Caesar as King? (45 to 44 B.C.E.)

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  • Опубликовано: 20 авг 2019
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    Sources:
    Nicolaus of Damascus, "The Life of Augustus" | amzn.to/2yWT7Y7
    Appian, "The Civil Wars, Book 2" | amzn.to/2H1ejkj
    Plutarch, "Parallel Lives: The Life of Julius Caesar" | amzn.to/2KwTIGw
    Plutarch, "Parallel Lives: The Life of Antony" | amzn.to/2KwTIGw
    Plutarch, "Parallel Lives: The Life of Brutus" | amzn.to/2KwTIGw
    Cassius Dio, "Roman History, Book 44" | amzn.to/2KyQYZf
    Suetonius, "The Lives of the Twelve Caesars: The Life of Julius Caesar" | amzn.to/2H6lbwF
    Cicero, "Letters to Atticus, Book 13" | amzn.to/31FI3v0
    ---
    Barry Strauss, "The Death of Caesar: The Story of History's Most Famous Assassination" | amzn.to/2H6RHyC
    Michael Parenti, "The Assassination of Julius Caesar: A People's History of Ancient Rome" | amzn.to/2Tv7HQf
    Stephen Dando-Collins, "The Ides: Caesar's Murder and the War for Rome" | amzn.to/2KyrLy3
    Adrian Goldsworthy, "Caesar: Life of a Colossus" | amzn.to/2Z3VAeb
    Adrian Goldsworthy, "Antony and Cleopatra" | amzn.to/31FXVxg
    Philip Freeman, "Julius Caesar" | amzn.to/2Z23SmJ
    Anthony Everitt, "Cicero: The Life and Times of Rome's Greatest Politician" | amzn.to/31GToLo
    Arthur Weigall, “The Life and Times of Marc Antony” | amzn.to/2KwUVO4
    Rhona Beare, "The Imperial Oath under Julius Caesar," Latomus 38, no. 2 (1979) 469-73 | www.jstor.org/stable/41531205
    William C. McDermott, "Caesar's Projected Dacian-Parthian Expedition," Ancient Society 13/14 (1982) 223-31 | www.jstor.org/stable/44080153
    Ernest Hemingway, "The Sun Also Rises" | amzn.to/2Z7kGbU
    Music:
    "Mells Parade," by Broke For Free
    "March of the Victors," by Benjamin Botkin
    "Infados," by Kevin MacLeod
    "Thomas Neutrality," by Enrique Molano
    "Requiem," by György Ligeti
    "Hallon," by Christian Bjoerklund
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Комментарии • 3,7 тыс.

  • @oWallis
    @oWallis 4 года назад +16608

    Hey could someone ask Tribune Aquila if it's ok to like this video? Thanks.

    • @tribuneaquilla5648
      @tribuneaquilla5648 4 года назад +3087

      No

    • @jollesracing517
      @jollesracing517 4 года назад +636

      Tribune Aquilla haha did you make a RUclips account just for this

    • @nuclearnadal4869
      @nuclearnadal4869 4 года назад +374

      Yikes

    • @mariano98ify
      @mariano98ify 4 года назад +148

      @@tribuneaquilla5648 you lazy, you made this account just to wrote that and even you hadn´t pick a profile photo....

    • @dylanchouinard6141
      @dylanchouinard6141 4 года назад +565

      Tribune Aquilla come on, Aquilla! Take back the Republic, if you can!

  • @saidtoshimaru1832
    @saidtoshimaru1832 4 года назад +2044

    Caesar: There are lots of holes in your prophecy.
    Spurinna: 23 holes, actually.

  • @lukaradulovic7904
    @lukaradulovic7904 2 года назад +1094

    That Caninius guy knew exactly what he was doing. He knew that 4 hours of consulship were enough to have his name mentioned in a youtube video 2000 years later

  • @justinokraski3796
    @justinokraski3796 4 года назад +3179

    Ironically the change to "Dictator for Life" ended up being a shorter term

    • @feynstein1004
      @feynstein1004 3 года назад +92

      Damn, dude 😂😂😂

    • @carlosvalois8966
      @carlosvalois8966 3 года назад +31

      Ha, nice

    • @ventu2295
      @ventu2295 3 года назад +110

      Truly, maybe if the opposition had the living hope of getting rid of Caesar when 10 years had passed, maybe just maybe they wouldnt assasinate him.

    • @mindykanitz6255
      @mindykanitz6255 3 года назад +5

      Yep.

    • @karthikparameswaran7813
      @karthikparameswaran7813 3 года назад +13

      Caesar was a tyrant and he delibrately destroyed the Roman Politics. That's why he had to fall prey to more than 5 specific dagger, knife and sword wounds. He had to pay for the price of the "last three straws" incident along with his life.

  • @petarpetrovic3411
    @petarpetrovic3411 3 года назад +848

    "Not king, but Caesar" aged so well, since his name it self became the base for the word "Emperor" in multiple languages, including Russian (Tsar) and German (Keiser). Thus, to an extent this sounds as "Not king, but emperor!" from a linguistic point of view.

    • @MelkisgoedvoorJan
      @MelkisgoedvoorJan 11 месяцев назад +46

      I always wondered if the word ''keizer'' (dutch for emperor) was connected to Caeser, so it turns out it really is?

    • @m0nk198
      @m0nk198 11 месяцев назад +25

      ​@@MelkisgoedvoorJanyeah, there's a yt channel that's mostly focused on the Latin language that covers a bit of history and etymology as well as pronunciation. I think the channel is polymathy

    • @GaryWagers
      @GaryWagers 8 месяцев назад +15

      Between reading that line in Shakespeare's version of events and knowing that emperors used his name as a royal title, in middle school I honestly started wondering if "Caesar" was an actual title in the Roman Republic, and "Gaius Julius" holding that title is why we remember him as "Caesar."

    • @jwb_666
      @jwb_666 8 месяцев назад

      wtf no... Imperator is the basis of the word Emperor 🤦

    • @prnzssLuna
      @prnzssLuna 7 месяцев назад +10

      It's Kaiser, not Keiser in German

  • @kektuss
    @kektuss 4 года назад +1823

    “Caeser I’m sad now.” - Random Roman Citizen

  • @stefanosgrimp8990
    @stefanosgrimp8990 4 года назад +3601

    Historia civilis has released up until now 22 videos about ceasars life. The 23rd video will be the final video about ceasar. Ceasar was also stabbed 23 times
    The numbers Mason what do they mean...

    • @thegrandimperialist168
      @thegrandimperialist168 4 года назад +218

      It's a conspiracy!

    • @jummeh
      @jummeh 4 года назад +68

      That's numberwang!

    • @Schmidty1
      @Schmidty1 4 года назад +71

      Clearly Historia Civilis is in cahoots with the illuminati and we must stop this collusion by any means necessary!

    • @NijikaYuki
      @NijikaYuki 4 года назад +10

      stefanos grimp that is poetic

    • @MarcelinoDeseo
      @MarcelinoDeseo 4 года назад +8

      dang, you spoiler! ;-)

  • @devinsamuel3612
    @devinsamuel3612 3 года назад +1571

    "I have my suspicions."
    unlabelled red square appears
    Me: "Oh my god it was Caesar"

    • @micaiahleigh2449
      @micaiahleigh2449 2 года назад +131

      @@spcxplrr I took ancient cilivilzations in highschool which focused heavily on Rome. I genuinely can’t remember shit from it because Antony wasn’t pink.

    • @restitutororbis964
      @restitutororbis964 Год назад +3

      Red sus or something

    • @glatres
      @glatres Год назад +10

      Are you sure that guy wasn't Rex?

  • @Jauhl1
    @Jauhl1 2 года назад +1319

    “At one o'clock, Caesar announced the election of a consul to serve until 1 January--which was the next morning. So I can inform you that in Caninus' consulship, no one had lunch. Still, nothing untoward occurred while he was consul: such was his vigilance that throughout his consulship, he never ever closed his eyes.” /Cicero.

    • @JonatasAdoM
      @JonatasAdoM 2 года назад +258

      Man, I gotta give to him. Cicero had a sense of humor.

    • @jordaneggerman4734
      @jordaneggerman4734 Год назад +127

      @@JonatasAdoM oh, Cicero was spicy with the sarcasm. You expect historical figures to be all stoic, but I like to imagine Cicero and Cato were sassy b×tches on the floor of the Senate...

    • @zealousdoggo
      @zealousdoggo Год назад +87

      "such was his vigilance that throughout his consulship, he never ever closed his eyes" that had me dying

    • @lauriecook2399
      @lauriecook2399 Год назад +12

      @@JonatasAdoM I think this is evident from 20:40 - such a snarky comment, with its intent so clear, is just the sort of back-biting you’d expect from 3 blokes in a pub 😭

    • @Matthew-Anthony
      @Matthew-Anthony 4 месяца назад +3

      @jordaneggerman4734 Tywin Lannister was stoic and did not have a sense of humor.

  • @CheemsofRegret
    @CheemsofRegret 4 года назад +1826

    That Octavian kid sounds like he'll be living under Caesar's shadow for the rest of his life. There's no way he can possibly do anything that will eclipse his uncle!

    • @iii8410
      @iii8410 4 года назад +92

      Definitely agree! And that Lepidus guy? I bet he does not even believe in the gods! There is NO WAY he will become Pope!

    • @icedwhitechocolatemochafra9851
      @icedwhitechocolatemochafra9851 4 года назад +55

      @@ahm3dyusuf737 yeah.. thats why he said he wouldnt be Pope....

    • @fibo4108
      @fibo4108 4 года назад +69

      Senate: you can't possibly eclipse Caesar.
      Octavian: o b s e r v e

    • @icedwhitechocolatemochafra9851
      @icedwhitechocolatemochafra9851 4 года назад +8

      @@ahm3dyusuf737 he clearly says he wont be pope youre just delusional. He was stating a fact and you were correctimg an already true fact.

    • @GrandMoffTarkinsTeaDispenser
      @GrandMoffTarkinsTeaDispenser 4 года назад +49

      Augustus didn't eclipse Caesar...
      Caesar is still the most famous and influential roman to ever live.

  • @thelegate8636
    @thelegate8636 4 года назад +4599

    I hope in the next video we get to see Caesar invade Parthia and avenge Crassus. Surely nothing will happen to him.

    • @rin_etoware_2989
      @rin_etoware_2989 4 года назад +846

      let's not be too hasty about that
      let's ask Tribune Aquila's permission first

    • @halmahs4626
      @halmahs4626 4 года назад +89

      Indeed agreed. May no hair on his head be harmed and may he out live all of us for one thousand years.

