| Caesar, Gaius Julius (100-44 BC), Roman general
and statesman, who laid the foundations of the Roman imperial system.
Early Life
Born in Rome on July 12 or 13, 100 BC, Caesar belonged to the prestigious
Julian clan; yet from early childhood he knew controversy. His uncle by
marriage was Gaius Marius, leader of the Populares. This party supported
agrarian reform and was opposed by the reactionary Optimates, a senatorial
faction. Marius was seven times consul (chief magistrate), and the last
year he held office, just before his death in 86 BC, he exacted a terrifying
toll on the Optimates. At the same time he saw to it that young Caesar
was appointed flamen dialis, one of an archaic priesthood with no power.
This identified him with his uncle's extremist politics, and his marriage
in 84 BC to Cornelia, the daughter of Marius's associate, Cinna, further
confirmed him as a radical. When Lucius Cornelius Sulla, Marius's enemy
and leader of the Optimates, was made dictator in 82 BC, he issued a list
of enemies to be executed. Although Caesar was not harmed, he was ordered
by Sulla to divorce Cornelia. Refusing that order, he found it prudent
to leave Rome. He did not return to the city until 78 BC, after Sulla's
resignation.
Caesar was now 22 years old. Unable to gain office, he left Rome again
and went to Rhodes, where he studied rhetoric; he returned to Rome in
73 BC, a very persuasive speaker. The year before, while still absent,
he had been elected to the pontificate, an important college of Roman
priests.
Triumvirate
In 71 BC Pompey the Great, who had earned his epithet in service under
Sulla, returned to Rome, having defeated the rebellious Populares general
Sertorius in Spain. At the same time Marcus Licinius Crassus, a rich patrician,
suppressed in Italy the slave revolt led by Spartacus. Pompey and Crassus
both ran for the consulship-an office held by two men-in 70 BC. Pompey,
who by this time had changed sides, was technically ineligible, but with
Caesar's help he won the office. Crassus became the other consul. In 69
BC, Caesar was elected quaestor and in 65 BC curule aedile, gaining great
popularity for his lavish gladiatorial games. To pay for these, he borrowed
money from Crassus. This united the two men, who also found common cause
with Pompey. When Caesar returned to Rome in 60 BC after a year as governor
of Spain, he joined forces with Crassus and Pompey in a three-way alliance
known as the First Triumvirate; to cement their relationship further,
Caesar gave his daughter Julia to Pompey in marriage. Thus backed, Caesar
was elected consul for 59 BC despite Optimate hostility, and the year
after (58 BC) he was appointed governor of Roman Gaul.
Gallic Wars
At that time Celtic Gaul, to the north, was still independent, but the
Aedui, a tribe of Roman allies, appealed to Caesar for help against another
Gallic people, the Helvetii, during the first year of his governorship.
Caesar marched into Celtic Gaul with six legions, defeated the Helvetii,
and forced them to return to their home area. Next, he crushed Germanic
forces under Ariovistus (flourished about 71-58 BC). By 57 BC, following
the defeat of the Nervii, Rome was in control of northern Gaul. (A last
revolt of the Gauls, led by Vercingetorix, was suppressed in 52 BC.)
Power Play
While Caesar was in Gaul, his agents attempted to dominate politics in
Rome. This, however, threatened Pompey's position, and it became necessary
for the triumvirs to arrange a meeting at Luca in 56 BC, which brought
about a temporary reconciliation. It was decided that Caesar would continue
in Gaul for another five years, while Pompey and Crassus would both be
consuls for 55 BC; after that, each would have proconsular control of
provinces. Caesar then went off to raid Britain and put down a revolt
in Gaul. Crassus, ever eager for military glory, went to his post in Syria.
Provoking a war with the Parthian Empire, he was defeated and killed at
Carrhae in 53 BC. This removed the last buffer between Caesar and Pompey;
their family ties had been broken by the death of Julia in 54 BC.
