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                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:base="urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1"><body xml:lang="eng" n="urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1"><div type="textpart" subtype="alphabetic_letter" n="C"><div type="textpart" subtype="entry" xml:id="caesar-bio-19" n="caesar_19"><head><label xml:id="phi-0448"><persName xml:lang="la"><addName full="yes">CAESAR</addName></persName></label></head><p>18. <persName xml:lang="la"><forename full="yes">C.</forename><surname full="yes">Julius</surname><addName full="yes">Caesar</addName></persName>, C. F. C. N., the dictator, son of No. 15 and Aurelia,
      was born on the 12th of July, <date when-custom="-100">B. C. 100</date>, in the consulship of C.
      Marius (VI.) and L. Valerius Flaccus, and was consequently six years younger than Pompey and
      Cicero. He had nearly completed his fifty-sixth year at the time of his murder on the 15th of
      March, <date when-custom="-44">B. C. 44</date>. Caesar was closely connected with the popular party
      by the marriage of his aunt Julia with the great Marius. who obtained the election of his
      nephew to the dignity of flamen dialis, when he was only thirteen years of age. (<date when-custom="-87">B. C. 87</date>.) Marius died in the following year; and, notwithstanding the
      murder of his own relations by the Marian party, and the formidable forces with which Sulla
      was preparing to invade Italy, Caesar attached himself to the popular side, and even married,
      in <date when-custom="-83">B. C. 83</date>, Cornelia, the daughter of L. Cinna, one of the chief
      opponents of Sulla. He was then only seventeen years old, but had been already married to
      Cossutia, a wealthy heiress belonging to the equestrian order, to whom he had probably been
      betrothed by the wish of his father, who died in the preceding year. Caesar divorced Cossutia
      in order to marry Cinna's daughter; but such an open declaration in favour of the popular
      party provoked the anger of Sulla, who had returned to Rome in <date when-custom="-82">B. C.
       82</date>, and who now commanded him to put away Cornelia, in the same way as he ordered
      Pompey to divorce Antistia, and M. Piso his wife Annia, the widow of Cinna. Pompey and Piso
      obeyed, but the young Caesar refused to part with his wife, and was consequently proscribed,
      and deprived of his priesthood, his wife's dower, and his own fortune. His life was now in
      great danger, and he was obliged to conceal himself for some time in the country of the
      Sabines, till the Vestal virgins and his friends obtained his pardon from the dictator, who
      granted it with difficulty, and is said to have observed, when they pleaded his youth and
      insignificance, " that that boy would some day or another be the ruin of the aristocracy, for
      that there were many Mariuses in him."</p><p>This was the first proof which Caesar gave of the resolution and decision of character which
      distinguished him throughout life. He now withdrew from Rome and went to Asia in <date when-custom="-81">B. C. 81</date>, where he served his first campaign under M. Minucius Thermus,
      who was engaged in the siege of Mytilene, which was the only town in Asia that held out
      against the Romans after the conclusion of the first Mithridatic war. Thermus sent him to
      Nicomedes III. in Bithynia to fetch his fleet, and, on his return to the camp, he took part in
      the capture <pb n="540"/> of Mytilene (<date when-custom="_80">B. C. 80</date>), and was rewarded by
      the Roman general with a civic crown for saving the life of a fellow-soldier. He next served
      under P. Sulpicius, in Cilicia, in <date when-custom="-78">B. C. 78</date>, but had scarcely entered
      upon the campaign before news reached him of the death of Sulla, whereupon he immediately
      returned to Rome.</p><p>M. Aemilius Lepidus, the consul, had already attempted to rescind the acts of Sulla. He was
      opposed by his colleague Q. Catulus, and the state was once more in arms. This was a tempting
      opportunity for the leaders of the popular party to make an effort to recover their former
      power, and many, who were less sagacious and long-sighted than the youthful Caesar, eagerly
      availed themselves of it. But he saw that the time had not yet come; he had not much
      confidence in Lepidus, and therefore remained neutral.</p><p>Caesar was now twenty-two years of age, and, according to the common practice of the times,
      he accused, in the following year (<date when-custom="-77">B. C. 77</date>), Cn. Dolabella of
      extortion in his province of Macedonia. Cn. Dolabella, who had been consul in 81, belonged to
      Sulla's party, which was an additional reason for his being singled out by Caesar ; but, for
      the same reason, he was defended by Cotta and Hortensius, and acquitted by the judges, who
      were now, in accordance with one of Sulla's laws, chosen from the senate. Caesar, however,
      gained great fame by this prosecution, and shewed that he possessed powers of oratory which
      bid fair to place him among the first speakers at Rome. The popularity he had gained induced
      him, in the following year (<date when-custom="-76">B. C. 76</date>), at the request of the Greeks,
      to accuse C. Antonius (afterwards consul in <date when-custom="-63">B. C. 63</date>) of extortion in
      Greece; but he too escaped conviction. To render himself still more perfect in oratory, he
      went to Rhodes in the winter of the same year, to study under Apollonius Molo, who was also
      one of Cicero's teachers ; but in his voyage thither he was captured off Miletus, near the
      island of Pharmacusa, by pirates, with whom the seas of the Mediterranean then swarmed. In
      this island he was detained by them till he could obtain fifty talents from the neighbouring
      cities for his ransom. Immediately he had obtained his liberty, he manned some Milesian
      vessels, overpowered the pirates, and conducted them as prisoners to Pergamus, where he
      shortly afterwards crucified them--a punishment he had frequently threatened them with in
      sport when he was their prisoner. He then repaired to Rhodes, where he studied under