    • @julians7268
      @julians7268 4 года назад +30

      *Maniacally* *tapping* *fingers* *together.*

    • @tastyloaf5487
      @tastyloaf5487 4 года назад +25

      @@halmahs4626 I mean, let's not go nuts....I'd be willing to pledge my allegiance for 40 years.... But surely that would never happen, ha ha.....

    • @somerandomguy4812
      @somerandomguy4812 4 года назад +66

      I bet that Caesar is going to live a long prosperous life with no one, not even his friends would even try to kill him, no one at all... Surely March 15, 44 BC would be an extremely uneventful day with nothing interesting at all.

  • @Kanner111
    @Kanner111 2 года назад +1644

    I love that in the case of Antony, we can't rule out that he simply forgot about the conspiracy because he didn't have a clue that a bunch of senators asking him to help remove Caesar was a big deal.

    • @TheAlmightyAss
      @TheAlmightyAss 2 года назад +31

      He does seem like he may have been a bit dim, maybe all that shagging and drinking just got to his brain.

    • @everybodyisanidiot4553
      @everybodyisanidiot4553 2 года назад +204

      I'd go with both.. a personal political move that he quickly forgot.
      Also, he fucked up badly.. so my guess is he wanted to see what Caesar would do with him but the conversation went on for too long.. mentioning the conspiracy after he was forgiven would have shown his dishonesty and slight lack of loyalty.

    • @Yung-plague
      @Yung-plague 2 года назад +131

      @@everybodyisanidiot4553 thats a good point, "oh hye buddy. Pal, a few years ago a couple of senators asked me to help depose you, totally slipped my mind until just now hahaha."

    • @CraftyChicken91
      @CraftyChicken91 2 года назад +102

      @@everybodyisanidiot4553 that actually makes a lot of sense, held the card too long. Now if you play it Caesar knows you were holding.

    • @elevationsickness8462
      @elevationsickness8462 2 года назад +11

      He was probably just blacked out

  • @joemiller947
    @joemiller947 Год назад +254

    I like to think that Antony got so engrossed in his conversation with Caesar that he forgot about the conspiracy, and felt it would be super awkward to bring it up a few hours later and just didnt.

    • @DynastyLuminous46
      @DynastyLuminous46 11 месяцев назад +63

      One of the many problems with history is the near impossibility of attempting to take thigs such as "social anxiety" into account.

    • @dengernoodle4391
      @dengernoodle4391 10 месяцев назад +15

      “One more thing”

  • @valentinaaugustina
    @valentinaaugustina 4 года назад +3778

    Hopefully he has a long life ahead of him :) can’t wait to see rome finally conquer Parthia

  • @user-sr7jx5zs2z
    @user-sr7jx5zs2z 4 года назад +421

    That dude Aquila probably couldnt stand up because of his IRON BALLS.

    • @lkcdarzadix6216
      @lkcdarzadix6216 4 года назад +12

      So his iron balls couldn't take the republic back

  • @arcaeca783
    @arcaeca783 4 года назад +1118

    "When he himself in one of his triumphal processions rode past the benches of the tribunes, he was so incensed because a member of the college, Pontius Aquila by name, did not rise, that he cried: 'Come then, Aquila, take back the republic from me, you tribune'; and for several days he would not make a promise to any one without adding, 'That is, if Pontius Aquila will allow me.'"
    - Suetonius, _The Life of Julius Caesar_ , Chapter 78

    • @AtmoStk
      @AtmoStk 3 года назад +157

      Amused by drama queen Caesar

    • @abhaysastry6976
      @abhaysastry6976 2 года назад

      +

    • @karthikparameswaran7813
      @karthikparameswaran7813 2 года назад +34

      Thanks Arcaeca for citing from Suetonius's book, De Vita Caesarum. Otherwise even in Google, where I wished to read that same book, most pages of the book are missing.

    • @thiago292
      @thiago292 Год назад +16

      Tribune Aquila being like: L + Ratio + Didn't ask

    • @dengernoodle4391
      @dengernoodle4391 10 месяцев назад

      Big mad

  • @couchpotatoe91
    @couchpotatoe91 4 года назад +1650

    "Power doesn't corrupt, it reveals."

    • @NadDew
      @NadDew 4 года назад +67

      No I disagree
      People around the man (Cesar in this case) corrupt him
      So everyone can be corrupted
      The moment you start to believe someone can't be corrupted is the moment you gave him the listens to be corrupt

    • @fuzzydunlop7928
      @fuzzydunlop7928 4 года назад +239

      @@NadDew You've failed to prove your point, while the OP is quoting from an historian who - following a career spent writing biographies of powerful people - famously said "I used to believe that absolute power corrupts absolutely, but now I've come to believe that power doesn't necessarily corrupt - it reveals. When the man is able to do anything he wants to do, you'll see what it is he always wanted to do."
      I'll go with the seasoned professional biographer of powerful people on this one, no offense intended.

    • @JonatasAdoM
      @JonatasAdoM 4 года назад +16

      I prefer "absolute power corrupts absolutely"

    • @lordbiscuitthetossable5352
      @lordbiscuitthetossable5352 4 года назад +27

      I don't think that corruption is the only way for a human to be wielded out, as we are born ambitious and prepared to throw one another under the bus from birth to grave, the only distinct difference is that after we are children we learn to control that behaviour. The only limiter on that behaviour is personal power, people will conceal their true nature if they are incapable of otherwise acting on it.
      I mean the average workplace is a perfect example of this. We all know that two faced colleague that belittles everyone because at their core they are a spiteful human being, yet the moment they get into a management position they will exercise blatant favouritism and shut down people that they dislike. I've known family who have been screwed over for much less favourable candidates due to the person in the superior position being able to choose whom they surround themselves with.
      Ceasers qualities as a General also made him a Tyrant. He was a master of managing the battlefield and his choices, he kept his friend close to him to prevent him becoming a significant power rival and then proceeded to tackle becoming an Emperor by targeting politics in the same way he started war. He slowly fortified his position until he had everything he needed then attacked the political institution relentlessly. His main mistake was being unaware that these same subject would do something unlawful to end his regime.

    • @ilkkarautio2449
      @ilkkarautio2449 4 года назад +3

      Yeah, people dont change either. Some traits stay hidden and some surface when its suitable time. 🤔🤔🇦🇫

  • @martinguerra5152
    @martinguerra5152 4 года назад +1691

    Wait a second!!!!
    Was antony still naked when he tried to crown Caesar?????
    That image will never leave my mind

    • @Annatar_the_admirable
      @Annatar_the_admirable 4 года назад +492

      Little known fact: He tried to hand Caesar not only crown, but a big ol' scepter as well!

    • @assortedmunchies9281
      @assortedmunchies9281 4 года назад +202

      @@Annatar_the_admirable not just any scepter ;-)

    • @blacksympho
      @blacksympho 4 года назад +178

      @@assortedmunchies9281 ...but a meat scepter.

    • @mkb6418
      @mkb6418 4 года назад +171

      Actually nudity was somewhat common in festivals in ancient Greece and Rome.
      Men participated in any gymnastics activity nude. Also some famous women when publicly drunk drop off their cloths.

    • @mirceadonciu4983
      @mirceadonciu4983 4 года назад +365

      The reason the ,,coronation'' failed was because he didn't check with tribune Aquila first.

  • @histguy101
    @histguy101 4 года назад +627

    "Caesar pushed up against Rome's political system and found nothing pushing back"
    Well...if you don't count constant political opposition, and a worldwide civil war... Yeah, I guess so.

    • @lorenzooliveira1157
      @lorenzooliveira1157 3 года назад +57

      Well, he managed that from his expertise of the republic’s grand corruption and bureaucratic decay, he conquered and enslaved, and became super rich and influential, while the senators bickered about petty shenanigans, so he went, killed and stole and enslaved and got all sort of powers and no one was there to stop him in time

    • @histguy101
      @histguy101 3 года назад +59

      @@lorenzooliveira1157 Achieving political power, even in Republican Rome, ultimately derives from military power, and Caesar won all those civil wars. He had no major opposition only after he defeated his rivals on the battlefield. He defeated Afranius in Spain, Pompey in Greece, Ptolemy in Egypt, Cato in Africa, and Pompey's sons in Spain.
      He could not have amassed all his power without winning hard fought battlefield victories in a civil war that crossed the whole ancient world. It's not like he was just a politician and was able to manipulate the system easily to his advantage, he had a huge army, and had to fight for those powers.
      Augustus was much more snakelike, and able to slowly accumulate the same powers, but even he was only able to do so by being in control of almost all the legions, and was not against threatening the senate with armed soldiers.

    • @mike-gn1wi
      @mike-gn1wi 3 года назад +14

      Yes, but as he said, it was not necessary for Caesar to try to take more power for himself and destroy the Roman institutions after he had won, he did so because no one or nothing could have stopped him, including his own conscience. Sulla had marched on Rome before him but didn't try to destroy Roman politics forever, and Caesar didn't need to, he did because he was an egomaniac.

    • @booradley6832
      @booradley6832 3 года назад +6

      Before even 3 minutes in:
      >Triumph celebrating end of civil war
      >Caesars allies in control of senate giving him false triumphs
      Tell me again about the constant opposition, and that civil war?

    • @diegonatan6301
      @diegonatan6301 3 года назад +18

      ​@@booradley6832 Did you skip both the "His Year" and the "Caesar's Civil War" Series?

  • @duchessnoor
    @duchessnoor Год назад +196

    Fun fact about Tribune Aquila: Given that Pontius Aquila was attributed as a member of the Pontia gens, it’s possible that Aquila was an ancestor to another person of the same name: Pontius Pilate, the governor of Judaea and the one who supposedly overlooked the trial of and ordered the crucifixion of ya boi, Jesus.

    • @projectms205
      @projectms205 Год назад +80

      Did he get Tribune Aquila permission to do that?

