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Julius Caesar
100 - 44BC

Veni, vidi, vici. 'I came, I saw, I conquered.' These are the
words of the man who changed the course of Greco-Roman history.
Julius Caesar was born in Rome on July 12 or 13, in the year 100
B.C.. His father Gaius Caesar, died when Caesar was 16 years
old, and it was his mother Aurelia, who proved to be quite
influential in his life. Caesar's family was part of Rome's
original aristocracy, called patricians, although they were not
rich or particularly influential. At the time of Caesar's birth,
the number of patricians was small, and their status no longer
provided political advantage.
To obtain distinction for himself and his family, a Roman
nobleman sought election to public office. In 86 B.C., Caesar
was appointed flamen dialis with the help of his uncle by
marriage, Gaius Marius. The position was one of an archaic
priesthood and held no power. Nevertheless, it identified Caesar
with extremist politics. Ceasar committed himself further to the
radical side when he married Cornelia, daughter of Lucius
Cornelius Cinna in 84 B.C.
In 82 B.C., Caesar was ordered to divorce his wife by Lucius
Cornelius Sulla, an enemy of the radicals. Caesar refused and
prudently left Rome for military service in Asia and Cilicia. He
returned in 78 B.C. when Sulla died and began his political
career as a prosecuting advocate. Caesar then traveled to Rhodes
to study rhetoric and did not return to Rome until 73 B.C.
During his journey to Rhodes, Caesar was captured by pirates.
While in captivity, Caesar convinced his captors to raise his
ransom, which increased his prestige. He then raised a naval
force, overcame his captors, and had them crucified.
In 69 or 68 B.C., Caesar was elected quaestor. His wife died
shortly thereafter. In a purely political maneuver, Caesar
seized the opportunity to praise his uncle, Cinna and
father-in-law, Marius during the funeral orations for his
deceased wife. He then married Pompeia, a relative of Pompey.
Caesar was elected curule aedile in 65 B.C., pontifex maximus in
63 B.C., and a praetor in 62 B.C. By this time, Caesar was
making a name for himself as a political figure. He divorced
Pompeia after a scandal.
Caesar was made governor of Farther Spain in 61 B.C. When he
returned to Rome the next year, he joined forces with Crassus
and Pompey and formed the first triumvirate. The alliance
between Pompey and Ceasar was solidified further when Pompey
married Julia, Caesar's only child.
Caesar's next step up the political ladder was to be elected
consul in 59 B.C. During that year he also married Calpurnia.
The following year, Caesar was appointed governor of Roman Gaul.
During the next 8 years, Caesar successfully conquered Gallic
Gaul to the north. In 49 B.C., Caesar was instructed by the
Senate to lay down his command. Roman politics had changed
following the death of Crassus in 53 B.C., and Pompey was
appointed sole consul in 52 B.C.. In addition, Pompey's wife
Julia died in 54 B.C., breaking the family ties between Pompey
and Caesar.
On January 10-11, 49 B.C., Caesar crossed the Rubicon, a small
river separating Gaul from Italy, signifying the start of the
Roman Civil War. Pompey fled and within three months, Caesar
ruled of all Italy. He then took Spain and continued to pursue
Pompey all the way to Egypt. In 48 B.C., Pompey was murdered by
an officer of King Ptolemy. Caesar remained in Egypt throughout
the winter and dallied with Queen Cleopatra.
In 48 B.C., Caesar assumed the title of dictator. He returned to
Rome for a short time in 47 B.C. but then left for Africa to
crush his opponents. Caesar departed for Farther Spain in 46
B.C. to put down resistance there. In 45 B.C., Caesar returned
to Rome to put his empire in order.
On March 15, 44 B.C., a day known as the Ides of March, Caesar
entered the Senate House. An assassination plot had been hatched
by a group of 60 senators, including Gaius Cassius and Marcus
Junius Brutus. As Caesar entered the Senate, he was stabbed 23
times. After Ceasar was assassinated, Rome experienced another
13 years of civil war.
