Thursday, April 16, 2020
Roman Civil War And Caesar Essays - Julio-Claudian Dynasty
  Roman Civil War And Caesar    If anyone had hoped that the assassination of Julius Caesar would bring about  the return of Republican rule, they must surely have been disappointed, for the  political turbulence simply continued. Caesar's assassins and his old  commanders battled for control, while orators like Cicero labored to save the  old Republic. In the and, Julius Caesar's great nephew and adopted son    Octavian known to history as Augustus Caesar outmaneuvered and outfought  everyone. The year after his uncle's death, Octavian and his allies of the    Caesarian faction joined forces in an alliance called the second Triumvirate. By  means of intriguer and threat, they coerced the senate into granting them and  their legions the power to rectory peace to the Roman state. In the battle of    Philippi, in northern Greece in 42b.c., Octavian and his allies defeated the  conspirators who had assassinated Julius Caesar. However, peace was not at hand.    Octavian split with his former allies, especially with Mark Antony, who was now    Cleopatra's lover. In a climactic naval battle at Actium in 31b.c., Octavian  defeated Mark Antony. Antony's death and Octavian's victory effectively  ended the Roman Civil war. In the thirty seventh poems in his first book of    Odes, the poet Horace wrote in response: Nuncest bibendum nuncpede libero  pulsanda tellus! Octavian took power, and Horace hailed him as "Caesar,"  which, for the first time, becomes a horrific title. Gaius Julius Caesar    Octavianus held both military command and tribunician power he was both chief  priest. He was also politically astute enough to adorn reality with palatable  outward forms, replacing democracy with autocracy in a way that did not  antagonize the public. He called on the services of culture, religion,  literature, architecture, and the visual arts to help create a new picture of  the world, with the result that there was a politically inspired aesthetic  revolution, which led to the legalization of absolute power. In 27b.c., Octavian  formally divested himself of all authority. In response, the Senate and the  people promptly gave it back to him, voting him the title Augustus. Although he  was never officially emperor of Rome at all, within four years he had assumed  complete power including the right of veto over any law. The Republic was  formally dead. During the forty-five years that Augustus ruled, the Senate and  popular assemblies continued to meet. However, the election of consuls,  proconsuls, tribunes, and other officials required his blessing, the Senate was  filled with Augustus' finds, and the popular assemblies seem to have lost all  political function. As commander of the armies, he rule all the vast territories  of an empire that reached to the Rivers Rhine and Danube in what is now Germany.    He commanded in the name of his uncle, Julius Caesar, and on the basis of his  own military victories, claiming that he brought peace and order after a century  of civil wars. He rebuilt temples to the Olympian gods, the "divine" Julius    Caesar, and to "Rome and Augustus." He built roads, bridges, and aqueducts,  established a sound currency, nurtured honest government, and maintained peace,  which lasted nearly two hundred years.    
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