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Julius Caesar

 Presented by: Group 1
 Members:
 Vince Gonzales
 Daniel Legislador
 Mark Tormon
 Bea Pastrana
 Shiho Hamashima
100 B.C.E.
• Gaius Julius Caesar was born (by Caesarean
  section according to an unlikely legend) of
  Aurelia and Gaius Julius Caesar, a praetor.
• His family had noble, patrician roots, although
  they were neither rich nor influential in this
  period.
• His aunt Julia was the wife of Gaius Marius,
  leader of the Popular faction.
85 B.C.E.
• His father died, and a few years later he was
  betrothed and possibly married to a wealthy
  young woman, Cossutia.
• This betrothal/marriage was soon broken
  off, and at age 18 he married Cornelia, the
  daughter of a prominent member of the Popular
  faction; she later bore him his only legitimate
  child, a daughter, Julia.
75 B.C.E.
• While sailing to Greece for further study, Caesar
  was kidnapped by Cilician pirates and held for
  ransom.
• After he was released, he crucified the pirates
  and cut their throats to lessen their pain.
72 B.C.E.
• Caesar was elected as a military tribune.
68/67 B.C.E.
• Caesar was elected quaestor and obtained a seat
  in the Senate; he married Pompeia, a
  granddaughter of Sulla.
• He helped Gnaeus Pompeius (Pompey), a
  Roman politician, get an extraordinary
  generalship against the Mediterranean pirates.
65 B.C.E.
• He was elected curule aedile and spent lavishly
  on games to win popular favor; large loans from
  Crassus made these expenditures possible.
• There were rumors that Caesar was having an
  affair with Gnaeus Pompey's wife, Mucia, as well
  as with the wives of other prominent men.
63 B.C.E.
• Caesar spent heavily in a successful effort to get
  elected pontifex maximus (chief priest); in 62 he
  was elected praetor.
• In 61 he was sent to the province of Further
  Spain as propraetor.
60 B.C.E.
• He returned from Spain and joined with Pompey
  and Crassus in a loose coalition called by modern
  historians ―The First Triumvirate‖ and by his
  enemies at the time ―the three-headed monster.‖
• In 62, Pompey had returned victorious from
  Asia, but had been unable to get the Senate to ratify
  his arrangements and to grant land to his veteran
  soldiers because he had disbanded his army on his
  return and Crassus was blocking his efforts.
• Caesar persuaded the two men to work together
  and promised to support their interests if they
  helped him get elected to the consulship.
56 B.C.E.
• Caesar, Pompey, and Crassus met in Caesar's
  province to renew their coalition, since Pompey
  had been increasingly moving toward the
  Optimate faction.
• Pompey and Crassus were to be consuls again,
  and Caesar's command in Gaul was extended
  until 49 BCE.
54 B.C.E.
• Caesar led a three-month expedition to Britain
  (the was the first Roman crossing of the English
  Channel), but he did not establish a permanent
  base there.
• Meanwhile, Caesar's coalition with Pompey was
  increasingly strained, especially after Julia died
  in childbirth in 54. In the following year, Crassus
  received command of the armies of the East but
  was defeated and killed by the Parthians.
52 B.C.E.
• Rioting in Rome led to Pompey's extra-legal
  election as ―consul without a colleague.‖
• Without Julia and Crassus, there was little to
  bond Caesar and Pompey together, and Pompey
  moved to the Optimate faction, since he had
  always been eager for the favor of the aristocrats.
51 B.C.E.
• The conquest of Gaul effectively completed,
  Caesar set up an efficient provincial
  administration to govern the vast territories.
• He published his history The Gallic Wars.
• Pompey and Caesar were maneuvered into a
  public split; neither could yield to the other
  without a loss of honor, dignity, and power.
49 B.C.E.
• Caesar tried to maintain his position legally, but
  when he was pushed to the limit he led his
  armies across the Rubicon River (the border of
  his province), which was automatic civil war.
• After a remarkably short campaign, he returned
  to Rome and was elected consul, thus (relatively)
  legalizing his position.
48 B.C.E.
• Pompey and the Optimate faction had
  established a strong position in Greece by this
  time, and Caesar, in Brundisium, did not have
  sufficient ships to transport all his legions.
• Caesar pardoned all Roman citizens who were
  captured, including Brutus, but Pompey
  escaped, fleeing to Egypt.
