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- Julius Caesar, Life of
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- Julius Caesar was a strong leader for the Romans who changed the course
- of the history of the Greco - Roman world decisively and irreversibly.
- With his courage and strength he created a strong empire . What
- happened during his early political career? How did he become such a
- strong dictator of the Roman Empire? What events led up to the making
- of the first triumvirate? How did he rise over the other two in the
- triumvirate and why did he choose to take over? What happened during
- his reign as dictator of Rome? What events led up to the assassination
- of Caesar? What happened after he was killed? Caesar was a major part
- of the Roman Empire because of his strength and his strong war
- strategies.
- Julius Caesar was a Roman general and statesman whose dictatorship was
- pivotal in RomeÆs transition from republic to empire. When he was young
- Caesar lived through one of the most horrifying decades in the history
- of the city of Rome. The city was assaulted twice and captured by Roman
- armies, first in 87 BC by the leaders of the populares, his uncle Marius
- and Cinna. Cinna was killed the year that Caesar had married CinnaÆs
- daughter Cornelia. The second attack upon the city was carried our by
- MariusÆ enemy Sulla, leader of the optimates, in 82 BC on the latterÆs
- return from the East. On each occasion the massacre of political
- opponents was followed by the confiscation of their property. The
- proscriptions of Sulla, which preceded the reactionary political
- legislation enacted during his dictatorship left a particularly bitter
- memory that long survived.
- Caesar left Rome for the province of Asia on the condition that he
- divorce his wife because Sulla would only allow him to leave on that
- condition. When he heard the news that Sulla had been killed he
- returned to Rome. He studied rhetoric under the distinguished teacher
- Molon.
- In the winter of 75-74 BC Caesar was captured by pirated and, while in
- their custody awaiting the arrival of the ransom money which they
- demanded, threatened them with crucifixion , a threat which he fulfilled
- immediately after his release. He then returned to Rome to engage in a
- normal political career, starting with the quaetorship which he served
- in 69-68 BC in the province of Further Spain.
- In the Roman political world of the sixties the dominance of the
- optimates was challenged by Pompey and Crassus. The optimates, led by
- Quintus Lutatius Catulus and Lucius Licinius Lucullus , were chiefly men
- whose careers had been made by Sulla. Pompey and Crassus were consuls
- in 70 BC and had rescinded the most offensively reactionary measures of
- SullaÆs legislation. During PompeyÆs absence from 67 to 62 BC during
- his campaigns against the Mediterranean pirates, Mithridates, and
- Crassus, his jealous rival. Caesar married Ponpeia after CorneliaÆs
- death and was appointed aedile in 65 BC As aedile , Caesar returned to
- MariusÆ trophies to their former place of honor in the Capitol, thus
- laying claim to leadership of the populares.
- When Caesar was a praetor, he supported a tribune who wanted Pompey
- recalled to restore order in Rome. As a result, Caesar was suspended
- from office for a period and antagonized Catulus. Before leaving Rome
- to govern Further Spain for a year, Caesar divorced his wife Pompeia
- because of the allegation that she had been implicated in the offense of
- Publius Clodius. The latter was then awaiting trial for breaking into
- CaesarÆs house the previous December disguised as a woman at the
- festival of the Bona Dea, which no man is allowed to attend.
- After his return from a successful year administrating Spain Caesar was
- elected consul for 59 BC through political alliance with Pompey and
- Crassus . This alliance was called the first triumvirate. CaesarÆs
- purpose was to gain a big military command. Pompey for his part sought
- the ratification of his Eastern settlement and land allotments for his
- discharged troops. Crassus sought a revision of the contract for
- collecting taxes in the province of Asia. An agrarian bill authorizing
- the purchase of land for PompeyÆs veterans was passed in January of 59
- BC at a disorderly public assembly which CaesarÆs fellow consul
- Calpurnius Bibulus, was thrown from the platform and his consular
- insignia were broken. Bibulus tried to stop Caesar and his supporters
- from passing any further law but was only able to postpone the creation
- of the new laws by saying that the skies would not permit it because
- there was stormy weather and they were very superstitious. Caesar
- disregarded BibulusÆ behavior and the remainder of the legislative
- program of the triumvirate was carried through. As a result of this
- action Caesar and his friends incurred bitter attacks. Their political
- opponents continued to claim that the whole of the legislation was
- unconstitutional and invalid.
- Caesar had secured for five years the governorship of three provinces.
- The provinces were Cisalpine Gaul , Transalpine Gaul , and Illyricum .
- He left Rome and remained in Gaul until his invasion of Italy. He
- continued north of the Alps each summer and he would leave his army
- there in garrison each winter while he came south to conduct the civil
- administration of Cisalpine Gaul and Illyricum and to keep in contact
- with Rome.
- Caesar became determined to conquer and make a province of the whole of
- Gaul. After his defeat of the Belgic tribes in the north and the
- submission of the maritime tribes on the Atlantic seaboard, he believed
- that the task had all but been accomplished. Caesar decided to make two
- short reconnaissance expeditions, one across the Rhine. and the other
- across the Straits of Dover to Britain. In a longer and more serious
- invasion of Britain he crossed the Thames and received the submission of
- the supreme commander of the southeastern Britons, Cassivellaunus.