    • @duchessnoor
      @duchessnoor Год назад +27

      @@projectms205 Unfortunately not 😤

    • @l-nolazck-rn24
      @l-nolazck-rn24 Год назад +19

      Damn, this feels like when I learned that Nabokov got traumatized because his father saved a Russian politician from Sergei 'Gaming' Taboritski's assassination attempt.
      Turns out he was in the crowd as a kid so yea.
      Nice fun fact, wonder if he asked his ancestor tribune Pontius Aquila for his permission lol

    • @ultra-papasmurf
      @ultra-papasmurf Год назад +8

      ​@@l-nolazck-rn24Taboritski being indirectly responsible for Lolita was a crazy earth plot twist

    • @Tonixxy
      @Tonixxy 11 месяцев назад

      Jews killed jesus

  • @michaelmcghee6594
    @michaelmcghee6594 4 года назад +1245

    *Historia civilis new Caesar video drops *
    Instantly stops what I'm doing and presses play

    • @garabic8688
      @garabic8688 4 года назад +7

      Michael McGhee yep, all the time

    • @Ultrasapien
      @Ultrasapien 4 года назад +4

      Same :)

    • @jesseberg3271
      @jesseberg3271 4 года назад +7

      I'll cut 23 minutes and 43 seconds off of my lunch hour to make up for it.

    • @Lucas-po6mn
      @Lucas-po6mn 4 года назад +6

      *instantly press like then play

    • @tibs7095
      @tibs7095 4 года назад +2

      Precisely.

  • @tribuneaquilla5648
    @tribuneaquilla5648 4 года назад +4449

    I do not approve

    • @sarahheikel
      @sarahheikel 4 года назад +117

      Wait how was this comment posted six days ago

    • @Martijn_M
      @Martijn_M 4 года назад +72

      Its probably CH himself posting it when it was private. Or just magic.

    • @smvictor123
      @smvictor123 4 года назад +187

      @@sarahheikel patreons have acces to the video some days early

    • @roguefactor2646
      @roguefactor2646 4 года назад +144

      Take back the republic then boi

    • @konstantinosnikolakakis8125
      @konstantinosnikolakakis8125 4 года назад +29

      Did you create that account just for the joke?

  • @captinobvious4705
    @captinobvious4705 4 года назад +187

    20:42
    I have honestly never seen a more befitting way to address Marc Antony

  • @thejojomonado3647
    @thejojomonado3647 4 года назад +218

    I love how you colour code each 'prominent' member of the story, it means that if you're diligent enough, you might notice a *familiar* colour at the table. Great video as always!

    • @TheRealRandomFandom
      @TheRealRandomFandom Месяц назад

      I came back to watch this years later and I saw that part and I was like
      *GASP*
      BRUTUS?!

  • @sulla1537
    @sulla1537 4 года назад +1640

    If you made full length documentaries I’d pay to watch boxes chase each other for volumes

    • @EloiFL
      @EloiFL 4 года назад +68

      Right? Why think outside th box if you can think in boxes?

    • @sulla1537
      @sulla1537 4 года назад +5

      Eloi Febrero lol

    • @hopkinsonhoppyxd8080
      @hopkinsonhoppyxd8080 4 года назад +9

      If you think about it, they are already mini-documentaries. Why not just cleverly edit them together?

    • @dragonh8174
      @dragonh8174 4 года назад +1

      Hopkinson HoppyXD you’re a genius

    • @hopkinsonhoppyxd8080
      @hopkinsonhoppyxd8080 4 года назад +2

      Harrison Mosburg i might do that and post it on a fake historia civilis channel. Call it something like “historia civilis fanpage” or something like that.

  • @garabic8688
    @garabic8688 4 года назад +861

    Can we do Augustus after Caesar, he is just as fascinating

    • @mirceadonciu4983
      @mirceadonciu4983 4 года назад +458

      We'll have to check with tribune Aquila first.

    • @2VeryIceyGaming
      @2VeryIceyGaming 4 года назад +53

      @@mirceadonciu4983 I think that tribune Aquila should have been emperor

    • @Wolfeson28
      @Wolfeson28 4 года назад +51

      I strongly suspect/hope that the series will continue with Octavian/Augustus' rise to power. There's so much intrigue and political maneuvering through that time period that it would be right in HC's wheelhouse. Plus, it will be interesting to eventually see him compare Augustus' methods for consolidating power with what Caesar did here.

    • @feynstein1004
      @feynstein1004 4 года назад +3

      Call him by his name, mate. Octavian.

    • @jesseberg3271
      @jesseberg3271 4 года назад +5

      I'd actually like to see us pick up another point in the timeline, even if only for a bit.
      Maybe the early Republic, or the conquest of Greece, which is never covered, only mentioned in hindsight.
      If we go on to Bricks McMarble, then we're basically set to follow the whole Dynasty, all the way to Burnie McFiddler. Now I want to see that rennacted with blocks, but it's not all I want to see rennacted with blocks. He can pick up where he left off later.
      For those of you who are interested, the other three are Disappointing McPedophile, Artist McLost's Shit, and Stutters McLonglife.

  • @MulToyVerse
    @MulToyVerse 3 года назад +523

    I wonder what happened to Caesar's "special golden chair" after his assassination. Was it destroyed or used by the emperors after Augustus took over?

    • @MrZiggy-sk2wg
      @MrZiggy-sk2wg 3 года назад +368

      my friend john has it

    • @jw4277
      @jw4277 3 года назад +201

      @@MrZiggy-sk2wg I offer you five bagels for the chair. Take it or leave it.

    • @annwilliams6438
      @annwilliams6438 2 года назад +105

      @@jw4277 Only if those bagels are baked by the Capitoline Brotherhood of Millers… ;)

    • @baccaismemebob2603
      @baccaismemebob2603 2 года назад +87

      @@annwilliams6438
      True Roman bread for true Romans.

    • @cmox1830
      @cmox1830 2 года назад +24

      It was probably eventually melted

  • @oliverzhang4938
    @oliverzhang4938 4 года назад +230

    8:38 And I remember long ago Historia said, "My boy Caeser wouldn't have done this," things have changed.

    • @axxization
      @axxization 4 года назад +11

      In video titled: The Battle of Cannae, but it was quoted wrong.

    • @lorisperfetto6021
      @lorisperfetto6021 3 года назад +1

      @@axxization yeah i agree with you

    • @nunyabisness7055
      @nunyabisness7055 2 года назад +1

      Character development!

    • @arawn1061
      @arawn1061 2 года назад +11

      The qoute was about Caesar as a general

  • @Valivali94
    @Valivali94 4 года назад +1255

    The "run around naked to whip girls" thing sound very much like Mark Anthony to me.

    • @vaughnyboy8
      @vaughnyboy8 4 года назад +100

      Especially with how Marc Antony is depicted in HBO Rome

    • @lukejones7164
      @lukejones7164 4 года назад +11

      @@vaughnyboy8 Hell yes

    • @Chirchy
      @Chirchy 4 года назад +7

      Did you mean Antony? You said Anthony.

    • @MrHerobrineHunters
      @MrHerobrineHunters 4 года назад +56

      @@Chirchy *Marcus Antonius

    • @Tetricus57
      @Tetricus57 4 года назад +15

      Octavian was actually more of a pervert than Antony, despite how both are typically portrayed.

  • @cartmann94
    @cartmann94 4 года назад +389

    Spurinna: Remember, Caesar, all glory is fleeting.
    Caesar: No
    Spurinna: *BEWARE THE IDES OF MARCH!!!*
    Caesar: No

    • @lambbone8302
      @lambbone8302 4 года назад +1

      cartmann94 Your profile picture fits this very well

    • @tastyloaf5487
      @tastyloaf5487 4 года назад +5

      *"Remove the girl!"*

    • @dylanchouinard6141
      @dylanchouinard6141 4 года назад +12

      I’m reminded of a line from History of the World Part 1:
      “Remember, thou art mortal! Remember, thou art mortal! Remember, thou art mortal!”
      “Oh, blow it out your ass!”

    • @DysnomiaFilms
      @DysnomiaFilms 4 года назад

      "I know you think you're happy now but it won't last forever!"
      "Everything lasts forever."

    • @mal2ksc
      @mal2ksc 4 года назад

      "Caesar pls go."
      "No."
      [Many stabbings later]
      Meet the new boss. Same as the old boss.

  • @rmk3155
    @rmk3155 4 года назад +86

    3:28 You would've thought that Caesar had learnt from his 4th Triumph.

    • @karthikparameswaran7813
      @karthikparameswaran7813 2 года назад +4

      No. He didn't. He publicly humiliated Aquilla and little did he realize that the same man, whom he humiliated was going to conspire against him. There is a video on Caesar's assassination posted by a channel "Kings And Generals". Watch that video. You'll hear the name "Aquilla" in the list of conspirators against Caesar. Caesar was arrogant and was seduced by glorification of his images. He abused the power of "Prefect of Morality" by punishing the two tribunes-Flavus and Marullus, whose names are mentioned at the beginning of William Shakespeare's Julius Caesar.

  • @squamish4244
    @squamish4244 4 года назад +31

    I think Caesar was testing the waters with the diadem incident too, because that would explain why Antony offered the diadem to him twice. If the crowd had booed when he pushed it away the first time, then Antony could offer it to him again, and this time Caesar would accept it. And if the crowd cheered like it did the first time, he would look good by rejecting it twice. The incident would be a win for Caesar either way.

  • @demonblood8841
    @demonblood8841 4 года назад +714

    Okay own up who watched this video without Aquillas permission?

    • @merrittanimation7721
      @merrittanimation7721 4 года назад +33

      I my defense I thought he would be fine with it.

    • @volcryndarkstar3283
      @volcryndarkstar3283 4 года назад +7

      He's been dead for more than ten years so I couldn't ask. It's what he would have wanted.

    • @julienducasse3986
      @julienducasse3986 4 года назад +4

      I live to live dangerously

    • @mini2239
      @mini2239 4 года назад +2

      I didn’t, I went to get his permission. Turned out he was quite nice.

    • @batavica1875
      @batavica1875 4 года назад +1

      Argh you got me!

  • @Jordan-pv9ey
    @Jordan-pv9ey 4 года назад +2574

    This video's public bread is provided by the Capitoline Brotherhood of Millers. The Brotherhood uses only the finest flour: true Roman bread for true Romans.

    • @luisvasquez5015
      @luisvasquez5015 4 года назад +110

      Is it true that Herod is visiting soon?

    • @ianirungu3659
      @ianirungu3659 4 года назад +132

      @@TheOriginalFishPond No slaves, freedmen or unclean tradesmen

    • @procrastinator99
      @procrastinator99 4 года назад +34

      Thanks, Newsreader!!

    • @b3ygghsas
      @b3ygghsas 4 года назад +52

      TRVEROMANBREADFORTRVEROMANS

    • @staalman1226
      @staalman1226 3 года назад +13

      @@b3ygghsas You forgot to randomly abbreviate words

  • @Sanches7557
    @Sanches7557 3 года назад +37

    7:15 - “Kinda look like a throne though”
    Caesar: What are you, Aquilla?