June 23, 47 B.C.E.
• Caesar left Alexandria, having established
  Cleopatra as a client ruler in alliance with Rome;
  he left three legions under the command of
  Rufio, as legate, in support of her rule.
• Either immediately before or soon after he left
  Egypt, Cleopatra bore a son, whom she named
  Caesarion, claiming that he was the son of
  Caesar.
August, 47 B.C.E.
• After leaving Alexandria, Caesar swept through
  Asia Minor to settle the disturbances there.
• On August 1, he met and immediately overcame
  Pharnaces, a rebellious king; he later publicized
  the rapidity of this victory with the
  slogan veni, vidi, vici (―I came, I saw, I
  overcame‖).
October, 47 B.C.E.
• Caesar arrived back in Rome and settled the
  problems caused by the mismanagement of
  Antony.
• When he attempted to sail for Africa to face the
  Optimates (who had regrouped under Cato and
  allied with King Juba of Numidia), his legions
  mutinied and refused to sail.
July 25, 46 B.C.E.
• The victorious and now unchallenged Caesar
  arrived back in Rome and celebrated four
  splendid triumphs (over the Gauls, Egyptians,
  Pharnaces, and Juba); he sent for Cleopatra and
  the year-old Caesarion and established them in a
  luxurious villa across the Tiber from Rome.
April, 45 B.C.E.
• The two sons of Pompey, Gnaeus and Sextus, led
  a revolt in Spain; since Caesar's legates were
  unable to quell the revolt, Caesar had to go
  himself, winning a decisive but difficult victory
  at Munda.
• Gnaeus Pompey was killed in the battle, but
  Sextus escaped to become, later, the leader of
  the Mediterranean pirates.
October, 45 B.C.E.
• Caesar, back in Rome, celebrated a triumph over
  Gnaeus Pompey, arousing discontent because
  triumphs were reserved for foreign enemies.
• Furthermore, the Senate was constantly voting
  him new honors—the right to wear the laurel
  wreath and purple and gold toga and sit in a
  gilded chair at all public functions, inscriptions
  such as ―to the unconquerable god,‖ etc.
February, 44 B.C.E.
• Caesar was named dictator perpetuus.
• On February 15, at the feast of Lupercalia,
  Caesar wore his purple garb for the first time in
  public.
• Caesar was preparing to lead a military
  campaign against the Parthians, who had
  treacherously killed Crassus and taken the
  legionary eagles; he was due to leave on March
  18.
March 15, 44 B.C.E.
• Caesar attended the last meeting of the Senate
  before his departure, held at its temporary quarters
  in the portico of the theater built by Pompey the
  Great (the Curia, located in the Forum and the
  regular meeting house of the Senate, had been badly
  burned and was being rebuilt).
• The conspirators had only a band of gladiators to
  back them up, while Antony had a whole legion, the
  keys to Caesar's money boxes, and Caesar's will.
CHARACTERS
Julius Caesar
• A great Roman general and senator, recently
  returned to Rome in triumph after a successful
  military campaign.
• He is unable to separate his public life from his
  private life, and, seduced by the populace’s
  increasing idealization and idolization of his
  image, he ignores ill omens and threats against
  his life, believing himself as eternal as the North
  Star.
Antony
• A friend of Caesar.
• Antony claims allegiance to Brutus and the
  conspirators after Caesar’s death in order to save
  his own life.
• Antony’s desire to exclude Lepidus from the
  power that Antony and Octavius intend to share
  hints at his own ambitious nature.
Cassius
• A talented general and long time acquaintance of
  Caesar.
• Cassius dislikes the fact that Caesar has become
  godlike in the eyes of the Romans.
• Impulsive and unscrupulous, Cassius harbors no
  illusions about the way the political world works.
• A shrewd opportunist, he proves successful but
  lacks integrity.
Octavius
• Caesar’s adopted son and appointed successor.
• Octavius, who had been traveling
  abroad, returns after Caesar’s death; he then
  joins with Antony and sets off to fight Cassius
  and Brutus.
• Antony tries to control Octavius’s
  movements, but Octavius follows his adopted
  father’s example and emerges as the
  authoritative figure, paving the way for his
  eventual seizure of the reins of Roman
Casca
• A public figure opposed to Caesar’s rise to
  power.
• Casca relates to Cassius and Brutus how Antony
  offered the crown to Caesar three times and how
  each time Caesar declined it.