      Apollonius for a short time, but soon afterwards crossed over into Asia, on the outbreak of
      the Mithridatic war again in <date when-custom="-74">B. C. 74</date>. Here, although he held no
      public office, he collected troops on his own authority, and repulsed the commander of the
      king, and then returned to Rome in the same year, in consequence of having been elected
      pontiff, in his absence, in the place of his uncle C. Aurelius Cotta.</p><p>On his return to Rome, Caesar used every means to increase his popularity. His affable
      manners, and still more his unbounded liberality, won the hearts of the people. As his private
      fortune was not large, he soon had recourse to the usurers, who looked for repayment to the
      offices which he was sure to obtain from the people. It was about this time that the people
      elected him to the office of military tribune instead of his competitor, C. Popilius; but he
      probably served for only a short time, as he is not mentioned during the next three years
       (<date when-custom="-78">B. C. 78</date>-<date when-custom="-71">71</date>) as serving in any of the wars
      which were carried on at that time against Mithridates, Spartacus, and Sertorius.</p><p>The year <date when-custom="-70">B. C. 70</date> was a memorable one, as some of Sulla's most
      important alterations in the constitution were then repealed. This was chiefly owing to
      Pompey, who was then consul with M. Crassus. Pompey had been one of Sulla's steady supporters,
      and was now at the height of his glory; but his great power had raised him many enemies among
      the aristocracy, and he was thus led to join to some extent the popular party. It was Pompey's
      doing that the tribunicial power was restored in this year; and it was also through his
      support that the law of L. Aurelius Cotta, Caesar's uncle, was carried, by which the judicia
      were taken away from the senate, who had possessed them exclusively for ten years, and were
      shared between the senate, equites, and tribuni aerarii. These measures were also strongly
      supported by Caesar, who thus came into close connexion with Pompey. He also spoke in favour
      of the Plotia lex for recalling from exile those who had joined M. Lepidus in <date when-custom="-78">B. C. 78</date>, and had fled to Sertorius after the death of the latter.</p><p>Caesar obtained the quaestorship in <date when-custom="-68">B. C. 68</date>. In this year he lost
      his aunt Julia, the widow of Marius, and his own wife Cornelia, the daughter of Cinna. He
      pronounced orations over both of them in the forum, in which he took the opportunity of
      passing a panegyric upon the former leaders of the popular party. The funeral of his aunt
      produced a great sensation at Rome, as he caused the images of Marius, who had been declared
      an enemy of the state, to be carried in the procession : they were welcomed with loud
      acclamations by the people, who were delighted to see their former favourite brought, as it
      were, into public again. After the funeral of his wife, he went, as quaestor to Antistius
      Vetus, into the province of further Spain.</p><p>On his return to Rome, in <date when-custom="-67">B. C. 67</date>, Caesar married Pompeia, the
      daughter of Q. Pompeius Rufus and Cornelia, the daughter of the dictator Sulla. This marriage
      with one of the Pompeian house was doubtless intended to cement his union still more closely
      with Pompey, who was now more favourably inclined than ever to the popular party. Caesar
      eagerly promoted all his views, and rendered him most efficient assistance ; for he saw, that
      if the strength of the aristocracy could be broken by means of Pompey, he himself would soon
      rise to power, secure as he was of the favour of the people. He accordingly supported the
      proposal of the tribune Gabinius for conferring upon Pompey the command of the war against the
      pirates with unlimited powers: this measure was viewed with the utmost jealousy by the
      aristocracy, and widened still further the breach between them and Pompey. In the same year,
      Caesar was elected one of the superintendents of the Appian Way, and acquired fresh popularity
      by expending upon its repairs a large sum of money from his private purse.</p><p>In the following year, <date when-custom="-66">B. C. 66</date>, Caesar again assisted Pompey by
      supporting, along with Cicero, the Manilian law, by which the Mithridatic war was committed to
      Pompey. At the end of this year, the first Catilinarian conspiracy, as it is called, was
      formed, in which Caesar is said by some writers to have taken an active part. But <pb n="541"/> this is probably a sheer invention of his enemies in later times, as Caesar had already,
      through his favour with the people and his connexion with Pompey, every prospect of obtaining
      the highest offices in the state. He had been already elected to the curule aedileship, and
      entered upon the office in the following year (<date when-custom="-65">B. C. 65</date>), with M.
      Bibulus as his colleague. It was usual for those magistrates who wished to win the affections
      of the people, to spend large sums of money in their aedileship upon the public games and
      buildings; but the aedileship of Caesar and Bibulus surpassed in magnificence all that had
      preceded it. Caesar was obliged to borrow large sums of money again; he had long since spent
      his private fortune, and, according to Plutarch, was 1300 talents in debt before he held any
      public office. Bibulus contributed to the expenses, but Caesar got almost all the credit, and
      his popularity became unbounded. Anxious to revive the recollection of the people in favour of
      the Marian party, he caused the statues of Marius and the representations of his victories in
      the Jugurthine and Cimbrian wars, which had been all destroyed by Sulla, to be privately
      restored, and placed at night in the Capitol. In the morning the city was in the highest state
      of excitement : the veterans and other friends of Marius cried with joy at the sight of his
      countenance again, and greeted Caesar with shouts of applause : the senate assembled, and Q.