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Caesar, Caius Julius (100-44 bc). Probably the greatest general
in Rome's history, and among the most successful of all time,
Caesar was also a skilful author who wrote detailed accounts of
his campaigns. His seven books of Commentaries on the Gallic
wars, three on the civil war, along with several books written
by some of his officers to fill the gaps in the narrative,
provide more information about Caesar's campaigns than those of
any other ancient commander. The style of these works has had a
massive influence on the writing of military history, down to
the present day.
It is important to remember that Caesar was not simply a
general, but also a politician. In Rome politics and war were
inseparably linked. Success in war promoted a political career,
which in turn led to greater opportunities for military command.
Up until the year 58, Caesar's career followed the normal
pattern for a Roman aristocrat, mixing military with civil
posts. He served as a junior officer (tribune) in the east
(80-78), being awarded Rome's highest decoration for gallantry,
the corona civica, for saving a soldier's life at the siege of
Mytilene. His first independent command came with his
appointment as governor of Further Spain, where he led a small
army in some successful police actions (61-60). However, after
his political alliance with two of the most powerful politicians
in Rome, Pompey and Crassus, Caesar received the consulship for
the year 59 and an exceptionally large provincial command
including Illyria, Cisalpine, and Transalpine Gaul in 58. At
first his term of office was for five years, which was later
extended to ten, an unprecedentedly long period.
Caesar was massively in debt and needed the profits derived from
a successful war of conquest. He may well have contemplated
marching from Illyria against the Dacian kingdom on the Danube,
but the migration of the Helvetii offered him a perfect excuse
to intervene in Gaul, an opportunity he accepted with alacrity
(58). In eight years he conquered all of Gaul, defeated several
rebellions, and advanced Rome's power to the Rhine. His
victories were celebrated with public thanksgivings in Rome, and
he took care to seize every chance to perform the spectacular,
twice bridging the Rhine and leading expeditions to the strange
and distant shores of Britain. Every winter he returned to
Cisalpine Gaul to perform his judicial duties as governor, but
also to keep an eye on the political climate at Rome. Vast
quantities of booty and huge numbers of slaves covered Caesar's
debts and made him exceptionally wealthy. He lavished much of
this on his victorious soldiers, further increasing their
loyalty to him.
Crassus had fallen at Carrhae in 53 and by the end of the Gallic
wars, Pompey was unwilling to accept Caesar as a political equal
and rival. He sided with Caesar's ardent opponents in the Senate
who were determined to prosecute him as soon as the Gallic
command expired. This led to the outbreak of the civil war in
49, when Caesar led his troops across the Rubicon, the narrow
stream separating his province, where he legally exercised
command, with Italy, where he did not. He secured Italy in a
matter of weeks, with hardly a blow being struck. Then he moved
to Spain and manoeuvred a Pompeian army into a hopeless
position, forcing it to surrender at Ilerda. In 48 he crossed to
Macedonia and after a hard campaign defeated Pompey himself at
Pharsalus. Following Pompey to Egypt, he wintered there, making
Queen Cleopatra his mistress, and fighting with small forces
against a serious rebellion. In 47 he moved against Pharnaces,
king of Bosphorus, who had overrun much of Asia, and defeated
him in a few days at Zela. It was of this rapid victory that he
made the famous comment, ‘Veni, Vidi, Vici’ (I came: I saw: I
conquered). In 46 he smashed another Pompeian army at Thapsus in
Africa, before finally crushing the last resistance at Munda in
Spain in 45. Returning to Rome he was made dictator for life,
but was murdered by a senatorial conspiracy on 15 March 44, a
few weeks before he was to have embarked on a series of major
campaigns, first against Dacia, then Parthia.