  • @Aravaganthus
    @Aravaganthus 4 года назад +410

    This video brought to you by Marcus Junius Brutus

    • @marcokite
      @marcokite 4 года назад +6

      hail Brutus and Cassius!

    • @carloss2595
      @carloss2595 4 года назад +45

      These Pompeian shills are out of control

    • @Ringlord7
      @Ringlord7 3 года назад +3

      But did he remember to ask Tribune Aquila first?

    • @05r41
      @05r41 3 года назад

      @@marcokite Brutus was useless

  • @wrinkle9917
    @wrinkle9917 4 года назад +1249

    This is a good video and all but you should check with Tribune Aquila first

  • @cleothehermetichermeticist8391
    @cleothehermetichermeticist8391 4 года назад +186

    “Caesar kept his clothes on.”
    Surprisingly.

  • @TheDarkRobloxian
    @TheDarkRobloxian 4 года назад +260

    16:16
    This is a 4d next level top-Caesar joke that I'm sad you kind of missed.
    The 'Rex' part you got down pat in the video, but what 'non Rex sum, sed Caesar' needs to work is the Latin pronunciation of Caesar (i.e. Kaesar). It's a little bit of a walk, but basically:
    Caesar was saying he was the _opposite_ of a king, here. The _furthest you could get_ from "Rex."
    Consider the pronunciation of Rex. How would 'rex' be pronounced, if you flipped it on its head and started with the 'x?' Well, we know that X makes the 'ks' sound in 'rex,' as in 'reks.' If you flip it around, then that becomes 'kser.' Since you have to stress the first consonant to pronounce the word properly, you can even write it 'keserr.'
    Keserr.
    Keser.
    Kaeser.
    Caesar.

    • @andrewdao24
      @andrewdao24 3 года назад +31

      Bruh

    • @tyty-xm8fw
      @tyty-xm8fw 3 года назад +4

      Dude......

    • @reschadakbari1593
      @reschadakbari1593 3 года назад +24

      That's probably why the terms Kaiser and Tsar/Czar originated from

    • @cageybee7221
      @cageybee7221 3 года назад +8

      @@reschadakbari1593 Tsar is slavic, Czar is magyar and sometimes south slavic. (the line between those two is far thinner than they will ever want to admit). they are not interchangeable but people often confuse them and use them as such.

    • @reschadakbari1593
      @reschadakbari1593 3 года назад +8

      @@cageybee7221 yes, but I'm just saying that the term Tsar/Czar derivated from that since the russians became the central hub for orthodox christianity after the byzantine empire fell

  • @paerarru
    @paerarru 3 года назад +258

    Proof that the Pomerium has magical powers: Caesar is a military genius outside, but turns into a sociopolitical moron when he crosses it.

    • @Eamonshort1
      @Eamonshort1 3 года назад +25

      GLad someone else agrees for someone who was considered a political genius/prodigy in his time, he kinda earned his death. he was really sloppy once the civil wars were over he should know better about flexing his power. His fuck you to The senatorial/consular delegation was outrageous. I honestly wonder if his cognition was being impacted as epilepsy can have many comorbid neurological condition: Or maybe he thinks he’s still fighting fractious Gauls because the thing with the diadem statue. and hes being presented a crown with all the caesarian plants and the prophecy are honestly really obvious it doesn’t feel like the same guy that set up the conference of Luca who out manourver the senate both politically and militarily

    • @palatasikuntheyoutubecomme2046
      @palatasikuntheyoutubecomme2046 3 года назад +14

      Not really, Caesar was a skilful administrator

    • @froobas
      @froobas 3 года назад +50

      @@Eamonshort1 To Caesar, a restoration of the monarchy (especially with him at the top) was probably the best solution he could think of to a system that was pretty broken immediately before, and during, his lifetime. He was, shall we say, intimately familiar with how broken the system was. As a result, he underestimated how attached to the idea of the Republic the Roman people, and his opponents especially, were.

    • @pedrocavalcantesantana7378
      @pedrocavalcantesantana7378 3 года назад +9

      @@froobas so basically, he signed his own death sentence was to egocentric to see it

    • @Nothing-ch3dw
      @Nothing-ch3dw 2 года назад +8

      @@pedrocavalcantesantana7378 He knew the risks. But had he not done what he had Rome would’ve ceased then and there. A sacrifice.

  • @ApocalexNow
    @ApocalexNow 4 года назад +225

    Hopefully the next video gets to the whole salad naming business. That's all I've been waiting for since 2017.

    • @kwehvox6263
      @kwehvox6263 4 года назад +1

      ApocalexNow wasn’t even named for any of the Caesars though.

    • @RBuckminsterFuller
      @RBuckminsterFuller 4 года назад +9

      @@kwehvox6263 Good sense of humor, bro.

    • @jamalsankey6402
      @jamalsankey6402 4 года назад +1

      Whoooosh

    • @MrBigCookieCrumble
      @MrBigCookieCrumble 4 года назад +1

      Finally someone who asks the REALLY important questions!!

  • @Apollo1989V
    @Apollo1989V 4 года назад +404

    I would argue that stability in the republic had not been a thing since Sulla.

    • @trippfields279
      @trippfields279 4 года назад +67

      Civilis is biased in favor of the system my dude

    • @franciscomm7675
      @franciscomm7675 4 года назад +21

      Sulla actions created a chain reaction

    • @pablolongobardi7240
      @pablolongobardi7240 4 года назад +71

      @Maintenance Renegade i don't think the welfare programs played a significant role here, the corruption of the elites and the lack of counterbalance to the amount of power a rich person could gather were the reasons

    • @CyrilleParis
      @CyrilleParis 4 года назад +25

      Even since Tiberius Gracchus...

    • @RmsOceanic
      @RmsOceanic 4 года назад +47

      Yeah, though the rot started long before then. Take the Second Punic War, encouraging the Senate to consolidate power to better direct the war, undermining the checks and balances of other institutions. Then with chastisement of Greece and Spain you have vast sources of wealth pouring into the Senate's pocket, causing destabilising wealth inequality. And then the final defeat of Carthage removed any major external threat to Rome's interests up until they started butting heads with Parthia, meaning there was little external reason for the nobility to set aside personal grudges. The Graachi and other reformers were a reaction to this gradual process of wealth and power consolidation, and on both sides the mos maiorum, the unspoken code of conduct in Roman society, were eroded as people sought power. This culminated in Marius and Sulla seizing power outright and from each other, and though Sulla tried to set things right, the rot of mos maiorum was left unaddressed. The institutions looked stable on the surface, but the first time others sought personal power after his death (Pompey and Crassus), there was little pushback. The rules could no longer be enforced, since they were all unspoken gentlemanly agreements. And from disregarding them, it didn't take much for actual laws to be disregarded, like that obscure technicality about crossing the Rubicon with an army.

  • @javihache8066
    @javihache8066 4 года назад +239

    19:53 Caesar to Antony: “A dun wah nit...”
    Was Caesar in reality Jon Snow?

    • @user-rr9ng9bo9l
      @user-rr9ng9bo9l 4 года назад +3

      nuh

    • @slow_ae2676
      @slow_ae2676 4 года назад +5

      Nah, i don't think Jon is power hungry like caesar

    • @DAS63
      @DAS63 4 года назад +11

      No, Caesar is Daenerys. Anthony, is Jon Snow.
      Anthony will be like: "You are my Queen!"

    • @gerardomunoz8306
      @gerardomunoz8306 4 года назад +2

      I don’t need it, I don’t need it....
      I NEED IT

    • @infidelheretic923
      @infidelheretic923 4 года назад +2

      There’s a sort of decorum around accepting a lofty mantel.
      You must feign modesty.
      They offer once, and you respond “What me? I’m so unworthy, I would never.”
      They offer it twice and you say “You have given me a great honor, but I dare not.”
      Then they offer it a third a time and finally you ‘reluctantly’ accept.

  • @GNRandSTP911
    @GNRandSTP911 3 года назад +28

    Honestly, I feel like Antony simply didn't tell Caesar because he stood nothing to lose. Either the conspiracy fizzled out or was otherwise averted and Antony gets a cushy job in the new administration or the conspiracy succeeded and Antony was poised to be the new top guy in Rome. It was pretty much a no-lose situation for Antony.

    • @oqo3310
      @oqo3310 5 месяцев назад +3

      Top guy in Rome ? When everyone hated him ?
      Hell no, Caesar was the only thing keeping him in a somewhat important position.

  • @harry68784
    @harry68784 4 года назад +85

    in short: Caesar came back from spain and started to wear a toga with "please stab me" written on it.

  • @andrewbellahcene2267
    @andrewbellahcene2267 4 года назад +238

    "The Roman Republic was plunging off a cliff and the vast majority of the political class didn't care."
    Times never change do they?

  • @ksmith4135
    @ksmith4135 4 года назад +45

    0:08 - 0:12 sounds like it's about to lead into a fascinating rap album

  • @brycenlanager1216
    @brycenlanager1216 4 года назад +20

    20:41 I can imagine Cicero being so fed up he would call Marc Antony an idiot.

  • @danwar2489
    @danwar2489 4 года назад +283

    I can't agree with the point made in 8:36 honestly. While sure, such is true in most *modern* democracies, that *definitely* wasn't the case in the Roman Republic, as Caesar had literally just defeated 1.5 civil wars when he started accumulating powers. The Roman Republic had had precedence for dictators taking absolute power - *Caesar had literally lived through one* - and the incidents involving the Gracchi brothers proved that the Roman Republic just wasn't as stable as any modern democracy. The Roman Republic was decaying rapidly, and looking at that decay and saying it was somehow more stable than the alternative is just a lie. Healthy political systems do not cause stability, but are rather a sign of such stability and other factors. By the time Caesar arrived on the political scene, those factors were long gone from Roman politics.

    • @khorps4756
      @khorps4756 4 года назад +22

      it's true in modern democracies *at the moment* , the fate of democracy is still sealed though, there's ~100 years before the West gets Caesarism

    • @DomenicoMigliorini
      @DomenicoMigliorini 4 года назад +5

      Totally agree!