Civil War
In 52 BC, with Crassus out of the way, Pompey was made sole consul. Combined
with his other powers, this gave him a formidable position. Jealous of
his younger rival, he determined to break Caesar's power, an objective
that could not be achieved without first depriving him of his command
in Gaul. In order to protect himself, Caesar suggested that he and Pompey
both lay down their commands simultaneously, but this was rejected; goaded
by Pompey, the Senate summarily called upon Caesar to resign his command
and disband his army, or else be considered a public enemy. The tribunes,
who were Caesar's agents, vetoed this motion, but they were driven out
of the Senate chamber. The Senate then entrusted Pompey with providing
for the safety of the state. His forces far outnumbered Caesar's, but
they were scattered throughout the provinces, and his troops in Italy
were not prepared for war. Early in 49 BC Caesar crossed the Rubicon,
a small stream separating his province from Italy, and moved swiftly southward.
Pompey fled to Brundisium and from there to Greece. In three months Caesar
was master of all Italy; his forces then took Spain and the key port of
Massilia (Marseille).
In Rome Caesar became dictator until elected consul for 48 BC. At the
beginning of that year he landed in Greece and smashed Pompey's forces
at Pharsalus. Pompey escaped to Egypt, where he was assassinated. When
Caesar arrived there, he installed Cleopatra, daughter of the late King
Ptolemy XI as queen. In 47 BC he pacified Asia Minor and returned to Rome
to become dictator again. By the following year all Optimate forces had
been defeated and the Mediterranean world pacified.
Dictatorship and Assassination
The basic prop for Caesar's continuation in power was the dictatorship
for life. According to the traditional Republican constitution, this office
was only to be held for six months during a dire emergency. That rule,
however, had been broken before. Sulla had ruled as dictator for several
years, and Caesar now followed suit. In addition, he was made consul for
ten years in 45 BC and received the sanctity of tribunes, making it illegal
to harm him. Caesar also obtained honors to increase his prestige: He
wore the robe, crown, and scepter of a triumphant general and used the
title imperator. Furthermore, as Pontifex Maximus, he was head of the
state religion. Above all, however, he was in total command of the armies,
and this remained the backbone of his power.
As a ruler Caesar instituted various reforms. In the provinces he eliminated
the highly corrupt tax system, sponsored colonies of veterans, and extended
Roman citizenship. At home he reconstituted the courts and increased the
number of senators. His reform of the calendar gave Rome a rational means
of recording time.
A number of senatorial families, however, felt that Caesar threatened
their position, and his honors and powers made them fear that he would
become a rex (king), a title they, as Republicans, hated. Accordingly,
in 44 BC, an assassination plot was hatched by a group of senators, including
Gaius Cassius and Marcus Junius Brutus. On March 15 of that year, when
Caesar entered the Senate house, the group killed him.
Personal Life
After Caesar's first wife, Cornelia, died in 68 BC, he married Pompeia,
a granddaughter of Sulla. When the mysteries of the Bona Dea, over which
she presided, were violated, she was maligned by gossips, and Caesar then
divorced her, telling the Senate that Caesar's wife must be above suspicion.
His next marriage (59 BC) was to Calpurnia and was politically motivated.
Since Caesar had no male heirs, he stipulated in his will that his grandnephew,
Octavius, become his successor. It was Octavius who became Rome's first
emperor under the name of Augustus.
Caesar was a gifted writer, with a clear and simple style. His Commentaries,
in which he described Gaul and his Gallic campaigns, is a major source
of information about the early Celtic and Germanic tribes.
Achievements
Scholarly opinion of Caesar's accomplishments is divided. Some regard
him as an unscrupulous tyrant, with an insatiable lust for power, and
blame him for the demise of the Roman Republic. Others, admitting that
he could be ruthless, insist that the Republic had already been destroyed.
They maintain that to save the Roman world from chaos a new type of government
had to be created. In fact, Caesar's reforms did stabilize the Mediterranean
world. Among ancient military commanders, he may be second only to Alexander
the Great.
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