Like many great commanders Caesar did little to reform his army,
but took the existing Roman army organization and raised it to
the peak of efficiency. He instituted a rigorous programme of
training, with regular exercises and route marches which he
often led in person. As a leader he was inspirational.
Conspicuous bravery was lavishly rewarded with decorations,
promotions, and a larger share of the booty. In particular he
rewarded his centurions, who figure prominently in his
Commentaries for their loyalty and courage. Caesar was also
skilled at fostering unit pride. When his army was reluctant to
march against Ariovistus, Caesar announced that he would go on
alone with the X Legion. The Tenth responded to the flattery
with enthusiasm and the rest of the army was shamed into
emulating their behaviour. During the civil war many of the
Tenth were long overdue for discharge and mutinied at the
prospect of another campaign. Caesar quelled the disturbance
with a single word, addressing them as Quirites, civilians
rather than soldiers. The legion gave the ringleaders up for
execution and won the day for Caesar at Munda.
As a commander Caesar's most striking quality was his speed of
action. He always tried to seize the initiative, launching
counter offensives in winter with whatever troops were
immediately available against the Gallic rebellions in 54 and
52. Crossing the Rubicon with a single legion, and invading
Macedonia in the civil war were equally bold actions. In battle,
Caesar moved around his army, ever present where there was a
crisis, and willing to go into the front line himself if the
situation was desperate. Modern scholars have criticized Caesar
for his rashness, pointing out that his genius was all too often
exercised in extricating his army from the poor position which
his recklessness had placed it in. Yet this type of behaviour
was typically Roman. The Romans expected a general to be very
bold, ranking luck as important an attribute of a successful
commander as ability.
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Gaius Julius Caesar (100-44 B.C.) was a Roman general and
politician who overthrew the Roman Republic and established the
rule of the emperors.
At the time of Julius Caesar's birth the political, social,
economic, and moral problems created by the acquisition of a
Mediterranean empire in the 3d and 2d centuries B.C. began to
challenge the Roman Republic. The senatorial oligarchy that
ruled Rome was proving inadequate to deal with these new
challenges. It could not control the armies and the generals and
was unwilling to listen to the pleas of the Italian allies for
equal citizenship and of the provinces for justice. The system
also had no real answers for the growth of an urban proletariat
and the mass importation of slaves. Caesar saw these
inadequacies of the Senate and used the problems and dilemmas of
the period to create his own supreme political and military
power.
Caesar was born on July 13, 100 B.C. His father had been only a
moderate political success, attaining the praetorship but not
the consulship. Caesar's mother came from plebeian stock. The
family could claim a long, if not overly distinguished, history.
It was a patrician family on his father's side and therefore one
of the founders of Rome and was entitled to certain traditional
privileges and offices. However, in comparison with many other
leading Roman families it had produced few distinguished people.
Early Training
Caesar received the classic, rhetorically grounded education of
a young Roman at Rome and in Rhodes. He was considered one of
the most cultured and literate of Romans by such an expert as
Cicero himself. Caesar followed the traditional Roman practice
of conducting some prosecutions in order to gain political
attention. He served as a young officer in Asia Minor and was
quaestor (financial official) in Farther Spain (69 B.C.).
Caesar first rose to political prominence in the internal
struggles that followed the revolt of Rome's allies - the
"Social Wars" - after Rome refused to grant them full
citizenship in 90. Caesar's family was related to the revolt's
leader, Gaius Marius, and joined his faction. Caesar married
Cornelia, the daughter of Cinna, one of the leading Marians, and
was nominated for the priesthood of flamen dialis. However,
Marius died, and his followers were defeated by the Roman
general Sulla. Caesar was spared in the proscriptions that
followed the victory of Sulla, even though he refused to divorce
Cornelia, to whom he remained married until her death in 69.