      Catulus accused Caesar of a breach of a positive law; but the popular excitement was so great,
      that the senate dared not take any measures against him. He now attempted to obtain by a
      plebiscitum an extraordinary mission to Aegypt, with the view probably of obtaining money to
      pay off his debts, but was defeated in his object by the aristocracy, who got some of the
      tribunes to put their veto upon the measure.</p><p>In <date when-custom="-64">B. C. 64</date> he was appointed to preside, in place of the praetor,
      as judex quaestionis, in trials for murder, and in that capacity held persons guilty of murder
      who had put any one to death in the proscriptions of Sulla, although they had been specially
      exempted from punishment by one of Sulla's laws. This he probably did in order to pave the way
      for the trial of C. Rabirius in the following year. He also took an active part in supporting
      the agrarian law of the tribune P. Servilius Rullus, which was brought forward at the close of
       <date when-custom="-64">B. C. 64</date>, immediately after the tribunes entered upon their office.
      The provisions of this law were of such an extensive kind, and conferred such large and
      extraordinary powers upon the commissioners for distributing the lands, that Caesar could
      hardly have expected it to be carried ; and he probably did not wish another person to obtain
      the popularity which would result from such a measure, although his position compelled him to
      support it. It was of course resisted by the aristocracy; and Cicero, who had now attached
      himself to the aristocratical party, spoke against it on the first day that he entered upon
      his consulship, the 1st of January, <date when-custom="-63">B. C. 63</date>. The law was shortly
      afterwards dropped by Rullus himself.</p><p>The next measure of the popular party was adopted at the instigation of Caesar. Thirty-six
      years before, in <date when-custom="-100">B. C. 100</date>, L. Appuleius Saturninus, the tribune of
      the plebs, had been declared an enemy by the senate, besieged in the Capitol, and put to death
      when he was obliged to surrender through want of water. Caesar now induced the tribune T.
      Atius Labienus to accuse C. Rabirius, an aged senator, of this crime. It was doubtless through
      no desire of taking away the old man's life that Caesar set this accusation afoot, but he
      wanted to frighten the senate from resorting to arms in future against the popular party, and
      to strengthen still further the power of the tribunes. Rabirius was accused of the crime of
      perduellio or treason against the state, a species of accusation which had almost gone out of
      use, and been supplanted by that of majestas. He was brought to trial before the duumviri
      perduellionis, who were usually appointed for this purpose by the comitia centuriata, but on
      the present occasion were nominated by the praetor. Caesar himself and his relative L. Caesar
      were the two judges; they forthwith condemned Rabirius, who according to the old law would
      have been hanged or hurled down from the Tarpeian rock. Rabirius, however, availed himself of
      his right of appealing to the people; Cicero spoke on his behalf ; the people seemed inclined
      to ratify the decision of the duumvirs, when the meeting was broken up by the praetor Q.
      Metellus Celer removing the military flag which floated on the Janiculum. This was in
      accordance with an old law, which was intended to protect the comitia centuriata in the Campus
      Martius from being surprised by the enemy, when the territory of Rome scarcely extended beyond
      the boundaries of the city, and which was still maintained as a useful engine in the hands of
      the magistrates. Rabirius therefore escaped, and Caesar did not think it necessary to renew
      the prosecution, as the object for which it had been instituted had been already in great
      measure attained.</p><p>Caesar next set on foot in the same year (<date when-custom="-63">B. C. 63</date>) an accusation
      against C. Piso, who had been consul in <date when-custom="-67">B. C. 67</date>, and afterwards had
      the government of the province of Gallia Narbonensis. Piso was acquitted, and became from this
      time one of Caesar's deadliest enemies. About the same time the office of pontifex maximus
      became vacant by the death of Q. Metellus Pius. The candidates for it were Q. Lutatius
      Catulus, Q. Servilius Isauricus, and Caesar. Catulus and Servilius had both been consuls, and
      were two of the most illustrious men in Rome, and of the greatest influence in the senate: but
      so great was Caesar's popularity, that Catulus became apprehensive as to his success, and
      fearing to be defeated by one so much his inferior in rank, station, and age, privately
      offered him large sums to liquidate his debts, if he would withdraw from the contest. Caesar,
      however, replied, that he would borrow still more to carry his election. He was elected on the
      sixth of March, and obtained more votes even in the tribes of his competitors than they had
      themselves. Shortly after this he was elected praetor for the following year. Then came the
      detection of Catiline's conspiracy. The aristocracy thought this a favourable opportunity to
      get rid of their restless opponent; and C. Piso and Q. Catulus used every means of persuasion,
      and even bribery, to induce Cicero to include him among the conspirators. That Caesar should
      both at the time and afterwards have been charged by the aristocracy with participation in
      this conspiracy, as he was in the former one of Catiline in <date when-custom="-66">B. C. 66</date>,
      is nothing surprising; but there is no satisfactory evidence of his guilt, and we think it
      unlikely that he would have embarked in such a rash scheme <pb n="542"/> For though he would
      probably have had little scruple as to the means he employed to obtain his ends, he was still
      no rash, reckless adventurer, who could only hope to rise in a general scramble for power : he
      now possessed unbounded influence with the people, and was sure of obtaining the consulship;
      and if his ambition had already formed loftier plans, he would have had greater reason to fear
      a loss than an increase of his power in universal anarchy. In the debate in the senate on the
      5th of December respecting the punishment of the conspirators, Caesar, though he admitted
      their guilt, opposed their execution, and contended, in a very able speech, that it was
      contrary to the principles of the Roman constitution for the senate to put Roman citizens to
      death, and recommended that they should be kept in custody in the free towns of Italy. This
      speech made a great impression upon the senate, and many who had already given their opinion
      in favour of death began to hesitate; but the speech of M. Cato confirmed the wavering, and
      carried the question in favour of death. Cato openly charged Caesar as a party to the
      conspiracy, and as he left the senate-house his life was in danger from the Roman knights who
      guarded Cicero's person.</p><p>The next year, <date when-custom="-62">B. C. 62</date>, Caesar was praetor. On the very day that
      he entered upon his office, he brought a proposition before the people for depriving Q.
