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Gaius Julius Caesar

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Title: Gaius Julius Caesar


1
Gaius Julius Caesar
  • Caesar had more than a mere name and military
    reputation his energy could never rest and his
    one disgrace was to conquer without war. He was
    alert and headstrong his arms answered every
    summons of ambition or resentment he never
    shrank from using the sword lightly he followed
    up each success and snatched at the favor of
    Fortune, overthrowing every obstacle on his path
    to supreme power, and rejoicing to clear the way
    before him by destruction. --Lucan, Bellum Civile
    I, 143-150

2
The Early Years
  • Born to a not-so-well-off patrician family in 100
    BC in a plebeian neighborhood of Rome.
  • After a civil war, Caesar was left penniless and
    almost lost his life while still a teenager.
  • He joined the army at age 18 and serves for four
    years.

3
The (Legal) Rungs of Power
  • Was elected a Senator at age 30.
  • At age 34 he was put in charge of public
    entertainments. He spent lavishly, and won great
    popularity.
  • Was elected Pontifex Maximus at age 36. This
    post was for life, and brought power, wealth, and
    prestige (plus a big house in the Forum!)
  • At age 39, then became military governor in
    Spain, where he earned his reputation as a
    general.
  • Was elected Consul, the highest office in Rome,
    at age 41.

4
The First Triumvirate
  • Wealth, popularity, military commands are all
    creating new and great opportunities for personal
    power.
  • Marcus Licinius Crassus the Richest man in Rome
  • Cnaeus Pompeius Magnus the most successful
    General of the time
  • Caesar up-and-coming, popular, and Consul

5
Gaul
  • After his Consulship, Caesar makes sure hes
    appointed governor of Illyricum, Italian Gaul,
    and then Gaul-across-the-Alps.
  • This gives him the opportunity to command troops
    again, and to conquer territory.
  • This also gives him the opportunity for great
    wealth.
  • Through his Commentaries of the war, published
    back in Rome, he gains even greater celebrity.

6
Risking All
  • Crassus dies in battle in Parthia.
  • The Senate convinces Pompey to oppose Caesar
    rather than work with him.
  • Caesar, after eight years in Gaul, is ordered to
    surrender his armies and return to Rome (to stand
    trial!).
  • Caesar invades Italy with his Legions.

Alea iacta est! The die is cast.--Caesar,
crossing the Rubicon into Italy with his army.
(Suetonius, Life of Caesar)
7
Civil War--Again!
  • Pompey and the leading Senators flee to Greece to
    ready their army.
  • Caesar easily takes Italy, Rome, and Spain.
  • Outnumbered two to one, he faces Pompey in
    Greece, and crushes him.
  • Pompey flees to Egypt.

8
Caesars Coins
  • Caesar was the first Roman to have his face put
    on a coin while he was still alive
  • The Romans believed only ancestors and gods could
    be pictured
  • Caesar was equating himself with gods and Eastern
    kings

9
Ego sum Caesar
  • He has himself appointed Dictator-for-Life.
    Caesar now rules alone, using friends, freedmen,
    and slaves to govern--ignoring the Senate. Was
    Caesar a KING?
  • Starts wearing an all-purple toga the garment of
    a triumphal general representing the god Jupiter.
    Was Caesar a GOD?

10
CLEOPATRA
  • Became Queen of Egypt at the age of 17
  • Joint Ruler of Egypt with her brother Ptolomy XII
  • Egyptian custom meant that she had to marry him
  • Ptolomy was aged 12
  • He died aged 18

11
Ptolomy
  • Ptolomy and Cleopatra did not get along.
  • Ptolomys advisors drove Cleopatra out into the
    desert so Ptolomy XIII could rule alone.
  • Pompey fled to Egypt after being defeated by
    Julius Caesar
  • Ptolomy had Pompey beheaded and presented his
    head to Julius Casar

12
Ptolomys Mistake
  • This was a big miscalculation Pompey was still
    Consul of Rome and Julius Caesars son-in-law
  • Julius Caesar demanded that Pompeys assassins be
    handed over to him
  • Ptolomy refused
  • Julius Caesar fought against Ptolomys army.
  • Ptolomy, weighted by his armor of gold, drowned
    in the River Nile
  • Cleopatras third brother Ptolomy XIV becomes
    joint ruler

13
Julius and Cleopatra
  • Julius Caesar had Cleopatra restored to the
    throne of Egypt
  • Cleopatra became Caesars mistress
  • Cleopatras son Caesarean was probably Caesars
    son
  • She and Caesarean lived in Rome with Julius.
  • Caesar refused to recognize Caesarean as his heir

14
The Julian Forum
  • Julius Caesar created the Julian Forum. (named
    after himself)

The Forum was needed because the old forum had
become to small to deal with the amount of people.
15
The Ides of March
  • A group of over fifty Senators decide that enough
    is enough--they are not ready to relinquish power
    and control of Rome to one man.
  • They conspire to murder Caesar on March 15, 44
    BC.
  • They invite him to be crowned and declared King
    of Rome. He arrives to find 50 Senators with
    knives hidden in their togas. They promptly
    stabbed him to death.

This coin, issued by Brutus, commemorates
Caesars assassination. Brutus had hoped he and
the other conspirators would be seen as heroes
liberating the Republic from a tyrant.
16
The Aftermath
  • Caesars body is cremated in a massive public
    demonstration in the Forum. A temple is built to
    Divine Julius in that spot.
  • The conspirators are forced to flee.
  • Civil war again breaks out, with Caesars
    right-hand-man, Marc Antony, and his heir,
    Octavian, conquering the armies of Brutus,
    Cassius, and the Senators.

17
Caesars Lasting Impact
  • Caesar provided a blueprint for rising to
    absolute power in Rome--a blueprint both Octavian
    and Antony followed.
  • His name became one of the titles for the Roman
    emperors. The more modern Czar and Kaiser
    derive from his name too.
  • Caesar began the practice of granting Roman
    citizenship to conquered peoples. This helped to
    prolong the expansion and maintenance of the
    Roman Empire.

18
Caesars Lasting Impact
  • His Commentaries are one of the great pieces of
    Latin literature.
  • He inspired one of Shakespeares most celebrated
    plays.
  • His reform of the calendar has been changed very
    little over the past two millenia.
  • The month July is named for him.
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