First Political and Military Successes
In the following years Caesar emerged as one of the leading
political and social personalities of Rome. Cultivated,
charming, and handsome, vain about his appearance, he made his
love affairs the talk of Roman society. He recognized the urban
proletariat as one of the major sources of political power and
cultivated this group assiduously. He maintained Marian
connections, and in 65 B.C., when he was aedile, he restored the
triumphal monuments of Marius that had been dismantled under
Sulla. Caesar was famous for his hospitality and was often
heavily in debt. His aedileship was especially noted for its
lavish displays and games.
Caesar's first really important electoral success was his
election as pontifex maximus in 63 B.C. This was regarded as the
chief religious office in Rome and had important political
possibilities.
Caesar was elected praetor for 62 B.C. and served his
propraetorship in Farther Spain. For over a century Spain had
provided Roman governors the opportunity for a triumph. Caesar
was quick to take advantage of the situation by waging a
successful campaign against some native tribes in Lusitania. His
political enemies accused him of provoking the war - he would
not have been the first Roman governor in Spain who had done so
- but he was nevertheless awarded the right of a triumph for his
victory.
First Triumvirate
In the meantime a political crisis was developing in Rome.
Pompey had returned from the East after having eliminated
Mithridates and made major political settlements. He was having
difficulty persuading the Senate to ratify these settlements and
provide compensation for his veterans. Caesar at the same time
was setting his sights on the consulship for the year 59 B.C. He
returned from Spain in 60 B.C. and waived his right of triumph
in order to campaign for election. He won, together with a
representative of the senatorial oligarchy, Bibulus. The Senate
immediately moved to block his hopes of future political power
by voting as his postconsular area of responsibility the care of
the woodlands of the Roman state, a command with no
possibilities for military glory. Caesar, desiring more
glamorous political and military opportunities, saw that he
would need allies to circumvent his senatorial opponents.
Out of the specific problems of two of Rome's great men and the
general ambition of the third grew the political alliance known
as the First Triumvirate. Pompey brought wealth and military
might, Crassus wealth and important political connections, and
Caesar the key office of consul along with the brains and skill
of a master political infighter. Caesar was to obtain the
necessary settlements for Pompey and was in turn to receive a
choice province. The alliance was further cemented in 58 B.C. by
the marriage of Caesar's only daughter, Julia, to Pompey.
Caesar showed soon after his election that he intended to ignore
Bibulus, his weak consular colleague, by using the political and
religious machinery to advance Pompey's requests. Caesar's land
bills indicated an intelligent effort to solve the problem of
Rome's urban proletariat by returning people to the land.
Pompey's veterans were settled on their own land allotments; and
Caesar received as a reward the governorship of the provinces of
Cisalpine Gaul, Illyricum, and Transalpine Gaul for a period of
5 years after his consulship.
Proconsul in Gaul
At the time Caesar took command, Roman control in Gaul was
limited to the southern coast, the area known as Gallia
Narbonensis. However, Rome had political relations with tribes
beyond the actual border of the province. Caesar quickly took
advantage of these connections and the shifting power position
in Gaul to extend the sphere of Roman control. At the request of
the Aedui, a tribe friendly to Rome, Caesar prevented the
Helvetii from migrating across Gaul and then defeated Ariovistus,
a German chieftain, who was building his own political power
among the Sequani, a rival tribe to the Aedui. From there,
Caesar extended Roman arms north with military victories over
the Belgi (57 B.C.) and the Venetic tribes on the north coast of
Gaul (56).
Meanwhile political strains had appeared in the alliance of
Caesar, Pompey, and Crassus. Caesar's 5-year command was coming
to a close, and political enemies were demanding his recall to
make him explain his often high-handed actions in Gaul in
provoking war with the native tribes. Crassus had been viewing
with jealousy the power base that Caesar was building in Gaul
and desired his own military command.
The three men met at the northern Italian city of Luca in April
56 B.C. and recemented their political ties. Caesar received a
5-year extension of his command. Pompey and Crassus were to have
another consulship, after which Crassus would assume the
important post of governor of Syria and Pompey would receive the
governorship of Spain.
