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Gaius Julius Caesar

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Roman Benefactor
Gaius Julius Caesar (100-44 BC)

Gaius Julius Caesar was born on 12 July 100 BC in Rome, son of Gaius Caesar and Aurelia. Governor of Gaul 58-49 BC. Appointed dictator for ten years in 47 B, for life on 14 February 44 BC. Married initially to Cornelia (one daughter, Julia), then to Pompeia, alas to Calpurnia. Assassinated on 15 March 44 BC. Deified in 42 BC.

Caesar was tall, fair-haired, well built and of sound health. though he did suffer from the occasional epileptic fit. The historian Suetonius writes about Julius Caesar: He was embarrassed by his baldness, which was a frequent subject of jokes on the part of his opponents; so much so that he used to comb his straggling locks forward from the back, and of all honours heaped upon him by senate and people, the one he most appreciated was to be able to wear a wreath at all times…..

Caesar’s early Life

Caesar grew up in a period of unrest and civil war in Rome. The increased size of the empire had led to cheap slave labour flooding into the country which in turned made many Roman workers unemployed. The Social Wars created turmoil all over Italy and Marius and Sulla were the great fascist leaders of the time.

As a member of an old aristocratic family Julius was expected, at the completion of his education, to assume a modest office on the lower end of the long ladder of the Roman political career. However, Caesar was not like other Romans. Already at a young age he had realized that money was the key to Roman politics as the system had by his time suffered increasing corruption and he felt it was time to put a stop to it.

When, Caesar was fifteen years old, his father Lucius died, with him died the fatherly expectations that Caesar should engage on a modest political career. Instead, Caesar now set out to better himself and Rome.

His first step was to marry into a yet more distinguished family. Further he began building a network of connections, some of which with politicians currently out of favor (the supporters of Marius). But these were dangerous contacts to have. Sulla was leader of Rome and was seeking to wipe out any Marian sympathizers. A nineteen year old Caesar was arrested. But it appears that Sulla chose to spare him, as he did some others. Influential friends managed to have him released, but it was obvious that Caesar would have to leave Rome for a while, in order to let things cool down.

Caesar goes into Exile

And so Caesar left Rome to join the army. Naturally, as a member of a patrician family, he didn’t enter the forces as a common soldier. His first posting was as a military assistant to a provincial governor. Thereafter he was posted to Cilicia, where he proved himself a capable and courageous soldier, winning praise for having saved the life of a comrade. It’s believed that his next assignment was in one of the armies which crushed Spartacus’ slave rebellion. After this, Caesar left the army, yet it was still considered unwise for him to return to Rome. Instead he spent some time in the south of Italy improving his education, in particular rhetoric. Caesar later proved an incredibly talented, if not genial, public speaker and much of this will undoubtedly have come from his training in rhetoric.

Quotebubble.png ‘Do you know any man who, even if he has concentrated on the art of oratory to the exclusion of all else, can speak better than Caesar ?’
—quote by Cicero

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Caesar decided to spend the winter on the island of Rhodes, but the ship taking him there was captured by pirates, who held him hostage for about forty days, until a large ransom bought his freedom. During this misadventure Caesar displayed much of the decisive action which should later lead to his world fame.

While captured he joked with his captors, telling them he’d see them all crucified, once he was released. Everyone laughed at the joke, even Caesar himself. But it was in fact exactly what he did once he was released. He hunted the pirates down, captured them and had them crucified.

Caesar’s next task was to organize a force to defend Roman property along the coast of Asia Minor (Turkey).

Caesar returns from Exile

Meanwhile the administration in Rome had changed and Caesar could return home. Based on his deeds and military achievements so far, Caesar successfully campaigned for a post in the Roman administration. Caesar served in 63 BC as a quaestor in Spain, where in Cadiz he is said to have broken down and wept in front of a statue of Alexander the Great, realizing that where Alexander had conquered most of the known world at thirty, Caesar at that age was merely seen as a dandy who had squandered his wife’s fortunes as well as his own.

Caesar returned to Rome, determined to achieve political standing. His first wife had died, so Caesar once more entered into a politically useful marriage. Though he divorced his new wife soon afterwards, on suspicion of adultery. The suspicion was unproven, and friends urged him to show greater faith in his wife. But Caesar declared that he could not live with a woman even suspected of adultery. There was some truth in that statement. His enemies were only waiting to ruin him, seeking any chance to exploit a weakness, no matter if true or not.