• He believes, however, that Caesar is the
  consummate actor, lulling the populace into
  believing that he has no personal ambition.
Calpurnia
• Caesar’s wife.
• Calpurnia invests great authority in omens and
  portents.
• She warns Caesar against going to the Senate on
  the Ides of March, since she has had terrible
  nightmares and heard reports of many bad
  omens.
• Nevertheless, Caesar’s ambition ultimately
  causes him to disregard her advice.
Portia
• Brutus’s wife; the daughter of a noble Roman
  who took sides against Caesar.
  Portia, accustomed to being Brutus’s
  confidante, is upset to find him so reluctant to
  speak his mind when she finds him troubled.
• Brutus later hears that Portia has killed herself
  out of grief that Antony and Octavius have
  become so powerful.
Flavius
• A tribune (an official elected by the people to
  protect their rights).
• Flavius condemns the plebeians for their
  fickleness in cheering Caesar, when once they
  cheered for Caesar’s enemy Pompey.
• Flavius is punished along with Murellus for
  removing the decorations from Caesar’s statues
  during Caesar’s triumphal parade.
Cicero
• A Roman senator renowned for his oratorical
  skill.
• Cicero speaks at Caesar’s triumphal parade.
• He later dies at the order of
  Antony, Octavius, and Lepidus.
Lepidus
• The third member of Antony and Octavius’s
  coalition.
• Though Antony has a low opinion of
  Lepidus, Octavius trusts his loyalty.
Murellus
• Like Flavius, a tribune who condemns the
  plebeians for their fickleness in cheering
  Caesar, when once they cheered for Caesar’s
  enemy Pompey.
• Murellus and Flavius are punished for removing
  the decorations from Caesar’s statues during
  Caesar’s triumphal parade.
Decius
• A member of the conspiracy.
• Decius convinces Caesar that Calpurnia
  misinterpreted her dire nightmares and that, in
  fact, no danger awaits him at the Senate.
• Decius leads Caesar right into the hands of the
  conspirators.
Famous Lines
• ―Would he were fatter! But I fear him not:
  Yet if my name were liable to fear,‖
• "Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your
  ears; I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him.― –
  (Act III, Scene II)
• "A dish fit for the gods.― –(Act II, Scene I)
• "Not that I loved Caesar less, but that I
  loved Rome more.― -(Act III, Scene II)
• "Men at some time are masters of their fates:
  The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, but in
  ourselves, that we are underlings.― - (Act
  I, Scene II)

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English presentation

  • 1. Julius Caesar Presented by: Group 1 Members: Vince Gonzales Daniel Legislador Mark Tormon Bea Pastrana Shiho Hamashima
  • 2. 100 B.C.E. • Gaius Julius Caesar was born (by Caesarean section according to an unlikely legend) of Aurelia and Gaius Julius Caesar, a praetor. • His family had noble, patrician roots, although they were neither rich nor influential in this period. • His aunt Julia was the wife of Gaius Marius, leader of the Popular faction.
  • 3. 85 B.C.E. • His father died, and a few years later he was betrothed and possibly married to a wealthy young woman, Cossutia. • This betrothal/marriage was soon broken off, and at age 18 he married Cornelia, the daughter of a prominent member of the Popular faction; she later bore him his only legitimate child, a daughter, Julia.
  • 4. 75 B.C.E. • While sailing to Greece for further study, Caesar was kidnapped by Cilician pirates and held for ransom. • After he was released, he crucified the pirates and cut their throats to lessen their pain.
  • 5. 72 B.C.E. • Caesar was elected as a military tribune.
  • 6. 68/67 B.C.E. • Caesar was elected quaestor and obtained a seat in the Senate; he married Pompeia, a granddaughter of Sulla. • He helped Gnaeus Pompeius (Pompey), a Roman politician, get an extraordinary generalship against the Mediterranean pirates.
  • 7. 65 B.C.E. • He was elected curule aedile and spent lavishly on games to win popular favor; large loans from Crassus made these expenditures possible. • There were rumors that Caesar was having an affair with Gnaeus Pompey's wife, Mucia, as well as with the wives of other prominent men.
  • 8. 63 B.C.E. • Caesar spent heavily in a successful effort to get elected pontifex maximus (chief priest); in 62 he was elected praetor. • In 61 he was sent to the province of Further Spain as propraetor.