    • @Retard634
      @Retard634 4 года назад +27

      id upboat this comment if not for the fact that you believe modern democracy is healthy by any sense of the word and not heading in the same direction as the roman republic
      lets just hope that we get a good emperor and not a total system collapse

    • @danwar2489
      @danwar2489 4 года назад +26

      @@Retard634 You say this when most modern, 'first world' democracies have not had a civil war or any sort of internal conflicts in at least a century, especially since after the end of the Cold War and the overthrow of Stalinism in the former Eastern Bloc. Modern democracy, while definitely not without flaw, is far less prone to collapsing into brutal violence and civil war than the Roman republic was by a long stretch, and absolute dictators akin to Sulla are far less likely to take power - for example, the United States, which despite its flaws has not had a civil war in over two centuries.

    • @khorps4756
      @khorps4756 4 года назад +26

      Danwar yes but it has to, we are on the same trend of the Roman Republic, a system dominated by money, by the interests of the corporate aristocrats, just because there is no civil war, does not mean there will not be one in the future. political violence is on the rise, the policies of many West European states has seen to a radical rise in crime and a widening of political divides, in America and Europe people are thrown by the wayside as the soldiers of democracy (really, the soldiers of the media and the corporations), march forward to their own ends. the Gracchi attempted to curb this, just as he does now and it led to even more violence and instability.
      the Roman Republic also by the time of the Gracchi had had no civil wars at all, if anything, the American Republic may be doing worse.

  • @siyasettarih2870
    @siyasettarih2870 4 года назад +266

    I will miss Labienus. Good night sweet prince!

    • @siyasettarih2870
      @siyasettarih2870 4 года назад

      @Alexander the Great ;')

    • @SimuLord
      @SimuLord 4 года назад +15

      You can tell the Historia Civilis fans by our opinion of Titus Labienus, who gets short shrift from just about everyone else in Roman history buff circles.

    • @Igor_lvanov
      @Igor_lvanov 4 года назад +6

      He was my favorite character throughout the series

    • @stefanosgrimp8990
      @stefanosgrimp8990 4 года назад +4

      He was ceasars final boss fight

    • @lilben4184
      @lilben4184 4 года назад +2

      Le Benis :DD

  • @Loki_K
    @Loki_K 2 года назад +181

    ​I really wish Caeser had done something different in his 5th Triumph. Imagine if instead of "Roman v Roman" defeat paintings, they showed:
    - Spanish trickery/sorcery influencing Laebedius
    - Caeser's legions rushing up Laebedius' last-stand hill to face fellow Roman soldiers, just in time to see Spanish soldiers stabbing Laebedius' Romans in the back (and the shocked face of those betrayed Romans)
    - And Caeser cradling Laebedius' body and burying it with full honours as previously-fighting Romans reunited and did the Roman equivalent of taking your hat off in respect.
    And during the entity of the Triumph parade route, Spanish silver was tossed out into the crowd, as if to say "See what was kept from you? I stopped the Spanish treachery which 'bewitched' your family members and took them away -- here are the riches that they hid from Rome. Now the pain is over, we are made whole again."
    And at the point when they normally executed the king of the conquered region, they killed the Spanish "sorcerers" who "caused" the civil war.
    In short Caeser just really needed a good PR person.

    • @joedatius
      @joedatius 2 года назад

      nah
      more child strangling says Caeser

    • @ActionBastardo
      @ActionBastardo Год назад +18

      Thank you, this was a really cool post.

    • @cweb9169
      @cweb9169 Год назад +28

      True but as has been exemplified I think, Caesar was very vain. Older men from my experience in general also become very vain as they age. I think his predilection for vanity got worse as he started getting up there. And in the case of the 5th Triumph he WANTED everyone to see what HE had done.
      He was good at selling stories but when it came to showing and telling fellow Romans who was in charge I think he couldn't help himself.
      As HC indicates it does appear like Caesar, for whatever reason, genuinely hated the Republican government and perhaps even it's society. To an extent.

    • @sigmus1475
      @sigmus1475 Год назад +14

      Perhaps if Caeser had added a theme of mourning to his triumph it would have been better received.
      Like for instance he and his troops could have worn mourning colors such as black.
      or
      He could have had scenes depicting brave actions on both sides that were taken during the Battle of Munda but with with a feeling of sadness clearly shown.
      Caeser could have made the triumph about celebrating his victory and the end of the Civil War but also regret that countrymen had shed each other's blood.

    • @Loki_K
      @Loki_K Год назад +9

      @@sigmus1475 Ooh, I like this, especially if our two concepts are combined. Imagine if Laebedius had been given an honourable funeral pyre where he died (and this was one of the depicted scenes in the Triumph, right after the scene of "no longer bewitched" Romans reuniting), then his ashes were brought back to Rome and included in the Triumph. Then the urn of his ashes rode next to Caeser in the chariot of greatest honour, maybe even cloaked in purple and - unlike his other Triumphs - Caeser wore a cape striped purple AND black, showing both his military prowess but also his sorrow for Roman citizen death. The Triumph could have been a blend of Triumph rituals and funeral rituals: Noble Roman's funerals had slaves fight because their blood appeased the gods, so maybe this "Triumph-funeral" would have the Spanish slaves battle to the death in various places, such as in front of appropriate temples, maybe Laebedius' home (?), and so on, all in honour of the "bewitched" Romans who had lost their lives thanks to "Spanish sorcery". Combine that with the Spanish silver tossed to crowds, maybe some kneeling to Jupiter and gifting silver to prominent widows, etc., and it could've been Caesar's most incredible Triumph, instead of his dumbest.

  • @Condobius
    @Condobius 2 года назад +61

    Would be interested to hear Historian Civilis’ opinion on a very recent book that came out called “Julius Caesar and the Roman People” by Morstein-Marx. Basically seeks to dispute or debunk all of the claims that Caesar was a vicious autocrat seeking kingship, that the Civil War can be framed as “Caesar vs the Republic”, and that he was any different from the usual Late Republican Roman aristocrat seeking fame and glory. It’s incredibly well sourced, pretty damn academic, but ultimately. covers just about every scene in Caesar’s career in good detail.
    Long book, but definitely thought provoking and I recommend it.

    • @Proph3t3N
      @Proph3t3N Год назад

      Kinda late reply, but I'm rewatching this video years later after I turned it off ,because of obvious bias. I really do not understand this whole hatefull narration on Ceasar. Especially when we are comparing him to corrupt, inept and selfcentred ruling class of senate. Neither of those man had "Republic values" in mind (w.e they were at this glorious time in Roman history...), they only cared about keeping their power and influence. They literally forced him into going to war. What do you think would happen, if he let them strip himself off his immunity? 100% they would at best banish him and not even acknowledge his insane conquest of Gaul, at worst execute on place, because he was way too powerfull for their likings... Ironically it's literally what emperors did later down the line with any competent general, that was resourcefull and competent enough to win wars. Thats being said - all of his videos ,despite bias that I do not agree with are very good watch and I enjoy them nontheless. Just my opinion on the whole Ceasar - most evil person in Roman history "that caused countless deaths by his actions".

  • @adamhoward7277
    @adamhoward7277 4 года назад +337

    *Battle of Munda video comes out*
    Me: Ooh boy I can't wait for the next video which will *def* be about Caesar's assassination!
    2 months later:

    • @viviansventures
      @viviansventures 4 года назад +58

      It's gonna happen
      The end of the main arc on this channel for the last 2 and a half years

    • @panzerofthelake506
      @panzerofthelake506 4 года назад +37

      STOP *SPOILING IT FOR THE REST OF US!!*

    • @cartmann94
      @cartmann94 4 года назад +83

      Next Historia Civilis video: What were the Ides of March?

    • @panzerofthelake506
      @panzerofthelake506 4 года назад +9

      @@cartmann94 it's when our boy invades the parthians

    • @ultra-papasmurf
      @ultra-papasmurf 4 года назад +4

      Lil pizza boy eats up parthia

  • @davidchristie8789
    @davidchristie8789 4 года назад +1907

    Please say you're considering doing Octavian/Augustus after Caesar?

    • @phnexOice
      @phnexOice 4 года назад +173

      If it ends at some point it will likely be when Octavian becomes Augustus, he then might do other parts of Roman history or maybe go back to Alexander the Great

    • @chaosdwarf406
      @chaosdwarf406 4 года назад +184

      @@phnexOice No, better cover all of Augustus' reign. And more!

    • @bop1886
      @bop1886 4 года назад +65

      why wouldnt he, easy content for a looong time

    • @ATJ253
      @ATJ253 4 года назад +8

      @@chaosdwarf406 XD love ur passion

    • @BakerWase
      @BakerWase 4 года назад +29

      @@ATJ253 I'd like to see Mason cover the entire Julio-Claudian Dynasty tbh :P

  • @HolyKhaaaaan
    @HolyKhaaaaan 2 года назад +61

    One of the strengths of Historia Civilis is that he's willing more or less to produce the facts of History, at least so I gather, in a dramatic and interesting way. (Though I wish he would cite his sources.)
    The other good strength of this channel is that it's a primer on historical bias. HC often and prominently points out Caesar's own self-importance, and how that might be embellishing his autobiography. He does it so often that, if you listen carefully to him, you will notice HC very clearly has his own biases, and he is not ashamed of them. But he tells the story first, most of the time, and only then draws his own conclusions (or invite you to draw your own if he has none).
    My point being, he is prominent both in his bias and in the facts, and he doesn't let one get in the way of the other. I wish more authors presented their biases and were aware that they have them.

    • @kieslar0835
      @kieslar0835 Год назад +1

      The sources haven’t changed for 1000s of years 😂😂😂

    • @kingofcards9516
      @kingofcards9516 Год назад +7

      Meh, his blatant biases can be very annoying and not needed.

    • @HogBurger
      @HogBurger 4 месяца назад

      sources are in the description

  • @WorthlessWinner
    @WorthlessWinner 4 года назад +229

    9:00 it's not like rome hadn't been going through civil wars on and off for about a century before this point. Ceaser can't be blamed for the bloodshed. If anything, the monarchy he founded temporarily restored some stability.

    • @benlalammohamedrachid3112
      @benlalammohamedrachid3112 4 года назад +37

      The monarchy eventually ruined rome, a series of incompetent and unstable emperors such as Nero weakened the empire greatly and caused disasters, betting the stability of an entire empire on the mental stability and competence of ONE human being is a terrible idea.
      Democracy is always better then monarchy, even fake democracy is better.