- Caesar had avoided recall to Rome at the end of the five years of
- command voted to him by coming to a fresh agreement with Pompey and
- Crassus at Luca. The optimates in control of the senate, now awake to
- the immense increase in CaesarÆs personal power, wealth, and prestige,
- kept Pompey in Italy, allowing him to govern his Spanish provinces by
- deputies. PompeyÆs own attachment to Caesar was broken when CaesarÆs
- daughter Julia to whom Pompey had been happily married since 59 BC died
- in 54 BC Crassus was killed by the Parthians at Carrhae in
- Mesopotamia. In planning CaesarÆs return to civil life in Rome he could
- assume that as soon as he lost the immunity from prosecution which his
- military command conferred, his political enemies would endeavor to
- secure his exile by prosecuting him in the courts either for bribery or
- for the use of force in politics. In Rome there was support in the
- senate for a negotiated compromise when Curio put forth the proposal by
- which Caesar would give up his military command and stand in person at
- the consular election on condition that Pompey abandon his military
- command at the same time. On January 7, 49 BC Antony and one of his
- fellow tribunes were warned that their lives would be in danger if they
- sustained their veto and the proclamation of military law was passed.
- Caesar was told to leave his troops behind and cross the Rubicon into
- Rome alone. Caesar knew that this was a death sentence for him so he
- did not leave his troops but marched into the city and caused a civil
- war. He defeated PompeyÆs troops in many battles and became the
- dictator of Rome.
- From the time that he had first faced battle in Gaul and discovered his
- own military genius, Caesar was evidently fascinated and obsessed by
- military and imperial problems. He gave them an absolute priority over
- the more delicate by no less fundamental task of revising the Roman
- constitution. The need in the latter sphere was a solution which would
- introduce such elements of authoritarianism as were necessary to check
- corruption and administrative weakness.
- CaesarÆs first dictatorship was simply a commission to enable him to
- hold elections in the absence of the consuls of the year who were with
- Pompey, but after the news of Pharsalus, Caesar was created dictator
- again; after Tapsus he was made dictator for ten years and in the winter
- of 45 BC he was appointed perpetual dictator.
- When Caesar was out of Italy after 49 BC real power lay in the hands of
- his representatives. When he was dictator the most important of these
- representatives was his ômaster of the horseö. This representative was
- Mark Antony. Much resentment was felt by prominent senators like Cicero
- on account of the great power and influence of such against of Caesar.
- CaesarÆs military dominance was established beyond the possibility of
- successful challenge, the senate gave him a profusion of personal honors
- which were out of keeping with Roman tradition, reflecting as they did
- the extravagant distinctions accorded earlier to the Hellenistic kings.
- The month of July was named after Caesar and his statue was placed in
- the temple of Quirinus.
- Caesar was considered to be a dictator for life. According to the
- traditional Republican constitution this office was only to be held for
- six months during a dire emergency. Caesar also obtained honors to
- increase his prestige. He wore the robe, crown, and scepter of a
- triumphant general and used the title imperator. He was also in command
- of the armies. Caesar used his dictatorship and used it to increase his
- power. With all of his powers he was pretty much the king of Rome.
- Mark Antony was his major supporter and he helped convince the others to
- allow Caesar to have these abilities, but it led to some problems.
- A group of conspirators had been formed against Caesar because they
- felt that he had too much power and that if he became the king of Rome
- he would become corrupt and use his powers to create a bad society. The
- senate resented his actual position that was shown in the sixty member
- conspiracy which Marcus Brutus had organized to kill him. On the Ides
- of March , two days before he was due to leave Rome on his great eastern
- expedition, he was stabbed to death at a meeting of the senate in
- PompeyÆs new theater. He fell dead at the foot of PompeyÆs statue.
- Pompey was avenged, as well as Bibulus and Cato. After a provocative
- funeral oration by Mark Antony, CaesarÆs body was burned by the mob in
- the forum. When at the games in his honor the following July a comet
- appeared and it was regarded as evidence of his godhead and he was
- formally consecrated and ôdivus Julius,ö or divine Julius. Octavius,
- whose name became Caesar Octavianus after his adoption by CaesarÆs will,
- solved, by his creation of the Roman principate, the constitutional
- problem that Caesar failed to solve.
- Caesar had started as a consul and had formed the first triumvirate
- with Crassus and Pompey. They had taken over the Roman civilization and
- had controlled for a while. When Crassus was killed and agreement was
- made. Pompey and Caesar were supposed to give up their military and
- enter the city of Rome to find a real ruler. Pompey was in on the deal
- and he was supposed to take over. Caesar knew that if he entered the
- city of Rome without his troops he would be killed by Pompey and so he
- crossed the Rubicon with his troops and attacked Rome. He took over as
- a dictator for life and gained a lot of power. He was able to run a
- strong military and even though he was considered only a dictator he
- wrote laws that actually made him have the same powers as a king. The
- conspirators saw the problem that had arised and so they planned the
- murder of Caesar on the Ides of March. Caesar was killed and there was
- another triumvirate formed. Caesar was a strong military leader that
- had showed strength and courage to take over the town and he was able to
- form a civilization that was strong militarily and politically.