  • 9. 60 B.C.E. • He returned from Spain and joined with Pompey and Crassus in a loose coalition called by modern historians ―The First Triumvirate‖ and by his enemies at the time ―the three-headed monster.‖ • In 62, Pompey had returned victorious from Asia, but had been unable to get the Senate to ratify his arrangements and to grant land to his veteran soldiers because he had disbanded his army on his return and Crassus was blocking his efforts.
  • 10. • Caesar persuaded the two men to work together and promised to support their interests if they helped him get elected to the consulship.
  • 11. 56 B.C.E. • Caesar, Pompey, and Crassus met in Caesar's province to renew their coalition, since Pompey had been increasingly moving toward the Optimate faction. • Pompey and Crassus were to be consuls again, and Caesar's command in Gaul was extended until 49 BCE.
  • 12. 54 B.C.E. • Caesar led a three-month expedition to Britain (the was the first Roman crossing of the English Channel), but he did not establish a permanent base there. • Meanwhile, Caesar's coalition with Pompey was increasingly strained, especially after Julia died in childbirth in 54. In the following year, Crassus received command of the armies of the East but was defeated and killed by the Parthians.
  • 13. 52 B.C.E. • Rioting in Rome led to Pompey's extra-legal election as ―consul without a colleague.‖ • Without Julia and Crassus, there was little to bond Caesar and Pompey together, and Pompey moved to the Optimate faction, since he had always been eager for the favor of the aristocrats.
  • 14. 51 B.C.E. • The conquest of Gaul effectively completed, Caesar set up an efficient provincial administration to govern the vast territories. • He published his history The Gallic Wars. • Pompey and Caesar were maneuvered into a public split; neither could yield to the other without a loss of honor, dignity, and power.
  • 15. 49 B.C.E. • Caesar tried to maintain his position legally, but when he was pushed to the limit he led his armies across the Rubicon River (the border of his province), which was automatic civil war. • After a remarkably short campaign, he returned to Rome and was elected consul, thus (relatively) legalizing his position.
  • 16. 48 B.C.E. • Pompey and the Optimate faction had established a strong position in Greece by this time, and Caesar, in Brundisium, did not have sufficient ships to transport all his legions. • Caesar pardoned all Roman citizens who were captured, including Brutus, but Pompey escaped, fleeing to Egypt.
  • 17. June 23, 47 B.C.E. • Caesar left Alexandria, having established Cleopatra as a client ruler in alliance with Rome; he left three legions under the command of Rufio, as legate, in support of her rule. • Either immediately before or soon after he left Egypt, Cleopatra bore a son, whom she named Caesarion, claiming that he was the son of Caesar.
  • 18. August, 47 B.C.E. • After leaving Alexandria, Caesar swept through Asia Minor to settle the disturbances there. • On August 1, he met and immediately overcame Pharnaces, a rebellious king; he later publicized the rapidity of this victory with the slogan veni, vidi, vici (―I came, I saw, I overcame‖).
  • 19. October, 47 B.C.E. • Caesar arrived back in Rome and settled the problems caused by the mismanagement of Antony. • When he attempted to sail for Africa to face the Optimates (who had regrouped under Cato and allied with King Juba of Numidia), his legions mutinied and refused to sail.
  • 20. July 25, 46 B.C.E. • The victorious and now unchallenged Caesar arrived back in Rome and celebrated four splendid triumphs (over the Gauls, Egyptians, Pharnaces, and Juba); he sent for Cleopatra and the year-old Caesarion and established them in a luxurious villa across the Tiber from Rome.
  • 21. April, 45 B.C.E. • The two sons of Pompey, Gnaeus and Sextus, led a revolt in Spain; since Caesar's legates were unable to quell the revolt, Caesar had to go himself, winning a decisive but difficult victory at Munda. • Gnaeus Pompey was killed in the battle, but Sextus escaped to become, later, the leader of the Mediterranean pirates.
  • 22. October, 45 B.C.E. • Caesar, back in Rome, celebrated a triumph over Gnaeus Pompey, arousing discontent because triumphs were reserved for foreign enemies. • Furthermore, the Senate was constantly voting him new honors—the right to wear the laurel wreath and purple and gold toga and sit in a gilded chair at all public functions, inscriptions such as ―to the unconquerable god,‖ etc.