Revolt in Gaul
Caesar turned his energies to Gaul again. He decided to
undertake an expedition against Britain, whose tribes maintained
close contacts with Gaul. These expeditions in 55 B.C. and 54
B.C. were probably not a complete success for Caesar, but they
aroused great enthusiasm at Rome. For the first time Roman arms
had advanced over the sea to conquer strange, new peoples.
Caesar probably thought that his main task of conquest was
complete. However, in 52 B.C. Gaul arose in widespread rebellion
against Caesar under Vercingetorix, a nobleman of the tribe of
the Arverni. Caesar's power base was threatened.
At the same time the political situation in Rome was equally
chaotic. The tribune Clodius had been murdered, and his death
was followed by great civic disorder. Pompey was called upon to
assume the post of sole consul for 52 B.C. Caesar had crossed
the Alps to watch more closely the changing conditions in Rome,
and when the news of the Gallic revolt reached him, he recrossed
the Alps, still partly blocked by winter, and rallied his
divided army. He won a striking victory by capturing the Gallic
town of Avaricum but was repulsed when he tried to storm the
Arvernian stronghold of Gergovia. This defeat added Rome's old
allies, the Aedui, to the forces of Vercingetorix. However,
Vercingetorix made the mistake of taking refuge in the fortress
of Alesia, where Caesar brought to bear the best of Roman siege
techniques. A relieving army of Gauls was defeated, and
Vercingetorix was forced to surrender. He was carried to Rome,
where he graced Caesar's triumph in 46 B.C.
Dissolution of the Triumvirate
Caesar's long absence from Rome had partially weakened his
political power. He naturally kept numerous contacts in Rome
through agents and through extensive correspondence. Profits
from his conquests were used for building projects to impress
the people and for personal loans to leading figures such as
Cicero in order to win their allegiance. Caesar's conquests were
well publicized; his Commentaries, which described the campaigns
in a controlled, matter-of-fact, third-person style, circulated
among the reading public at Rome. Recent scholarship has
emphasized the propaganda aspects of the Commentaries, even
claiming that Caesar seriously distorted facts to justify his
actions. Certainly, Caesar sought to place his conquests in the
best possible light, stressing their basically defensive nature
and the importance of defending friends and allies of Rome
against traditional Roman enemies. He had made extensive
additions to the Roman Empire (about 640,000 square miles) at
the expense of peoples who had long been enemies of Rome.
Pompey, on the other hand, had remained in Rome and strengthened
his political position by appearing as a savior in a time of
chaos. Other tensions in the alliance were Julia's death in 54
B.C., which removed an important bond between the two men; and
the death of Crassus in 53 B.C., which left Pompey and Caesar in
a confrontation of power.
Caesar's second term as governor ended in 50 B.C. His enemies
were awaiting the day when he lost the immunity of an official
position and could be prosecuted for various actions during his
consulship and proconsulship. This was the traditional
republican method of breaking a political opponent by securing
his condemnation and exile. Caesar countered this by requesting
to stand for the consulship for the year 49 B.C. in absentia,
thus moving directly from proconsulship to consulship without
being exposed to the vulnerability of a private citizen.
Civil War
In 52 B.C. the bill allowing Caesar to run for consul in
absentia was passed, but its effect was vitiated by a decree of
the Senate which would have forced Caesar to yield his provinces
to a successor before he was elected consul. The majority of the
senators wanted peace but were pushed along by a determined
minority who wanted to destroy Caesar. Pompey was caught in a
dilemma. He did not want civil war, but he also did not want to
yield his prime position in the state. Finally Caesar's
opponents in the Senate won. A decree was passed in January 49
B.C. demanding that Caesar yield his province and return to Rome
as a private citizen to stand for the consulship.