For the next years, Caesar continued to buy popularity, both with the people of Rome as well as with the high and mighty in important places. Achieving the post of aedile, Caesar used it to his fullest advantage. Bribes, public shows, gladiatorial contests, games and banquets; Caesar employed them all at huge costs, to buy favor.

Quotebubble.png ‘He showed himself perfectly prepared to serve and flatter everybody, even ordinary people… and he did not mind temporarily grovelling’
—quote by Dio Cassius

But he also acted, as was usual for an aedile to renovate public buildings, which naturally also impressed some of the less fickle part of the populace. Caesar well knew that his actions were costing him fortunes. And some of his creditors were calling in their debts. Furthermore, many senators were beginning to dislike this brash newcomer who in the most undignified fashion was bribing his way up the political ladder. But Caesar cared little and bribed his way into the office of pontifex maximus (chief priest).

This new office bestowed upon Caesar not only the sheer status of a powerful position, but so too the post’s dignity granted Caesar a solemn appearance which he otherwise would have struggled to attain. Being a religious post, it also made him sacrosanct as a person. The pontifex maximus was a man very hard to criticize or attack in any way.

Caesar in Spain

In 60 BC Caesar’s career took him back to Spain. Aged 41, he was awarded the post of praetor. It may well have been that the senate decided to send the young upstart to a troubled region, in order to have him fail. Trouble had been brewing with the local tribes in Spain for a long time. But Caesar, undaunted by the problems, excelled in his new role.

Caesar discovered a talent for military command which he himself hadn’t known he possessed. The experience he gained in Spain would be of great value in his further career. But more so the ability of capturing some spoils of war for himself, to put his personal finances back to right and repay his debt was what rescued his career. If there was one lesson, Caesar learnt in Spain then it was that war could be politically and financially very profitable.

Through all this, Caesar maintained his own honor, but continued to shrewdly improve his status, his true goal being to improve the state of his beloved Rome.

Caesar allies with Pompey and Crassus ‘The First Triumvirate’

In 59 BC Caesar returned to Rome, having proved himself a very capable ruler. He now formed a valuable pact with two of the most prominent Romans of the day, – the ‘first triumvirate’.

The triumvirate helped Caesar achieve his greatest ambition to that day. He was elected consul, the highest office of Rome. The political influence he had built up in his previous years of political struggle, together with the enormous power and influence of Crassus and Pompey managed to virtually oust the second consul, Lucius Calpurnius Bibulus, who stayed at home for most of the time, knowing he had little say at all. The historian Suetonius tells of people joking of it being not the joint consulship of ‘Bibulus and Caesar’, but of ‘Julius and Caesar’.

The formation of the ruling triumvirate with Crassus and Pompey was a mark also of Caesar’s determination to push through genuine and innovative measures in the face of a hostile senate which was suspicious of his motives and to ensure that there was some continuity of progressive legislation after his term as consul was over.

Caesar’s laws are indeed seen as more than mere populist measures. For example, tax demands on farmers were cancelled. Public land was allocated to fathers of three or more children. These were laws hardly likely to make Caesar less popular than he was, and yet they reveal that he also possessed insight into the problems weighing on Rome at the time.

Caesar also remarried, once again to a bride from a very influential Roman household. And his daughter Julia was married to Pompey, further cementing his political partnership with the great general.

Caesar becomes Governor of Gaul

As his one-year term of office as consul came to an end, Caesar needed to think of finding a new office into which to retire from his current position. For his enemies were that bent on vengeance, to not have held any office would have left him open to attack in the courts and possible ruin. He therefore obtained for himself the governorship of Cisalpine Gaul, Illyricum, and due to the sudden death of that governor, Transalpine Gaul for a period of five years, which was later extended for a second term.

Gaul at the time comprised the subjugated region south of the Alps and to the east of the Apennines as far as the river Rubicon, together with a small portion of territory on the other side of the Alps, roughly corresponding with today’s French regions Provence and Languedoc. The following military campaign Caesar then embarked upon against the Gauls is still subject of study to students at military academies today. Caesar had read and informed himself well in the art of warfare. Now also he should benefit on the experience he had gathered in leading troops in Spain.  Caesar had at first been hoping to conquer the lands north of Italy. For this purpose, his first task was to start raising, partly at his own expense, more troops than those which he already commanded as governor. Over the next few years he was to raise a force of ten legions, about 50,000 men, as well as 10,000 to 20,000 allies, slaves and camp followers.