      Catulus of the honour of completing the restoration of the Capitol, which had been burnt down
      in <date when-custom="-83">B. C. 83</date>, and for assigning this office to Pompey. This proposal
      was probably made more for the sake of gratifying Pompey's vanity, and humbling the
      aristocracy, than from any desire of taking vengeance upon his private enemy. As however it
      was most violently opposed by the aristocracy, Caesar did not think it advisable to press the
      motion. This, however, was a trifling matter; the state was soon almost torn asunder by the
      proceedings of the tribune Q. Metellus Nepos, the friend of Pompey. Metellus openly accused
      Cicero of having put Roman citizens to death without trial, and at length gave notice of a
      rogation for recalling Pompey to Rome with his army, that Roman citizens might be protected
      from being illegally put to death. Metellus was supported by the eloquence and influence of
      Caesar, but met with a most determined opposition from one of his colleagues, M. Cato, who was
      tribune this year. Cato put his veto upon the rogation ; and when Metellus attempted to read
      it to the people, Cato tore it out of his hands; the whole forum was in an uproar; the two
      parties came to blows, but Cato eventually remained master of the field. The senate took upon
      themselves to suspend both Metellus and Caesar from their offices. Metellus fled to Pompey's
      camp; Caesar continued to administer justice, till the senate sent armed troops to drag him
      from his tribunal. Then he dismissed his lictors, threw away his praetexta, and hurried home.
      The senate, however, soon saw that they had gone too far. Two days after the people thronged
      in crowds to the house of Caesar, and offered to restore him to his dignity. He assuaged the
      tumult; the senate was summoned in haste, and felt it necessary to make concessions to its
      hated enemy. Some of the chief senators were sent to Caesar to thank him for his conduct on
      the occasion; he was invited to take his seat in the senate, loaded with praises, and restored
      to his office. It was a complete defeat of the aristocracy. Butnot disheartened by this
      failure, they resolved to aim another blow at Caesar. Proceedings against the accomplices in
      Catiline's conspiracy were still going on, and the aristocracy got L. Vettius and Q. Curius,
      who had been two of the chief informers against the conspirators, to accuse Caesar of having
      been privy to it. But this attempt equally failed. Caesar called upon Cicero to testify that
      he had of his own accord given him evidence respecting the conspiracy, and so complete was his
      triumph, that Curius was deprived of the rewards which had been voted him for having been the
      first to reveal the conspiracy, and Vettius was cast into prison.</p><p>Towards the end of Caesar's praetorship, a circumstance occurred which created a great stir
      at the time. Clodius had an intrigue with Pompeia, Caesar's wife, and had entered Caesar's
      house in disguise at the festival of the Bona Dea, at which men were not allowed to be
      present, and which was always celebrated at the house of one of the higher magistrates. He was
      detected and brought to trial; but though Caesar divorced his wife, he would not appear
      against Clodius, for the latter was a favourite with the people, and was closely connected
      with Caesar's party. In this year Pompey returned to Rome from the Mithridatic war, and
      quietly disbanded his army.</p><p>At the expiration of his praetorship Caesar obtained the province of Further Spain, <date when-custom="-61">B. C. 61</date>. But his debts had now become so great, and his creditors so
      clamorous for payment, that he was obliged to apply to Crassus for assistance before leaving
      Rome. This he readily obtained; Crassus became surety for him, as did also others of his
      friends ; but these and other circumstances detained him so long that he did not reach his
      province till the summer. Hitherto Caesar's public career had been confined almost exclusively
      to political life; and he had had scarcely any opportunity of displaying that genius for war
      which has enrolled his name among the greatest generals of the world. He was now for the first
      time at the head of a regular army, and soon shewed that he knew how to make use of it. He
      commenced his campaign by subduing the mountainous tribes of Lusitania, which had plundered
      the country, took the town of Brigantium in the country of the Gallaeci, and gained many other
      advantages over the enemy. His troops saluted him as imperator, and the senate honoured him by
      a public thanksgiving. His civil reputation procured him equal renown, and he left the
      province with great reputation, after enriching both himself and his army.</p><p>Caesar returned to Rome in the summer of the following year, <date when-custom="-60">B. C.
