The Age of Caesar
(60 - 44, B.C)
The Chronology: 70-61
The Chronlogy: 60-50. the
Roman Empire in the 50's
| 59 |
Caesar
consul; significant reform legislation on administration of empire. Pompeius
marries Julia; Caesar assigned Gaul |
| 58 |
Caesar's
campaigns in Gaul or other view; Alesia and its defenses; Vercingetorix and today |
| 57-56 |
Riots in Rome between
gangs supported by triumvirate and senate. |
| 56 |
Triumvirate renewed;
Pompeius and Crassus to be consuls then governors of Spain and Syria, respectively. |
| 54 |
Pompeius allowed
to govern Spain in absentia. Death of Julia; more rioting in Rome. |
| 53 |
More rioting; Crasses
defeated by Parthians. |
| 52 |
Pompeius sole consul |
| 50 |
Rising tension
between Caesar and Optimates; Pompeius asked "to save the state".
Tribunes driven out of Rome so they cannot veto measure; Caesar crosses
Rubicon. |
The Triumvate and the Civil Wars 60-46 BC
- The First Triumvirate
(60 - 49 B.C.): a consortium of clientelae, but not one that could
endure for long. By 52 it was clear that there was going to be an open conflict
between Caesar and the Optimates. Pompey, fearing the growing power of Caesar
and desiring glory that only the nobility can confer, sides with the Optimates.
- The reality of the civil
war that follows is not that it is a struggle between the republic and a would-be
monarch (Caesar), but, rather, it is a struggle between two types of one-man-rule.
The republic is finished: The choice is between a Principate system (Pompey)
or Monarchy (Caesar). Open conflict might have been avoided or indefinitely
postponed, but for the die-hard reactionaries who wanted to force the issue.
Caesar's movements
- The Issues:
- Caesar claims to be
defending his dignitas and the rights of the tribunes; to be liberating
the state from a faction.
- Pompey and the Senate
claim that Caear is a renegade traitor who has attacked the state.
- Pompey sought the
recognition of his peers; Caesar did not care. That is what made him so
frightening to the elite.
- On the chronology, see
table at end; for map
-
| 49 |
Across
the Rubicon, down the backbone of Italy to Brindisi, but Pompey had already
left. Returns to Rome. No proscriptions, but Caesar seizes the aerarium.
On to Spain. Siege of Massilia. Battle of Ilerda. Return to Rome. |
| 48 |
Campaign
in the Balkans leading to Pharsalus in June. Land route to Egypt where he
winters with Cleopatra. one, two, three, four |
| 47 |
Defeat
of Pharnaces at Zela (veni, vidi, vici); back to Italy by July. Leaves for
North Africa in October |
| 46 |
Thapsus;
suicide of Cato; celebrates quadruple triumph (Gaul, Egypt, Pontus and Africa).
leaves for Spain in November. |
| 45 |
Munda
(March); returns to Rome. |
The Beginnning of the End.
- Caesar's position in
46 --formally
- Religious authority:
pontifex maximus; deo invicto = "to the invincible god".
- Becomes dictator for
life, his powers are superior to those of all other magistrates and assemblies.
His edicts have power of laws. He handles the affairs of and acts in the
name of the senate.
- sacrosanctitas
- In 46, he receives
a praefectura morum, complete censorial powers.
- His position informally:
- He exercised his powers
as the head of a personal army.
- Head of a party, of
a body of clients, who see their personal power, wealth, ambitions to depend
upon the continuity of Caesar's rule..
- Reform and Reconstruction
- Introduction: The
problem--Caesar stands unchallenged at the head of government and state.
Reform of state and of constitution is necessary. What course could he,
should he follow?
- Administrative reforms
relevant to Rome and to Italy
- Most enduring was
calendar reform
- Suppression of collegia
which had contributed to urban warfare
- Planned to codify
Roman law
- Reduced list of
those on dole from 320,000 to 150,000 (those cut off to be sent to colonies
overseas)
- New forum and basilica
for public business
- Funds for upkeep
of roads and regulation of traffic (wheeled vehicles forbidden during
the day)
- Standardization
of municipal administration through-out Italy
- For Provinces
- Concern for well
being of provincials already clear in his extortion law of 59
- Fixes the tribute
of provinces and establishes an assessment formula for determining tax
(i.e., the opportunity for extortion reduced)
- Steps to unify Italy
and provinces: Settled Romans overseas and extended citizenship to provincials.
Colonies.
- Policy and Administration
- His expenditures
were on a lavish scale: public buildings, settlements and veteran's bonuses
were expensive..
- Caesar primarily
admitted "the responsible" (the landed gentry, domi nobiles)
of Italy along with some aristocratic Gauls to the Senate. Tota
Italia being realized!
- The Senate (rather
the remains of the optimates) could also be controlled because Caesar
had assumed into his own hands the traditional functions of the senate,
namely, he controlled finance, foreign policy and provincial commands.
- The Plot Against Caesar
- There was genuine
concern about his power and position, many who felt that the traditional
republic was being undermined. This attitude was shared not only by Cicero,
but also by some of his [Caesar's] long time supporters. Caesar: the basilica
Julia and today; overview;
the forum
Julii; Caesar the dictator; and as dictator perpetuus;
as pontifex
maximus; allow statue with inscription deo invicto.
- Personal feuds among
his party members; some felt that they had not been adequately rewarded.
- The implications of
clementia, a royal virtue.
- The example of tyrannicide;
it was praised in Greek and Roman literature and may well have provided
the model for action. also: from the time of the French Revolution and another
- Assessment
- as a politician: energetic, insightful; planned for all contingencies
- as a general: remarkably successful often outnumbered, and Pompey was a very worthy opponent.
- as a man of literature:commentaries recognized even by his enemies as literary masterpieces
Brutus: propaganda
after the ides of March; as imperator;
portrait as philosopher;
traditional