But it was to be in his very first year in office, 58 BC, before many additional troops had been levied that occurrences beyond Caesar’s control should set him on the path to history.

Caesar defeats the Helvetians

The tribe of the Helvetians (Helvetii) had been forced from their mountainous homelands by the migration of Germanic tribes and were now pushing into Transalpine Gaul (Gallia Narbonensis).Caesar acted swiftly and shattered the Helvetian invasion in a crushing defeat.

Caesar defeats the Germans

But no sooner was this done a large force of Germans, Sueves and Swabians, crossed the Rhine and then entered into the Roman part of Gaul. Their leader Ariovistus was an ally of Rome, but so too was the Gallic tribe of the Aedui, whom the Germans were attacking. Caesar sided with the Aedui. the Germans had had their eye on Gaul for some time, and Caesar wanted to use this opportunity to put a stop to any such ambitions. Gaul was to become Roman, not German. The Germans were the larger army, and the fighting prowess of the Germanic tribesmen was renowned. But they did not possess the iron discipline of the Roman army.

Caesar felt sufficiently confident to meet them in battle. On learning that the Germans believed in a prophecy that they should lose the battle if they fought before the new moon, Caesar forced a battle upon them immediately. The Germans were defeated and large numbers of them were slaughtered, trying to escape the field of battle.

Caesar defeats the Nervii

The following year (57 BC) Caesar marched his troops northwards to deal with the Belgae. The Nervii were the leading tribe of the Celtic Belgae and were apparently preparing to attack the Roman forces, as they feared Caesar might otherwise conquer all of Gaul. How right they were in this assumption no one can say with absolute certainty.

But it gave Caesar all the reason he needed to begin a full-scale war and invade Nervian territory. It was during the campaign against the Nervii that a weakness of Caesar’s tactics was exposed. Namely that of bad reconnaissance. His horsemen were mainly German and Gallic. Perhaps he didn’t sufficiently trust them. Perhaps he didn’t understand how to use them properly as scouts ahead of his army. but it is due to that oversight that Caesar was taken by surprise several times during his campaigns in Gaul. In one particular incident the Nervii swarmed down on his marching troops. It was only due to the iron discipline of his soldiers that panic did not take hold of the startled troops.

When the decisive battle eventually came, the Nervii fought heroically, and the battle for some time hung in the balance, but eventually they were defeated. With the Nervii smashed the other tribes of the Belgae were gradually forced into submission.

Having conquered most of Gaul, Caesar met up with the two other triumvirs in 56 BC in the town of Luca in Cisalpine Gaul, where it was decided that his governorship of Gaul was to be extended and Crassus and Pompey should once more be consuls.

Caesar launches attacks on Germany and Britain

Then in 55 BC another invasion of Germans demanded Caesar’s attention. The Germans were confronted and shattered near today’s town of Koblenz (Germany). Caesar then proceeded in building a bridge across the river Rhine. His description of events states his troops only took 10 days to construct the wooden bridge. Recent experiments by engineers have indeed proven it possible.

The meaning of the bridge was mainly symbolic. This display of Roman engineering and power was meant to frighten the Germans as well as impress people back home in Rome. (The bridge was used to carry Roman raiding parties into Germany. But appears to have been destroyed by Caesar’s troops shortly afterwards.) The senate however was angered at Caesar’s flouting of the rules. For as governor of Gaul Caesar was by no means entitled to take any action against territory east of the Rhine. But Caesar was not to care for what his enemies in the senate thought of him. With the Germans crushed, he turned to Britain in the same year (55 BC). The following year he launched another expedition into Britain.

These raids on Britain were as such not very successful from a military standpoint. But to Caesar they were invaluable propaganda. Britain was virtually unknown to the Roman world, but for some trading links. Ordinary Romans heard of Caesar fighting near mythical enemies in unknown lands. Meanwhile the senate was seething.

Gaul rises against Caesar

On his return from Britain in the autumn of 54 BC, Caesar faced a large revolt of the Belgae. The rest of 54 BC and the following year were spent subduing the rebellious tribes and ravaging the lands of those who had risen against him. But in 52 BC Gaul arose in a massive revolt against its conqueror. Under the Arverni chief Vercingetorix, almost all the tribes of Gaul, except for three, allied against the Romans.

