Marcus In Hornblower Simon et al eds The Oxford classical dictionary 4th ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199381135 013 3440 ISBN 978 0 19 954556 8 OCLC 959667246 Clarke M L 1981 The noblest Roman Ithaca Cornell University Press Syme Ronald 1939 The Roman revolution Oxford University Press Volk Katharina 2018 Review of Brutus the noble conspirator Bryn Mawr Classical Review ISSN 1055 7660 Wistrand Erik 1981 The policy of Brutus the tyrannicide Goteborg Kungl External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Marcus Junius Brutus Wikiquote has quotations related to Marcus Junius Brutus Marcus Junius Brutus in the Digital Prosopography of the Roman Republic Brutus on Livius org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Marcus Junius Brutus amp oldid 1149223092, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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