       60</date>, a little before the consular elections, without waiting for his successor. He laid
      claim to a triumph, and at the same time wished to become a candidate for the consulship. For
      the latter purpose, his presence in the city was necessary; but as he could not enter the city
      without relinquishing his triumph, he applied to the senate to be exempted from the usual law,
      and to become a candidate in his absence. As this, however, was strongly opposed by the
      opposite party, Caesar at once relinquished his triumph, entered the city, and became a
      candidate for the consulship. The other competitors were L. Lucceius and M. Calpurnius Bibilus
      : the former belonged to the popular party, but the <pb n="543"/> letter, who had been
      Caesar's colleague in the aedileship and praetorship, was a warm supporter of the aristocracy.
      Caesar's great popularity combined with Pompey's interest rendered his election certain; but
      that he might have a colleague of the opposite party, the aristocracy used immense exertions,
      and contributed large sums of money in order to carry the election of Bibulus. And they
      succeeded. Caesar and Bibulus were elected consuls. But to prevent Caesar from obtaining a
      province in which he might distinguish himself, the senate assigned as the provinces of the
      consuls-elect the care of the woods and of the public pastures. It was apparently after his
      election, and not previously as some writers state, that he entered into that coalition with
      Pompey and M. Crassus, usually known by the name of the first triumvirate. Caesar on his
      return to Rome had found Pompey more estranged than ever from the aristocracy. The senate had
      most unwisely opposed the ratification of Pompey's acts in Asia and an assignment of lands
      which he had promised to his veterans. For the conqueror of the east and the greatest man in
      Rome to be thus thwarted in his purpose, and not to have the power of fulfilling the promises
      which he had made to his Asiatic clients and his veteran troops, were insults which he would
      not brook; and all the less, because he might have entered Rome, as many of his enemies feared
      he intended, at the head of his army, and have carried all his measures by the sword. He was
      therefore quite ready to desert the aristocracy altogether, and to join Caesar, who promised
      to obtain the confirmation of his acts. Caesar, however, represented that they should have
      great difficulty in carrying their point unless they detached M. Crassus from the aristocracy,
      who by his position, connexions, and still more by his immense wealth, had great influence at
      Rome. Pompey and Crassus had for a long time past been deadly enemies; but they were
      reconciled by means of Caesar, and the three entered into an agreement to support one another,
      and to divide the power between themselves. This first triumvirate, as it is called, was
      therefore merely a private agreement between the three most powerful men at Rome; it was not a
      magistracy like the second; and the agreement itself remained a secret, till the proceedings
      of Caesar in his consulship shewed, that he was supported by a power against which it was in
      vain for his enemies to struggle.</p><p>In <date when-custom="-59">B. C. 59</date>, Caesar entered upon the consulship with M. Bibulus.
      His first proceeding was to render the senate more amenable to public opinion, by causing all
      its proceedings to be taken down and published daily. His next was to bring forward an
      agrarian law, which had been long demanded by the people, but which the senate had hitherto
      prevented from being carried. We have seen that the agrarian law of Rullus, introduced in
       <date when-custom="-63">B. C. 63</date>, was dropped by its proposer; and the agrarian law of
      Flavius, which had been proposed in the preceding year (<date when-custom="-60">B. C. 60</date>),
      had been successfully opposed by the aristocracy, although it was supported by the whole power
      of Pompey. The provisions of Caesar's agrarian law are not explicitly stated by the ancient
      writers, but its main object was to divide the rich Campanian land which was the property of
      the state among the poorest citizens, especially among those who had three or more children;
      and if the domain land was not sufficient for the object, more was to be purchased. The
      execution of the law was to be entrusted to a board of twenty commissioners. The opposition of
      the aristocratical party was in vain. Bibulus, indeed, declared before the people, that the
      law should never pass while he was consul ; but Pompey and Crassus spoke in its favour, and
      the former declared, that he would bring both sword and buckler against those who used the
      sword. On the day on which the law was put to the vote, Bibulus, the three tribunes who
      opposed it, and all the other members of the aristocracy were driven out of the forum by force
      of arms : the law was carried, the commissioners appointed, and about 20,000 citizens,
      comprising of course a great number of Pompey's veterans, received allotments subsequently. On
      the day after Bibulus had been driven out of the forum, he summoned the senate, narrated to
      them the violence which had been employed against him, and called upon them to support him,
      and declare the law invalid; but the aristocracy was thoroughly frightened; not a word was
      said in reply; and Bibulus, despairing of being able to offer any further resistance to
      Caesar, shut himself up in his own house, and did not appear again in public till the
      expiration of his consulship. In his retirement he published "Edicts" against Caesar, in which
      he protested against the legality of his measures, and bitterly attacked his private and
      political character.</p><p>It was about this time, and before the agrarian law had been passed, that Caesar united
      himself still more closely to Pompey by giving him his daughter Julia in marriage, although
      she had been already betrothed to Servilius Caepio. Caesar himself, at the same time, married
      Calpurnia, the daughter of L. Piso, who was consul in the following year.</p><p>By his agrarian law Caesar had secured to himself more strongly than ever the favour of the
      people ; his next step was to gain over the equites, who had rendered efficient service to
      Cicero in his consulship, and had hitherto supported the aristocratical party. An excellent
      opportunity now occurred for accomplishing this object. In their eagerness to obtain the
      fanning of the public taxes in Asia, the equites, who had obtained the contract, had agreed to
      pay too large a sum, and had accordingly petitioned the senate in <date when-custom="-61">B. C.