At first Vercingetorix achieved some advances, trying to starve the Romans out of Gaul. Caesar had spent the winter in Cisalpine Gaul and now hurried, at great danger to himself, back to join his troops. Immediately he launched attacks on Vercingetorix allies, overrunning one foe after the other. At the fortified hill town of Gergovia he was however repelled. His lieutenant Labienus had been sent with half Caesar’s force against another tribe, the Parisii. Caesar eventually realized he had insufficient forces to win the siege and withdrew.

The Battle of Alesia

Vercingetorix made his fatal error. Rather than continuing his small scale guerilla war against Roman raiding parties looking for food for the army (and so denying Caesar’s men food), he switched to a direct confrontation. The amassed Gallic army then launched a full-scale attack on Caesar’s army and suffered a terrible defeat. Lucky to get away, the remainder of the Gallic force withdrew into the fortified hill town of Alesia. Caesar laid siege to the town. The Gauls watched on as the Romans built a deadly ring of trenches and fortifications around the town. Vercingetorix did not intervene against the Romans as they built their siege works. Evidently, he was hoping for relief forces to arrive and drive Caesar off. Caesar knew that such a force had been sent for and hence also built an outer trench to defend against any attacks from outside. A massive relief force arrived, gathered from all parts of Gaul. Records describe a force of 250,000 thousand infantry and 8,000 cavalry.

The situation was desperate. The Romans still had a force of 80,000 warriors under Vercingetorix to contain within their siege works and a massive force without. More still, the Roman troops had stripped the surrounding countryside of any food. The Gallic troops had brought little for themselves and now faced the stark choice of having to fight or retreat.

An initial night attack by the Gauls was beaten back. A day and a half later another massive attack was concentrated on one of the main Roman camps. With fierce fighting all around Caesar mounted his horse, haranguing his troops to fight on. He sent his reserve cavalry out into the field to ride around a nearby hill and fall onto the Gauls from behind. Then he finally rushed in to fight in person.

He was never the general who commanded form a distance. And here there was no retreat. There were Gauls on either side of the trenches and to have lost this battle would have meant certain death. Fighting alongside his men he helped drive off the Gauls. Witnesses wrote that some soldiers, either weary from battle or panicked by fear, who sought to flee were grabbed by the throat by Caesar and forced back to their positions. Eventually Caesar’s cavalry emerged from behind the hills and fell into the rear of the Gauls. The attacking Gaul army fell into disorder, panicked and tried to retreat. Many were slaughtered by Caesar’s German mercenary horsemen. The Gallic relief force realized its defeat and retired. Vercingetorix admitted defeat and the day after surrendered in person. Caesar had miraculously won the battle of Alesia (52 BC).

Caesar, Master of Gaul

Vercingetorix was paraded through the streets of Rome during Caesar’s triumph celebration years later, during which he was ritually strangled. The inhabitants of Alesia and the captured Gallic soldiers fared little better. they were shared out as slaves among the victorious Roman soldiers, who either kept them to help carry baggage, or sold them to the slave traders which accompanied the army. It took Caesar another year to quell Gallic resistance to Roman rule. Eventually he assembled all the tribal chiefs of Gaul and demanded their allegiance to Rome. Gaul was beaten, they could do nothing but comply with his demands and Gaul was finally secured as a Roman province.

When Caesar had finished his series of brilliant campaigns, he had changed the nature of the Roman empire from a purely Mediterranean realm into western European empire. He had also driven the empire’s frontier up to the Rhine, a natural, easily defendable border, which would become the imperial border for centuries.

Caesar crosses the Rubicon, takes Rome

But things turned nasty in 51 BC when Caesar’s governorship of Gaul was revoked by the senate. This left Caesar hanging high and dry, needing to fear prosecution for past irregularities once he returned to Rome. For months on end there was diplomatic negotiations with Caesar remaining in Gaul, until he lost patience with the niceties of political life. In 49 BC Caesar crossed the Rubicon, the demarcation line between his province and Italy. He marched on Rome at the head of his battle-hardened army, where due to an incredible strategy of not resting for Winter, he met no resistance. Pompey had fled, stealing Rome's treasury, all the soldiers, and leaving everything in disarray. The was looting and chaos. Caesar's first task was to have himself appointed temporary dictator, a post of the republic set aside for emergencies, during which one man would be given absolute powers. Accustomed to working at top speed from his time in Gaul, he dictated letters to two secretaries while on horseback, Caesar went to work.

