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An Analytical Essay: The Early Life Of Julius Caesar

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Julius Caesar once said “ Now that I am the leading Roman of my day, it will be harder to pull me down from first to second place than degrade me to the ranks.” Following his return to Rome, he was appointed as dictator for life and hailed as the Father of his Country. Not only was Caesar a Roman general and statesman, but it is he who turned the Roman Republic into the powerful Roman Empire. The early life of Caesar consisted of an element of disorder and instability that ruled the Roman Republic.
A strategic political alliance that was between Julius Caesar, Marcus Licinius Crassus, and Pompey was known as the First Triumvirate. As Caesar was in control of Pompey, he aligned himself with Crassus, a Roman general and politician. Caesar used …show more content…

Pompey was soon to become restive toward his alarmingly successful ally Caesar. As the alliances were having a conference in Lucca about how Pompey and Crassus were to be the consuls and where to get laws promulgated. Crassus was then eliminated by an annihilating defeat at the Parthians’ hands. Subsequently, Pompey irresolutely veered further from Caesar.
Unfortunately, Caesar was killed by political rivals on the Ides of March. The assassination was led by Gaius Cassius Longinus and Marcus Junius Brutus, whom pronounced themselves as the Liberators. Following his death, Octavian took rule and vowed revenge on the assassins. Two years later Cassius and Brutus committed suicide because they found out that Octavian's forces defeated theirs at the battle of Philippi in Greece. Antony took his armies East, where he had consorted with Caesar’s old paramore, Cleopatra.
Julius Caesar was appointed as dictator after he returned to Rome. He had an alliance with two other guys, the group was called the First Triumvirate. A few years later the alliance met in Lucca for a conference for Pompey and Crassus and how to get laws promulgated. March 15, 44 B.C, Caesar was assassinated by rivals, soon Octavian took rule. Two years later the assassins committed suicide. Julius Caesar’s last words were “you, too, my

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