       61</date> for more favourable terms. This, however, had been opposed by Metellus Celer, Cato,
      and others of the aristocracy; and Caesar therefore now brought forward a bill in the comitia
      to relieve the equities from one-third of the sum which they had agreed to pay. This measure,
      which was also supported by Pompey, was carried. Caesar next obtained the confirmation of
      Pompey's acts; and having thus gratified the people, the equites, and Pompey, he was easily
      able to obtain for himself the provinces which he wished. The senate, as we have seen, had
      previously assigned him the care of the woods and the public pastures as his province, and he
      therefore got the tribune Vatinius to propose a bill to the people, granting to him the
      provinces of Cisalpine Gaul and Illyricum with three legions for five years. This was of
      course passed; and the senate added to his government the province of Transalpine Gaul, with
      another legion, for five years also, as they plainly saw that a bill would be proposed to the
      people for that purpose, if they did not grant the province themselves. <pb n="544"/></p><p>It is not attributing any great foresight to Caesar to suppose, that he already saw that the
      struggle between the different parties at Rome must eventually be terminated by the sword. The
      same causes were still in operation which had led to the civil wars between Marius and Sulla,
      which Caesar had himself witnessed in his youth; and he must have been well aware that the
      aristocracy would not hesitate to call in the assistance of the sword if they should ever
      succeed in detaching Pompey from his interests. It was therefore of the first importance for
      him to obtain an army, which he might attach to himself by victories and rewards. But he was
      not dazzled by the wealth of Asia to obtain a command in the East, for he would then have been
      at too great a distance from Rome, and would gradually have lost much of his influence in the
      city. He therefore wisely chose the Gallic provinces, as he would thus be able to pass the
      winter in the north of Italy, and keep up his communication with the city, while the disturbed
      state of Further Gaul promised him sufficient materials for engaging in a series of wars, in
      which he might employ an army that would afterwards be devoted to his purposes. In addition to
      these considerations, Caesar was doubtless actuated by the desire of finding a field for the
      display of those military talents which his campaign in Spain shewed that he possessed, and
      also by the ambition of subduing for ever that nation which had once sacked Rome, and which
      had been, from the earliest times, more or less an object of dread to the Roman state.</p><p>The consuls of the following year (<date when-custom="-58">B. C. 58</date>), L. Calpurnius Piso
      and A. Gabinius, were devoted to Caesar's interests; but among the praetors, L. Domitius
      Ahenobarbus and C. Memmius attempted to invalidate the acts of Caesar's consulship, but
      without success. Caesar remained a short time in the city, to see the result of this attempt,
      and then left Rome, but was immediately accused in his absence by the tribune Antistius. This
      accusation, however, was dropped; and all these attempts against Caesar were as ill-advised as
      they were fruitless, since they only shewed more strongly than ever the weakness of his
      adversaries. But although Caesar had left Rome, he did not go straight to his province; he
      remained with his army three months before Rome, to support Clodius, who had passed over from
      the patricians to the plebs in the previous year, was now tribune, and had resolved upon the
      ruin of Cicero. Towards the latter end of April, Cicero went into exile without waiting for
      his trial, and Caesar then proceeded forthwith into his province.</p><p>During the next nine years Caesar was occupied with the subjugation of Gaul. In this time he
      conquered the whole of Transalpine Gaul, which had hitherto been independent of the Romans,
      with the exception of the part called Provincia ; he twice crossed the Rhine, and carried the
      terror of the Roman arms across that river, and he twice landed in Britain, which had been
      hitherto unknown to the Romans. To give a detailed account of these campaigns would be
      impossible in the limits of this work; we can only offer a very brief sketch of the principal
      events of each year.</p><p>Caesar left Rome, as has been already remarked, towards the latter end of April, and arrived
      at Geneva in eight days. His first campaign was against the Helvetii, a powerful Gallic people
      situated to the north of the lake of Geneva, and between the Rhine and mount Jura. He had
      heard before leaving Rome that this people had intended to migrate from their country into
      Western or Southern Gaul, and he had accordingly made all the more haste to leave the city.
      There were only two roads by which the Helvetii could leave their country--one across mount
      Jura into the country of the Sequani (Franche Comté), and the other across the Rhone by
      the bridge of Geneva, and then through the northern part of the Roman province. Since the
      latter was by far the easier of the two, they marched towards Geneva, and requested permission
      to pass through the Roman province; but, as this was refused by Caesar, and they were unable
      to force a passage. they proceeded northwards, and, through the mediation of Dumnorix, an
      Aeduan, obtained permission from the Sequani to march through their country. Caesar,
      apprehending great danger to the Roman province in Gaul, from the settlement of the Helvetii
      in its immediate neighbourhood, resolved to use every effort to prevent it. But having only
      one legion with him, he hastened back into Cisalpine Gaul, summoned from their winter quarters
      the three legions at Aquileia, levied two new ones, and with these five crossed the Alps, and
      came into the country of the Segusiani, the first independent people north of the province,
      near the modern town of Lyons. When he arrived there, he found that the Helvetii had passed
      through the country of the Sequani, and were now plundering the territories of the Aedui.