Caesar defeats Pompey

Caesar might have ruled Rome. But things were far from under control, just because the capital lay in his hands. The entire state of Rome was under threat and only one man could stop Caesar – Pompey. But Pompey, though an excellent general, deemed superior to Caesar by many, didn’t possess the troops, save 3 legions. So he withdrew his troops from Italy to gain time to train them. Caesar tried to stop him at that point but failed.

But with Pompey forced to flee eastwards, Caesar was left to turn to Spain to put the Pompeian legions there out of action. Not so much by fighting as by skillful maneuvering was Caesar by his own admission for once outgeneraled. However, the campaign was brought to a success in six months, most of the troops joining his standard. During this time Caesar regained control of Rome's treasury. Caesar now turned east to deal with Pompey himself. The Pompeians controlled the seas, causing him great difficulty in setting across to Epirus, where he was shut down within his own lines by a much larger army of Pompey in November.

Caesar avoided a pitched battle with some difficulty, whilst waiting for Mark Antony to join him with the second army in spring 48 BC. Then, in midsummer of 48 BC Caesar met Pompey on the plain of Pharsalus in Thessaly. Pompey’s army was much larger, though Pompey himself knew them not of the same quality as Caesar’s veterans. Caesar won the day, utterly destroying the force of Pompey, who fled to Egypt. Caesar followed, though Pompey was eventually assassinated on arrival by the Egyptian government.

Caesar in the East

Caesar in hot pursuit of Pompey arrived in Alexandria, only to get entangled in the quarrels of succession to the throne of the Egyptian monarchy. Initially asked to help settle a dispute, Caesar soon found himself attacked by Egyptian royal troops and needed to hold out for help to arrive. The few troops he had with him, barricaded the streets and held off their opponents in bitter street fighting. The Pompeians still controlling the seas with their fleet, made it impossible for Rome to send help. He was forc3d to succed using mercenaries.

Caesar did not leave Egypt at once. The legendary charms of the woman he had made queen of Egypt, Cleopatra, persuaded him to stay a while as her personal guest. Such was the hospitality that a son, named Caesarion, was born the following year.

Caesar first dealt with king Parnaces, the son of Mithridates of Pontus, before returning to Rome. Pharnaces had used the Roman’s weakness during their civil war to recover his father’s lands. It was after this crushing victory in Asia Minor (Turkey) that he sent his celebrated message to the senate ‘veni, vidi, vici’ (I came, I saw, I conquered.)

Caesar, Dictator of Rome

Back home Caesar had been confirmed dictator in his absence, an appointment which was regularly renewed thereafter. With this began an era, the rule of Rome being held by men who successively held the name Caesar, by birth or adoption. But the fact that Caesar had not returned home at once had given Pompey’s sons enough time to raise new armies. Two more campaigns were needed, in Africa and Spain, culminating in the battle of Munda on March 17, 45 BC. In October of that year Caesar was back in Rome. Quickly it showed that Caesar was not merely a conqueror.

Caesar the great benefactor

Caesar was a builder, a visionary statesman, the likes of which the world rarely gets to see. He established order, began measures to reduce congestion in Rome, draining large tracts of marshy lands, gave full voting rights to the inhabitants of his former province south of the Alps, revised the tax laws of Asia and Sicily, resettled many Romans in new homes in the Roman provinces and reformed the calendar, which, with one slight adjustment, is the one in use today. Caesar’s colonial policy, combined with his generosity in granting citizenship to individuals and communities, was to rejuvenate both the Roman legions and the Roman governing class. And Caesar, who included some provincial aristocrats in his enlarged Senate, was perfectly aware of what he was doing.

But despite the pardons he granted to his old senatorial enemies, despite not drowning Rome in blood like Sulla and Marius had done, when they had seized power, Caesar failed to win over his enemies.

The Murder of Caesar

Five months after his arrival back in Rome, Caesar was dead, at the hands of a band of senatorial conspirators led by Marcus Junius Brutus (d 42 BC) and Gaius Cassius Longinus (d 42 BC), both former Pompeians who’d been pardoned by Caesar after the battle of Pharsalus. He was, at the excuse of some of the conspirators, who claimed to want to present a petition to him, lured into one of the back room of Pompey’s Theatre in Rome. (The rooms of the theatre were used for senatorial affairs, while the senate building was being restored.) There the conspirators pounced, and Caesar was stabbed 23 times (15 March 44 BC).

Julius Caesar had changed the nature of the Roman empire, he had swept away the old, corrupt system of the late Roman republic and had set an example to future Roman emperors as well as other future European leaders to live up to.