The proconsul now had two choices. He could bow to the will of
the Senate and be destroyed politically, or he could provoke
civil war. Caesar chose the latter course and led his troops
over the Rubicon, the small river that divided Cisalpine Gaul
from the Roman heartland. At the beginning the greater power
seemed to rest with Pompey and the Senate. Most men of prestige,
such as Cato and Cicero, joined Pompey's cause. Pompey had
connections with the provinces and princes of the Roman East,
where he could draw enormous resources. Furthermore, he was
defending the cause of the Senate and the established order at
Rome.
However, Caesar had at his command a tough and experienced army,
as well as an extensive following in Italy. Most of all, he was
fighting for his own interests alone and did not have to face
the divisions of interest, opinion, and leadership that plagued
Pompey.
Pompey quickly decided to abandon Italy to Caesar and fell back
to the East. Caesar secured his position in Italy and Gaul and
then defeated Pompey at Pharsalus on Aug. 9, 48 B.C. Pompey fled
to Egypt and was killed by the young pharaoh, Ptolemy. Although
his rival was eliminated, much work remained to be done to make
Caesar's position secure.
Caesar followed Pompey to Egypt and became involved in the
dynastic struggle of the house of Ptolemy.
Caesar supported Cleopatra, but caught in Alexandria without
sufficient troops, he was nearly destroyed before reinforcements
could arrive. The main result of this sojourn was the affair
that developed between Caesar and Cleopatra, which ultimately
resulted in a son, Caesarion.
Caesar still had numerous unconquered enemies in Africa and
Spain. Turning first to Africa, on April 6, 46 B.C., at Thapsus
he crushed a republican army led by Cato the Younger, his old
and bitter enemy. Cato retreated to Utica, where he committed
suicide rather than surrender to Caesar. Caesar moved into Spain
and on March 17, 45 B.C., defeated the sons of Pompey at Munda.
Consolidation of the Empire
Meanwhile Caesar had to define his political position in Rome.
He adopted a policy of special clemency toward his former
enemies and rewarded political opponents with public office. For
himself he adopted the old Roman position of dictator. However,
what had been traditionally a 6-month emergency magistracy he
turned into an office of increasing duration.
There has been much debate about what political role Caesar
planned for himself. He certainly regarded the old oligarchic
government as inadequate and desired to replace it with some
form of rule by a single leader. Significantly, just before his
death, Caesar was appointed dictator for life. About the same
time, he began issuing coins with his own portrait on them, a
practice unparalleled in Rome up to that time.
Caesar was planning major projects and reforms. Public works,
such as a new, massive basilica in the old forum complex, were
progressing. Even more grandiose schemes, like the draining of
the Pontine marshes, were planned. New colonial foundations were
under way, including settlements in Carthage and Corinth, both
destroyed by the Romans in 146 B.C. Among his reforms was the
reordering of the inadequate Roman calendar.
However, Caesar's restless temperament was not satisfied by
administration and legislation at Rome. He was preparing equally
extensive military campaigns. Trouble was brewing in Dacia
across the Danube, and the Parthians had not been punished for
the destruction of Crassus' army.
Death and Legacy
In Rome dissatisfaction was growing among the senatorial
aristocrats over the increasingly permanent nature of the rule
of Caesar. A conspiracy was formed aimed at eliminating Caesar
and restoring the government to the Senate. The conspirators
hoped that, with Caesar's death, government would be restored to
its old republican form and all of the factors that had produced
a Caesar would disappear. The conspiracy progressed with Caesar
either ignorant of it or not recognizing the warning signs. On
the Ides of March (March 15), 44 B.C., he was stabbed to death
in the Senate house of Pompey by a group of men that included
old friends and comrades-in-arms.
With Caesar's murder Rome plunged into 13 years of civil war.
Caesar remained for some a symbol of tyranny, and for others the
heritable founder of the Roman Empire whose ghost has haunted
Europe ever since. For all, he is a figure of genius and
audacity equaled by few in history.
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