    • @MaRaX93
      @MaRaX93 4 года назад +50

      @@whenyournameisduoduos1282 There was no democracy in the Republic. And Rome definitely didn't fall due to a single emperor. Monarchy in some form still survives today after all

    • @AmariFukui
      @AmariFukui 3 года назад +47

      The "five good emperors" followed in the wake of those inept rulers, The pax romana lasted 2 centuries following Augustus
      Bad as it was, the lare republics replacement with the Empire did bring stability and prosperity for a time

    • @cageybee7221
      @cageybee7221 3 года назад +32

      @@benlalammohamedrachid3112 rome was not nor was it ever a democracy. it was a republic in the ancient meaning. in otherwords it was a system where the rich and powerful used elections rather than wars to decide who ran it. they even had plato's beloved institutionalised class system.

    • @henrylansing9734
      @henrylansing9734 3 года назад +6

      @@benlalammohamedrachid3112 🤮 major cringe

  • @WarriorWildhead1337
    @WarriorWildhead1337 4 года назад +248

    >Historia Civilis outro music changes key
    We're in the endgame now.

    • @oswaldgevaldenheimer3124
      @oswaldgevaldenheimer3124 4 года назад +10

      >I noticed that too.

    • @donaltron2246
      @donaltron2246 4 года назад

      @@oswaldgevaldenheimer3124 that's not how you greentext buddy

    • @rayhoodoo847
      @rayhoodoo847 4 года назад +1

      I remember first time I watched this video I thought I was just way too high and was imagining the key change

  • @Alpha1200
    @Alpha1200 4 года назад +255

    7:15 - "Kinda looks like a throne though..." Love it. Those little text balloon jokes are always the best.

    • @goonerbear8659
      @goonerbear8659 3 года назад +12

      Special Golden Chair. Totally different from a throne. Totally.

    • @JonatasAdoM
      @JonatasAdoM 2 года назад +1

      @@goonerbear8659 Don't forget the civic -crown- I mean leaf thingy.

  • @Cybermat47
    @Cybermat47 2 года назад +6

    Caesar: >gets fucking murdered<
    Also Caesar: ‘i HoPe TriBuNe AqUiLa DoEsN’t MiNd iF I blEeD oUt!’

  • @Baggereeno
    @Baggereeno 4 года назад +37

    I think it's interesting to point out how in your Pontifex Maximus video, you mentioned how the Pontifex Maximus can fine anyone in the senate if they displayed bad public morals or for whatever they deem appropriate
    In my opinion, the whole "Prefect of Morality" title is just an extension of that power that he already had

  • @declanandrewbell
    @declanandrewbell 4 года назад +175

    oh man that outro music is getting pretty intense

    • @macrossMX
      @macrossMX 4 года назад +12

      Ominous foreshadowing. Who am I kidding, we all know how this will end up, but let us all wait in anticipation for the grand finale of Caesar's career.

    • @rebelli65
      @rebelli65 4 года назад +7

      It freaking scared the politics out of me

    • @M_Chen333
      @M_Chen333 4 года назад +5

      Yeah, I think its pitch was actually lowered.

    • @kogayoshi1
      @kogayoshi1 4 года назад

      Mewtwo but garfield, garfield but mewtwo.

  • @ze_rubenator
    @ze_rubenator 4 года назад +140

    "Transformed [Caesar] into a monarch in all but name."
    Which is funny, since Caesar since became synonymous with monarch, and gave us both the words Keiser/Kaiser and Tsar.

    • @MrRobbi373
      @MrRobbi373 4 года назад +43

      Funny thing is, at least in German, that Kaiser is generally seen as above mere Könige/Kings.

    • @ze_rubenator
      @ze_rubenator 4 года назад +15

      @@MrRobbi373 Indeed.Same as Emperor it implies Empire, which means conquering different cultures.

    • @guyanon
      @guyanon 4 года назад +6

      @@MrRobbi373 Auch im Russischen ist das genau so. Царь ist Tsar und Кароль ist König und Tsar ist viel mehr als nur ein König.

    • @MrBigCookieCrumble
      @MrBigCookieCrumble 4 года назад +5

      In Swedish (wich is heavily influenced by german) we say Kejsare (emperor), pronounced as "Shei-sa-re" (pronounced rather quickly).

    • @plebisMaximus
      @plebisMaximus 4 года назад +7

      @@MrBigCookieCrumble All scandinavian languages have derived our word for "Emperor" from Caesar's name. In danish it's Kejser, pronounced exactly like the german Kaiser.

  • @OttomanDrifter91
    @OttomanDrifter91 4 года назад +28

    18:20 '... the whole thing was stupid fun.'
    -Historia Civilis 2019

  • @Igor_servant_of_Philemon
    @Igor_servant_of_Philemon 2 года назад +56

    Fun fact: Caesar is the reason why in germany, the monarch that is even above a king was called "Kaiser", which is pronounced almost exactly as "caesar" in latin. His shinanigans literally shaped the understanding of monarchy until over 2000 yesrs after his death

    • @toreadoress
      @toreadoress Год назад +11

      Not only with Germany, the title Tzar also literally comes from Caesar as well in some Slavic medieval countries like the rulers of Bulgaria from 900s (Simeon I), later in Serbia from mid 1300s (Stefan Dusan) and then on Russia officially with Ivan the Terrible in thr 1500s.
      So Caesar had a huge influence over how his name will be used as a title for 2000 years in Europe and being associated to emperor. What's ironic is that the 1st Tzar was named Simeon I and the last Tzar who bears the title tzar is Simeon II (and will probably die with him) who went into exile when the Soviets took power in Bulgaria. Then Simeon II became a prime minister of Bulgaria in early 2000s and his political party was literally named "National Movement Tzar Simeon II
      So even today there is an actual person who technically bears the title of "Caesar" even if it's only ceremonial currently but was still a political power. This is how much influence Caesar had.

  • @thehobowizard
    @thehobowizard 4 года назад +191

    "You can go on pretending to be a god"
    "Who said anything about pretending?"
    This was the time period where Caesar alienated almost everyone he could. While in the past he was gracious in victory letting his enemies live, now he insisted on endlessly flaunting his victory on the defeated. The problem is he left them alive, which ensures his enemies were never truly completely defeated.

    • @geordiejones5618
      @geordiejones5618 2 года назад +26

      Caesar tried to rule as a conquering ruler but without Sulla or Marius's brutality. He grew up during the proscriptions and was genuinely fond of many of those who took up arms against him. And I think Caesar understood that, and to some degree knew his position was always going to be tenuous, hence the Parthiam campaign. If he had his way he woud have gone on campaigning in Germany, Spain and the Eurasian steppe for a decade until he either lost or beat everyone worth fighting, which might have been ruinous in terms of future adminsitration but it also might have allowed the Senate to exercise some soft power and find an exit like a deal for Caesar to retire in return for immunity or something.

    • @infidelheretic923
      @infidelheretic923 2 года назад +19

      You’re exactly right.
      Caesar defeated several foreign enemies of Rome, reformed the nation, satisfied the military, and made himself popular with the people.
      But he humiliated and pissed off Rome’s political class without simply killing them as many other dictators would have.
      Thus sowing the seeds of his downfall.
      But had the assassination attempt failed, it might have led to a shift in attitude.

  • @danib577
    @danib577 4 года назад +169

    The next video is going to be an absolute unit of an episode, no doubt.

    • @viviansventures
      @viviansventures 4 года назад +27

      It's gonna happen
      The end of the main arc on this channel for the last 2 and a half years

    • @JjackVideo
      @JjackVideo 4 года назад +24

      Nah dude, I think this Ceasar guy have a long and succesful story ahead of him.

    • @LPyourplay
      @LPyourplay 4 года назад +15

      Yeah, I'm looking forward to "Can Plants Commit Crimes?"

    • @siechamontillado
      @siechamontillado 4 года назад +2

      You could say that the next video will be a cohort. A praetorian cohort...

    • @paranoidandroid6095
      @paranoidandroid6095 4 года назад +3

      @Flavius Stilicho senate killed the salad

  • @megantrainorvevo9242
    @megantrainorvevo9242 4 года назад +858

    Historia, I can't believe you would spew such propaganda against our rightful Emporer, shame! shame on the house of Civilis, shame!

    • @zhouwu
      @zhouwu 4 года назад +36

      I'm pretty sure Historia Civilis just means "History of the People" or "Popular History" as opposed to academic history. So you're pretty much cursing yourself, one is the 'people'.

    • @megantrainorvevo9242
      @megantrainorvevo9242 4 года назад +54

      @@zhouwu Haha, nice. I just played myself.

    • @zhouwu
      @zhouwu 4 года назад +7

      @@megantrainorvevo9242 It's ok, happens to the best of us. :)

    • @zachdelozier2133
      @zachdelozier2133 4 года назад +7

      @@zhouwu Considering this was all basically just opinionated drivel it certainly wasn't anything historical.

    • @zhouwu
      @zhouwu 4 года назад +34

      @@zachdelozier2133 what on earth do you think 'history' is? His story, my story, the other fellow's story. History is basically just the official set of opinions. That's what it's always been. The 'history' of most ancient civilisations: Egyptian, Assyrian, Babylonian, Persian etc is just pure propaganda. Herodotus came along and made it a sociological/anthropological exercise. Then Thucydides came along and made it a polemical exercise. Which is basically what it has since remained in the Western academic world. So I don't know what you expect. With any grand narratives, the author is forced to fill in the gaps somehow.
      Otherwise, all you get is: "Julius Caesar wrote: Veni, vidi, vici" to the senate. It was carbon dated 100bc to 100 ad. Evidence shows there was a battle around the Pontus area around a similar period. There may have been a correlation between the two. But correlation does not equal causation.
      I mean, if that's what you prefer, the university department of archaeology would gladly welcome you, I'm sure. You're kind of wasting your time on RUclips, especially in the comments section.

  • @stephenwest6738
    @stephenwest6738 Год назад +17

    It's honestly difficult for modern people to imagine the fear, adoration, rage, power, influence, and fame that Julius Caesar had. He was so influential that his name became a stand in for emperor. He, in many ways, established how the powerful were to act and wield it. He might be the third most influential human in history behind Christ and Mohammed.

    • @eutropius2699
      @eutropius2699 Год назад +2

      He is by far one of the most important people in history. His influence changed Europe forever. I would argue that Christ and Mohammed were more influential but not in the same way as Caesar.

    • @napoleonbuonaparte8975
      @napoleonbuonaparte8975 7 месяцев назад

      I think you're downplaying a not so little guy that was born in a Mediterranean french/italian isle in the XVIII century.

