Saving Earth Britannica Presents Earth’s To-Do List for the 21st Century.Britannica Beyond We’ve created a new place where questions are at the center of learning.100 Women Britannica celebrates the centennial of the Nineteenth Amendment, highlighting suffragists and history-making politicians.
Brennan has dated the praetorship to the beginning of the decade.Ĭaesar died suddenly in 85 BC, in Rome, while putting on his shoes one morning. Broughton dated the praetorship to 92 BC, with the quaestorship falling towards the beginning of the 90s.
Even though it was his seventh year in the region, he had completely misread the. At the start of 52 BC, a rebellion that spread rapidly throughout much of Gaul surprised and wrong-footed Gaius Julius Caesar. The colony is probably one of Marius' of 103 BC. Roman leader Caesar overcame his failure in Gaul through his own talent as a commander, the skill of his army, and a good deal of luck. Julius Caesar was a dictator legally empowered to order anyone flogged, exiled, or executed, and also to confiscate or destroy anyones property, at will. Caesar’s Aunt Julia was wife to Gaius Marius, who at the time of Caesar’s birth was the leader of the Popular faction of Roman Politics. According to two elogia erected in Rome long after his death, Caesar was a commissioner in the colony at Cercina, military tribune, quaestor, praetor, and proconsul of Asia. Gaius Julius Caesar was born in Rome, Italy in the year 100 BCE to the patrician family of Gaius Julius Caesar and his wife Aurelia. He was the brother of Sextus Julius Caesar (consul in 91 BC) and the son of Gaius Julius Caesar.Ĭaesar's progress through the cursus honorum is well known, although the specific dates associated with his offices are controversial.
130-85 BC) was a Roman senator, supporter and brother-in-law of Gaius Marius, and father of Gaius Julius Caesar, the later dictator of Rome - Julius Caesar, Roman Dictator.Ĭaesar was married to Aurelia Cotta, a member of the Aurelii and Rutilii families, and had two daughters, both named Julia as was common in Rome, and a son, Julius Caesar, born in 100 BC.