      Three out of their four clans had already crossed the Arar (Saône), but the fourth was
      still on the eastern side of the river. This clan, called Tigurinus, was unexpectedly
      surprised by Caesar, and cut to pieces. He then threw a bridge across the Arar, and went in
      pursuit of the enemy. His progress, however, was somewhat checked by the defeat, a day or two
      afterwards, of the whole body of his cavalry, 4000 in number, levied in the province and among
      the Aedui, by 500 Helvetian horsemen. He therefore followed them more cautiously for some
      days, and at length fought a pitched battle with them near the town of Bibracte (Autun). The
      battle lasted from about mid-day to sunset, but the Helvetii, after a desperate conflict, were
      at length defeated with great slaughter. After resting his troops for three days, Caesar went
      in pursuit of the enemy. Unable to offer anyfurther resistance, they surrendered
      unconditionally to his mercy, and were by him commanded to return to their former homes. When
      they left their native country, their number was 368,000, of whom 92,000 were fighting-men;
      but upon returning to Helvetia, their number was found to have been reduced to 110,000
      persons.</p><p>This great victory soon raised Caesar's fame among the various tribes of the Gauls, who now
      sent embassies to congratulate him on his success, and to solicit his aid. Among others,
      Divitiacus, one of the most powerful of the Aeduan chiefs, informed Caesar that Ariovistus, a
      German king, had been invited by the Arverni and Sequani to come to their assistance against
      the Aedui, between whom and the Arverni there had long been a struggle for the supremacy in
      Gaul. He further stated, that not only had the Aedui been again and again defeated by
      Ariovistus, but that the German king had seized upon a great part of the land of the Sequani,
      and was still bringing over fresh swarms of Germans to settle in the Gallic <pb n="545"/>
      country. In consequence of these representations, Caesar commanded Ariovistus, who had
      received the title of king and friend of the Roman people in Caesar's own consulship, to
      abstain from introducing any more Germans into Gaul, to restore the hostages to the Aedui, and
      not to attack the latter or their allies. But as a haughty answer was returned to these
      commands, both parties prepared for war. Caesar advanced northwards through the country of the
      Sequani, and took possession of Vesontio (Besançon), an important town on the Dubis
      (Donbs), and some days afterwards fought a decisive battle with Ariovistus, who suffered a
      total defeat, and fled with the remains of his army to the Rhine, a distance of fifty miles.
      Only a very few, and among the rest Ariovistus himself, crossed the river; the rest were cut
      to pieces by the Roman cavalry. [<hi rend="smallcaps">ARIOVISTUS.</hi>]</p><p>Having thus completed two very important wars in one summer, Caesar led his troops into
      their quarters for the winter early in the autumn, where he left them under the command of
      Labienus, while he himself went into Cisalpine Gaul to attend to his civil duties in the
      province.</p><p>The following year, <date when-custom="-57">B. C. 57</date>, was occupied with the Belgic war.
      Alarmed at Caesar's success, the various Belgic tribes, which dwelt between the Sequana
      (Seine) and the Rhine, and were the most warlike of all the Gauls, had entered into a
      confederacy to oppose Caesar, and had raised an army of 300,000 men. Caesar meantime levied
      two new legions in Cisalpine Gaul, which increased his army to eight legions; but even this
      was but a small force compared with the overwhelming numbers of the enemy. Caesar was the
      first to open the campaign by marching into the country of the Remi, who submitted at his
      approach, and entered into alliance with him. He then crossed the Axona (Aisne), and pitched
      his camp on a strong position on the right bank. But, in order to make a diversion, and to
      separate the vast forces of the enemy, he sent Divitiacus with the Aedui to attack the country
      of the Bellovaci from the west. The enemy had meantime laid siege to Bibrax (Bièvre), a
      town of the Remi, but retired when Caesar sent troops to its assistance. They soon, however,
      began to suffer from want of provisions, and hearing that Divitiacus was approaching the
      territories of the Bellovaci, they came to the resolution of breaking up their vast army, and
      retiring to their own territories, where each people could obtain provisions and maintain
      themselves. This determination was fatal to them : together they might possibly have
      conquered; but once separated, they had no chance of contending against the powerful Roman
      army. Hitherto Caesar had remained in his entrenchments, but he now broke up from his
      quarters, and resumed the offensive. The Suessiones, the Bellovaci, and Ambiani were subdued
      in succession, or surrendered of their own accord; but a more formidable task awaited him when
      he came to the Nervii, the most warlike of all the Belgic tribes. In their country, near the
      river Sabis (Samnbre), the Roman army was surprised by the enemy while engaged in marking out
      and fortifying the camp. This part of the country was surrounded by woods, in which the Nervii
      had concealed themselves; and it seems, as Napoleon has remarked, that Caesar was on this
      occasion guilty of great imprudence in not having explored the country properly, as he was
      well provided with light armed troops. The attack of the Nervii was so unexpected, and the
      surprise so complete, that before the Romans could form in rank, the enemy was in their midst
      : the Roman soldiers began to give way, and the battle seemed entirely lost. Caesar used every
      effort to amend his first error; he hastened from post to post, freely exposed his own person
      in the first line of the battle, and discharged alike the duties of a brave soldier and an
      able general. His exertions and the discipline of the Roman troops at length triumphed; and
      the Nervii were defeated with such immense slaughter, that out of 60,000 fighting-men only 500
      remained in the state. The Aduatici, who were on their march to join the Nervii, returned to
      their own country when they heard of Caesar's victory, and shut themselves up in one of their
      towns, which was of great natural strength, perhaps on the hill called at present Falais.