    • @zxylo786
      @zxylo786 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@napoleonbuonaparte8975The midget? Nah, he was basically irrelevant. Conquered a few countries and then got everything he did stripped from him. The things in his rule weren't even his.

    • @stephenwest6738
      @stephenwest6738 4 месяца назад

      ​@@eutropius2699I've always liked to imagine what the interaction would be like between massively consequential historical figures. Jesus and Gandhi, Alexander the Great and Napoleon. Mohammed and Genghis Kahn, Shakespeare and Dickens, Michelangelo and Picasso, Isaac Newton and Darwin, Lincoln and Churchill, Einstein and Geothe, Julius Cesar and Cesar Augustus. It's fun to imagine these larger than life figureheads sharing and learning from each other, but it's a pipe dream. Except the last one. It's not theoretical. They didn't just speak, but had a father son type relationship. It's absolutely insane to think about

    • @tomasrocha6139
      @tomasrocha6139 5 дней назад

      That was thanks Augustus, Julius Caesar did not succeed

  • @mhug162
    @mhug162 4 года назад +147

    I'm not sure where HC is getting the idea that the late Republic was politically healthy. Sulla and Marius, Catiline and Clodius had shown that it absolutely was not.

    • @theswedishdude1
      @theswedishdude1 4 года назад +69

      yea honestly i think his hatred for Caesar is blinding him from seeing how corrupt and decayed the Roman Republic truly was. it was just an Oligarchy filled with corrupt elites Masquerading as a republic.

    • @trippfields279
      @trippfields279 4 года назад +25

      @@theswedishdude1
      I mean what do you expect from a Cato fanboy tbh

    • @ZeDawgear
      @ZeDawgear 4 года назад +23

      Too be fair, the Republic lasted hundreds of years before it decayed to the point of collapse. It had a pretty good run, as far as large, vaguely democratic bureaucracies go.

    • @franciscomm7675
      @franciscomm7675 4 года назад +6

      @@theswedishdude1 he is not blind. Watch his video about pompey. It shows how rules are being ignored and corruption has taken over

    • @42Aqualung
      @42Aqualung 4 года назад +45

      @@franciscomm7675 yeah, this video was somewhat odd, he usually shows a pretty unbiased picture. I can undestand his criticism of Caesar, but in this episode it was uncharacteristically vicious. He could have criticised him without distorting the opposition and the republic to such an extent.

  • @1984Phalanx
    @1984Phalanx 4 года назад +138

    Your videos are the very best on youtube, Tribune Aquila said so.

  • @AvaTheFaeva
    @AvaTheFaeva 4 года назад +10

    Am I the only one who (after having watched it all the way through once) listens to these videos to fall asleep to because that voice is just soothing? ^-^

  • @markbarker2799
    @markbarker2799 3 года назад +7

    Over the last 2000 years Julius Caesars last words have been hotly debated but as the leading expert in Roman history I've come here to say that they were, in fact, "Et tu, Tribune Aquila?"

  • @jonathanredacted3245
    @jonathanredacted3245 4 года назад +241

    I wouldn't necessarily call Roman politics stable, considering all the servile wars and civil wars that occured before Caesar had even become a big name in politics

    • @zach3318
      @zach3318 4 года назад +8

      Jonathan Simms best show on ice for a couple thousand years lol

    • @khorps4756
      @khorps4756 4 года назад +4

      plus the social war

    • @jonathanredacted3245
      @jonathanredacted3245 4 года назад +31

      @Lord Voldemort that was a feature of the highly aristocratic and militaristic republic though, not a bug

    • @seangannon6005
      @seangannon6005 4 года назад +3

      Not to mention how impossible it was becoming to change anything with the mountains of bureaucracy.

    • @Wolfeson28
      @Wolfeson28 4 года назад +16

      Ya, kind of a switch from "Rome's politics were broken." to "Warts and all, the Roman Republic was a mostly healthy political system."

  • @drifty_grifty
    @drifty_grifty 4 года назад +551

    The Roman Republic was dead before Caesar it was merely a question of who would issue a final blow. It effectively died with the dictatorship of Sulla but Pompey could just have easily have seized power on his return from the East.

    • @SuperNintendawg
      @SuperNintendawg 4 года назад +24

      This is kind of deterministic, don't you think? Even if you're right, the way things shook out could/ would have been extremely different.

    • @yungtoolshed251
      @yungtoolshed251 4 года назад +77

      Sam C. S. The Roman government seemed like it was too focused on politics and ego and not on governing the territory of Rome. Caesar merely exploited the ineptitude of the senate and the instability of the times to put himself in a position to govern the republic directly and satisfy his own egomaniacal desires.
      The same pattern played out in China during the 3 kingdoms period as well
      We can see the same trend more or less in the present with the way most politicians and “leaders” tend to focus on the popularity aspect of the office and not the governing aspect of their job.

    • @VasilyKiryanov
      @VasilyKiryanov 4 года назад +21

      @@SuperNintendawg NOPE, they couldn't. Remember Octavius and Antony. They pulled the same trick yet again, and in no time! Had the Republic been strong and healthy - this would not have happened.

    • @alex_zetsu
      @alex_zetsu 4 года назад +38

      Cicero, Domitius, and Brutus thought with Pompey's "inevitable" victory (remember after Cesar's legions were lost in Africa Pompey was clearly winning the recruitment game), Rome would also be a military dictatorship in all but name. They hoped they could restore normality after him since it should be easier to pick up the pieces after a dictatorship nominally supported by the Senate. A big problem the Roman Republic had was that the citizen-militia of the pre-Punic Wars era was inadequate, but the Senate never wanted to pay for enough legions (the previous governor of Illyricum before Caesar had to pay for 3/4 of his men), so Roman generals ended up personally paying for the bulk of the salaries.

    • @Joe-cc9it
      @Joe-cc9it 4 года назад +38

      @@SuperNintendawg I must say, multiple forceful dictatorships in the space of about 5 decades, tyranny, massacres etc etc. The Republic was sickly and flawed, Sulla had shown that. A nation that is capable of the blood civil wars at the frequency it was seen in the Republic is inevitably going to fall.

  • @andychap6283
    @andychap6283 4 года назад +131

    Videos great as usual but I can't see how the Republic was in any way a healthy political system in the 1st Century BC. At least 1 Tribune was assassinated every decade from 100 BC onwards and there were several times armies marched on Rome. The most notable being Sulla's that tried to completely revamp the political system by abolishing the Tribunate which was the predominant way Plebeians could influence government. Add to that plots like the Catiline Conspiracy, the rebellion of the Italian allies in 91BC, the now frequent political violence between different factions and the Republic and the Republic is anything but healthy.

    • @NightWanderer31415
      @NightWanderer31415 5 месяцев назад

      Yes but for the time it was as good a system as you could get.

    • @laisphinto6372
      @laisphinto6372 4 месяца назад

      Not really Caesar wasnt the First dictator for Life IT was sulla and He used that Power to try to restore it and IT failed 5 minutes after He died

  • @oshixxxx
    @oshixxxx 4 года назад +2

    Just have to thank you for these videos about Rome in general. Have read many books about the romans but none of them have ever been this detailed about the events. Will recommend all your videos to any fellow roman history fanatic I come across.

  • @ClydeC
    @ClydeC 4 года назад +62

    19:43
    *_"You all did see that on the Lupercal I thrice presented him a kingly crown, which he did thrice refused. Was this ambition? Yet Brutus says he was ambitious, and sure he is an honourable man."_*

    • @dohnjoe4100
      @dohnjoe4100 4 года назад +1

      It is pretty neat how accurate that play is, if that's what you're trying to say.

    • @ethanalspencer7294
      @ethanalspencer7294 4 года назад +1

      Old Bill's subtle and eloquent prose is wasted on an all-the-likely dullard like Antony.

    • @rin_etoware_2989
      @rin_etoware_2989 4 года назад

      You all did see that totally-not-staged-thing I did on the Lupercal lmao

    • @WaterShowsProd
      @WaterShowsProd 4 года назад

      I was thinking of an earlier scene in the play where the event has just taken place and is being recounted. I don’t remember them mentioning Antony being naked and whipping women. Damned Elizabethan censorship!

    • @JAClary
      @JAClary 3 года назад

      @@WaterShowsProd To be fair, the play compressed the offering of the crown into the Triumphant (do you know strew flowers in the way of the man who comes in conquest over Pompei's blood?)

  • @Dictator1999
    @Dictator1999 4 года назад +59

    You all did see that on the Lupercal
    I thrice presented him a kingly crown,
    Which he did thrice refuse: was this ambition?
    Yet Brutus says he was ambitious;
    And, sure, he is an honourable man.

    • @wertin200
      @wertin200 4 года назад +3

      Nice quote

    • @Dayvit78
      @Dayvit78 4 года назад +6

      I had to memorize this speech in my high school English class

    • @HOLY_BATH
      @HOLY_BATH 4 года назад +2

      Dayvit78 me too brother

  • @elenatroiae
    @elenatroiae 4 года назад +3

    what i love about your series is that you go so indepth that its obvious to see the drama of caesars life that cant be adequately taught in classrooms without spending time on the culture and history of rome. its the way this story is meant to be told

  • @stephenperretti8847
    @stephenperretti8847 3 года назад +1

    Gee, this is so very excellent.
    Lots of detail offered in small pieces.
    Very good.
    Thank you.
    I'm looking forward to watching all of your videos.

  • @sihtnaelkk2187
    @sihtnaelkk2187 4 года назад +33

    PLEASE, please make videos about:
    1) The Kings' Era
    2) The Early Republic
    3) The Early Empire (Augustus etc)
    4) The Five Good Emperors
    Exactly the way you have been doing it for the last years of the Republic. Discussing the politics, battles, thoughts of the protagonists etc. I CAN'T WAIT to see what your next topic will be after the Ides of March..

    • @srujamdave2139
      @srujamdave2139 4 года назад

      also crisis of the third century

    • @sihtnaelkk2187
      @sihtnaelkk2187 4 года назад

      @phoenixkhost The Early Republic in general :)

    • @sihtnaelkk2187
      @sihtnaelkk2187 4 года назад +1

      @@srujamdave2139 I believe that he should work with a timeline. The Regal Era, the Early Republic and Early Empire (all of Pax Romana) is something he hasn't touched yet. So they must come first, and the Crisis follows then :)
      He has covered PERFECTLY the Late Republic, and I would love to see him covering the rest 😍😍

    • @sihtnaelkk2187
      @sihtnaelkk2187 4 года назад

      @Esme Moore Yes, and perhaps even earlier than that.. But from Marius on, it was inevitable

  • @Halinspark
    @Halinspark 4 года назад +45

    Even if rejecting the diadem was a performative act, you can't reasonably expect me to believe Caesar wouldn't have accepted it if the crowd had approved instead.