  • 23. February, 44 B.C.E. • Caesar was named dictator perpetuus. • On February 15, at the feast of Lupercalia, Caesar wore his purple garb for the first time in public. • Caesar was preparing to lead a military campaign against the Parthians, who had treacherously killed Crassus and taken the legionary eagles; he was due to leave on March 18.
  • 24. March 15, 44 B.C.E. • Caesar attended the last meeting of the Senate before his departure, held at its temporary quarters in the portico of the theater built by Pompey the Great (the Curia, located in the Forum and the regular meeting house of the Senate, had been badly burned and was being rebuilt). • The conspirators had only a band of gladiators to back them up, while Antony had a whole legion, the keys to Caesar's money boxes, and Caesar's will.
  • 26. Julius Caesar • A great Roman general and senator, recently returned to Rome in triumph after a successful military campaign. • He is unable to separate his public life from his private life, and, seduced by the populace’s increasing idealization and idolization of his image, he ignores ill omens and threats against his life, believing himself as eternal as the North Star.
  • 27. Antony • A friend of Caesar. • Antony claims allegiance to Brutus and the conspirators after Caesar’s death in order to save his own life. • Antony’s desire to exclude Lepidus from the power that Antony and Octavius intend to share hints at his own ambitious nature.
  • 28. Cassius • A talented general and long time acquaintance of Caesar. • Cassius dislikes the fact that Caesar has become godlike in the eyes of the Romans. • Impulsive and unscrupulous, Cassius harbors no illusions about the way the political world works. • A shrewd opportunist, he proves successful but lacks integrity.
  • 29. Octavius • Caesar’s adopted son and appointed successor. • Octavius, who had been traveling abroad, returns after Caesar’s death; he then joins with Antony and sets off to fight Cassius and Brutus. • Antony tries to control Octavius’s movements, but Octavius follows his adopted father’s example and emerges as the authoritative figure, paving the way for his eventual seizure of the reins of Roman
  • 30. Casca • A public figure opposed to Caesar’s rise to power. • Casca relates to Cassius and Brutus how Antony offered the crown to Caesar three times and how each time Caesar declined it. • He believes, however, that Caesar is the consummate actor, lulling the populace into believing that he has no personal ambition.
  • 31. Calpurnia • Caesar’s wife. • Calpurnia invests great authority in omens and portents. • She warns Caesar against going to the Senate on the Ides of March, since she has had terrible nightmares and heard reports of many bad omens. • Nevertheless, Caesar’s ambition ultimately causes him to disregard her advice.
  • 32. Portia • Brutus’s wife; the daughter of a noble Roman who took sides against Caesar. Portia, accustomed to being Brutus’s confidante, is upset to find him so reluctant to speak his mind when she finds him troubled. • Brutus later hears that Portia has killed herself out of grief that Antony and Octavius have become so powerful.
  • 33. Flavius • A tribune (an official elected by the people to protect their rights). • Flavius condemns the plebeians for their fickleness in cheering Caesar, when once they cheered for Caesar’s enemy Pompey. • Flavius is punished along with Murellus for removing the decorations from Caesar’s statues during Caesar’s triumphal parade.
  • 34. Cicero • A Roman senator renowned for his oratorical skill. • Cicero speaks at Caesar’s triumphal parade. • He later dies at the order of Antony, Octavius, and Lepidus.
  • 35. Lepidus • The third member of Antony and Octavius’s coalition. • Though Antony has a low opinion of Lepidus, Octavius trusts his loyalty.
  • 36. Murellus • Like Flavius, a tribune who condemns the plebeians for their fickleness in cheering Caesar, when once they cheered for Caesar’s enemy Pompey. • Murellus and Flavius are punished for removing the decorations from Caesar’s statues during Caesar’s triumphal parade.
  • 37. Decius • A member of the conspiracy. • Decius convinces Caesar that Calpurnia misinterpreted her dire nightmares and that, in fact, no danger awaits him at the Senate. • Decius leads Caesar right into the hands of the conspirators.
  • 38. Famous Lines • ―Would he were fatter! But I fear him not: Yet if my name were liable to fear,‖ • "Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears; I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him.― – (Act III, Scene II) • "A dish fit for the gods.― –(Act II, Scene I) • "Not that I loved Caesar less, but that I loved Rome more.― -(Act III, Scene II)
  • 39. • "Men at some time are masters of their fates: The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, but in ourselves, that we are underlings.― - (Act I, Scene II)