  • @DanielSanchez-it1ki
    @DanielSanchez-it1ki 4 года назад +3

    Man, you are the best! Somehow you get to make all these stories even more interesting than they are by themselves! Nice work!

  • @iassenlazarov4421
    @iassenlazarov4421 4 года назад +3

    The efforts and quality behind this channel are amazing... You won a new subscriber!

  • @LuisAldamiz
    @LuisAldamiz 4 года назад +55

    15:30 - But Caesar was higher rank than consuls: only one office was higher than consuls: dictator, and that was Caesar. It may still have been unpolite but it wasn't just his opinion, but a legal fact.

    • @williambellmer6754
      @williambellmer6754 4 года назад +7

      It was multiple members of the Senate, which had a nonlinear effect to the rudeness of the gresture

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz 4 года назад +8

      @@williambellmer6754 - Fair enough. I know it was rude and intentionally so, arrogant stand on Caesar's part, but he still actually outranked the consuls.

    • @AndrewAshling
      @AndrewAshling 4 года назад +14

      @@LuisAldamiz "Fair enough. I know it was rude and intentionally so, arrogant stand on Caesar's part, but he still actually outranked the consuls."
      He did, but he also realized he had been rude and dangerously so. He went after the senators and apologized profusely, blaming his rudeness on being extremely tired.

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz 4 года назад +9

      @@AndrewAshling - Well, that's a bit that was not mentioned in the video, which was maybe somewhat slanted against Caesar and in favor of the oligarchic republic.

    • @zachdelozier2133
      @zachdelozier2133 4 года назад +1

      @@LuisAldamiz
      The guy has a chip for Caesar

  • @kwehvox6263
    @kwehvox6263 4 года назад +52

    My thought was Antony didn’t tell Caesar about the conspiracy because Caesar would then know that Antony knew of the plot and didn’t tell him immediately - if he told him after they rekindled their friendship, the first thing Caesar would’ve thought was “why didn’t you tell me the second you knew”

    • @LEGENDS3564
      @LEGENDS3564 4 года назад +11

      Or Antony wanted to get as much from Caesar as possible before Caesar's eventual assassination where he could be prime to take over.

    • @secretarias2504
      @secretarias2504 4 года назад +9

      Caesar could also wonder why they thought Antony would accept their plot.

    • @volimNestea
      @volimNestea 4 года назад +2

      Exactly as Myra said. If Antony had told Caesar, C. would have (justifiably) been worried about Antony's potential future involvement in a conspiracy against him. And in such a situation, Caesar would probably take steps to ensure that it doesn't come to that. In other words, Antony could get exiled or even killed. So not mentioning this to Caesar really is a no brainer.

    • @Ceilingcat9001
      @Ceilingcat9001 4 года назад +1

      no, what if the attempt failed? wouldnt he know that Antony knew then? I think he was just dumb and talked about the weather, Gods, and women... and in those days men... then went about his way. No cell phones then you see.

  • @nihilsinedeonihilsinedeo3137
    @nihilsinedeonihilsinedeo3137 4 года назад +2

    Mate I can`t help but rewatch all of your videos , very high quality and I thank you for also teaching me history and making such adictive videos.Good job!

  • @thomasroutt380
    @thomasroutt380 3 года назад +10

    Whenever I think of Caesar I think of a red square rather than a person. I think it’s great

  • @krimzonstriker7534
    @krimzonstriker7534 4 года назад +139

    Meh, I disagree Caesar would have seen instability in his move, quite the opposite really. I agree more with Overly Sarcastic Productions instead that the Republic was too overstretched as it was to maintain the same system that it had, mainly due to the gridlock and political stagnation. Had they actually moved to solve problems and issues there would have been no void for Caesar to fill.

    • @jeremycole2164
      @jeremycole2164 4 года назад +34

      I would agree too, if anything ceaser brought about the road to a more stable Roman state. Aiding the way from a republic to an empire. And he grew the state, you can't forgot to mention the conquests and political alliances he formed.
      The only way to criticize ceaser is that he lead to Octavian fearing people grabbing his power and leading to him incentivizing everything leading to stagnation. You could even blame Ceasar for grabbing for power earlier and letting Octavian become the first emperor instead.
      If anything the fall of Rome was from hands of the very people how thought that they were going to save it. Killing Ceasar and letting Octavian take the reigns instead, Ceasar was far more popular and had alot more people on his side, he would have been a far better emperor as he would have kept the military incentives at the very least.
      Besides stabbing a guy 23 times is pretty freaking disgusting and Senator Aquila would definitely not approve!

    • @qboxer
      @qboxer 4 года назад +12

      @@jeremycole2164 Octavian was an excellent Emperor.

    • @sjewitt22
      @sjewitt22 4 года назад +7

      @@qboxer Just a shame who followed.

    • @putbye1
      @putbye1 4 года назад +2

      i'd really refrain from using Overly Sarcastic Productions for any in-depth historical basis lol

    • @krimzonstriker7534
      @krimzonstriker7534 4 года назад +3

      @@putbye1 He just gave an opinion regarding Caesar and the Republic that I agreed with is all

  • @mattrecommends8360
    @mattrecommends8360 4 года назад +64

    This feels like the penultimate episode to the season finale! Stopped everything I was doing to watch this video.
    Cannot wait for the next one! HC you’re better than Netflix

  • @simonpeter5032
    @simonpeter5032 4 года назад +1

    Probably my favorite video so far, legit considering buying merch cuz of how good this channel is.

  • @pagaun
    @pagaun 3 года назад +18

    Caesar: I want all the political power!
    Brutus: Yeah we'll see about that.

    • @sobitasadullah4517
      @sobitasadullah4517 3 года назад +1

      Octavian: Allow me to introduce myself, *traitor*

    • @jerm70
      @jerm70 2 года назад +1

      @@sobitasadullah4517 Traitor? Brutus was the reason Octavian won the conflict.

  • @mynameisntpatrick1476
    @mynameisntpatrick1476 4 года назад +38

    Us: "Finally the end of Caesar!"
    HC: "BUT WAIT THERES MORE!"

  • @chernweimah9124
    @chernweimah9124 4 года назад +136

    8:22 How can you argue that the Roman Republic by the time of Caesar dictatorship was stable? Genuinely curious. I would have thought Sulla's civil wars, his failed reforms, and Caesar exploits and intrigue in the Senate before, during and after the Civil War (which this channel showed in awesome detail) showed that the political system was anything but stable.

    • @misanthropicservitorofmars2116
      @misanthropicservitorofmars2116 4 года назад +6

      Sakthi's Channel most of the wealth was conglomerated in pleb run plantations owned by corporations essentially. The citizens in Rome were fat lazy and entitled.
      How dare you say it was stable and peaceful. It was at the end of its life.

    • @alex_zetsu
      @alex_zetsu 4 года назад +20

      I'd argue that Cesar becoming King would have been an improvement to stability compared to the three decades before Caesar. That said, Caesar could have used his dictatorial powers to try to stabilize the Republic and make some reforms needed for continuity. After packing the Senate (which was also needed since having double digit Senators kept the system from working) with his supporters, he doesn't have to worry about prosecution or his wealth being confiscated. Before the Conservatives put him in the position of needing to break tradition or lose everything. Now he has the luxury of not needing power for self preservation but he is vain.

    • @Taurevanime
      @Taurevanime 4 года назад +13

      @Sakthi's Channel If it was so stable, then why did it not recover as a Republic after Caesar's assassination? It did not, because it wasn't stable. The Republic's political system had become utterly corrupt and decadent by the time of Caesar. Because as you will see, men like Cicero were vastly in the minority and not at all that popular.

    • @respublica4373
      @respublica4373 4 года назад +1

      No one has argued it was stable at the time of Ceasar, however all things considered Roman Republic was quite stable.

    • @Taurevanime
      @Taurevanime 4 года назад +2

      @@respublica4373 And so was the Empire that followed. Which lasted for many centuries.
      And both periods of Rome saw bloody expansionist war, repression of people, and murder of whole people groups.
      I don't think it's easy to say one period was better than the other.

  • @datscootusee213
    @datscootusee213 4 года назад +4

    I cannot overstate how fantastic all of your videos are. Nearly all have spurred discussion within my intellectual group.
    Hours of political, economic, and historical dialogue has been born and grown, due in part to the interesting videos you create.

    • @PraveenKumar-zz8ho
      @PraveenKumar-zz8ho 4 месяца назад

      Intellectual grp??

    • @davidrobertson2826
      @davidrobertson2826 2 месяца назад

      “Intellectual group”? Back in my day we had the self awareness to realize we were just a bunch of stoned college freshmen lmao. Cringe.

  • @Zakattack577
    @Zakattack577 4 года назад +2

    Love you and literally every video you've done. Please never stop

  • @Extremehalofan16
    @Extremehalofan16 4 года назад +131

    I find your lack of faith in the Imperator disturbing.

    • @lf2ut
      @lf2ut 4 года назад +2

      😄

    • @marcokite
      @marcokite 4 года назад +4

      i find his lack of faith in divination really disturbing

  • @tyrannicfool2503
    @tyrannicfool2503 4 года назад +66

    The season finale is near, I’m hyped for what Caesar does next season, Parthia is surely next

    • @watershipdowneyjr
      @watershipdowneyjr 4 года назад +3

      Rome rings its bells and Caesar decides to burn it to the ground.

    • @toedplays
      @toedplays 4 года назад +2

      @@watershipdowneyjr Damnit who let David and Dan write the history books

    • @SpeedosWay
      @SpeedosWay 4 года назад +2

      It would be the best fake out if Civilis had Caesar escape the assassins and go on campaign

    • @proskub5039
      @proskub5039 4 года назад +3

      Caesar 2: Electric Boogaloo

  • @TheLandOfTears
    @TheLandOfTears 4 года назад +2

    I've got to say that I did not know about Roman history as much I thought I did, bit and parts here and there, just the most profound moments, caesar's assassination, pompeys defeat, crossing the rubicon etc. But this channel taught me so much about the demise of the Roman republic then just public school knowledge, thanks alot.

  • @BIGNICKELL1
    @BIGNICKELL1 2 года назад

    Any video created by this channel is always superbly done.