      Caesar marched to the place, and laid siege to it; but when the barbarians saw the military
      engines approaching the walls, they surrendered to Caesar. In the night, however, they
      attempted to surprise the Roman camp, but, being repulsed, paid dearly for their treachery;
      for on the following day Caesar took possession of the town, and sold all the inhabitants as
      slaves, to the number of 53,000. At the same time he received intelligence that the Veneti,
      Unelli, and various other states in the north-west of Gaul, had submitted to M. Crassus, whom
      he had sent against them with one legion. Having thus subjugated the whole of the north of
      Gaul, Caesar led his troops into winter-quarters in the country of the Carnutes, Andes, and
      Turones, people near the Ligeris (Loire), in the central parts of Gaul, and then proceeded
      himself to Cisalpine Gaul. When the senate received the despatches of Caesar announcing this
      victory, they decreed a public thanksgiving of fifteen days--a distinction which had never yet
      been granted to any one : the thanksgiving in Pompey's honour, after the Mithridatic war, had
      lasted for ten days, and that was the longest that had hitherto been decreed.</p><p>At the beginning of the following year, <date when-custom="-56">B. C. 56</date>, which was
      Caesar's third campaign in Gaul, he was detained some months in Italy by the state of affairs
      at Rome. There had been a misunderstanding between Pompey and Crassus; and L. Domitius
      Ahenobarbus, who had become a candidate for the consulship, threatened to deprive Caesar of
      his army and provinces. Caesar accordingly invited Pompey and Crassus to come to him at Lncca
      (Lucca), where he reconciled them to one another, and arranged that they should be the consuls
      for the following year, and that Crassus should have the province of Syria, and Pompey the two
      Spains. They on their part agreed to obtain the prolongation of Caesar's government for five
      years more, and pay for his troops out of the public treasury. It was not through any want of
      money that Caesar made the latter stipulation, for he had obtained immense booty in his two
      campaigns in Gaul; but so corrupt was the state of society at Rome, that he knew it would be
      difficult for him to retain his present position unless he was able to bribe the people and
      the leading men in the city. The money which he had acquired in his Gallic wars was therefore
      freely expended in carrying the elections of those candidates for public offices who would
      support his interests, and also in presents <pb n="546"/> to the senators and other
      influential men who flocked to him at Luca to pay him their respects and share in his
      liberality. He held almost a sort of court at Luca : 200 senators waited upon him, and so many
      also that were invested with public offices, that 120 lictors were seen in the streets of the
      town.</p><p>After settling the affairs of Italy, Caesar proceeded to his army at the latter end of the
      spring of <date when-custom="-56">B. C. 56</date>. During his absence, a powerful confederacy had
      been formed against him by the maritime states in the north-west of Gaul. Many of these had
      submitted to P. Crassus in the preceding year, alarmed at Caesar's victories over the Belgians
      ; but, following the example of the Veneti in Bretagne, they had now all risen in arms against
      the Romans. Fearing a general insurrection of all Gaul, Caesar thought it advisable to divide
      his army and distribute it in four different parts of the country. He himself, with the main
      body and the fleet which he had caused to be built on the Ligeris, undertook the conduct of
      the war against the Veneti ; while he sent T. Titurius Sabinus with three legions into the
      country of the Unelli, Curiosolitae, and Lexovii (Normandy). Labienus was despatched eastwards
      with a cavalry force into the country of the Treviri, near the Rhine, to keep down the
      Belgians and to prevent the Germans from crossing that river. Crassus was sent with twelve
      legionary cohorts and a great number of cavalry into Aquitania, to prevent the Basque tribes
      in the south of Gaul from joining the Veneti. The plan of the campaign was laid with great
      skill, and was crowned with complete success. The Veneti, after suffering a great naval
      defeat, were obliged to surrender to Caesar, who treated them with merciless severity in order
      to strike terror into the surrounding tribes : he put all the senators to death, and sold the
      rest of the people as slaves. About the same time, Titurius Sabinus conquered the Veneti and
      the surrounding people; and Crassus, though with more difficulty, the greater part of
      Aquitania. The presence of Labienus, and the severe defeats they had experienced in the
      preceding year, seem to have deterred the Belgians from any attempt at revolt. Although the
      season was far advanced, Caesar marched against the Morini and Menapii (in the neighbourhood
      of Calais and Boulogne), as they were the only people in Gaul that still remained in arms. On
      his approach, they retired into the woods, and the rainy season coming on, Caesar was obliged
      to lead his troops into winter-quarters. He accordingly recrossed the Sequana (Seine), and
      stationed his soldiers for the winter in Normandy in the country of the Aulerci and Lexovii.
      Thus, in three campaigns, Caesar may be said to have conquered the whole of Gaul; but the
      spirit of the people was not yet broken. They therefore made several attempts to recover their
      independence ; and it was not till their revolts had been again and again put down by Caesar,
      and the flower of the nation had perished in battle, that they learnt to submit to the Roman
      yoke.</p><p>In the next year, <date when-custom="-55">B. C. 55</date>, Pompey and Crassus were consuls, and
      proceeded to carry into execution the arrangement which had been entered into at Luca. They
      experienced, however, more opposition than they had anticipated: the aristocracy, headed by
      Cato, threw every obstacle in their way, but was unable to prevent the two bills proposed by
      the tribune Trebonius from being carried, one of which assigned the provinces of the Spains
      and Syria to the consuls Pompey and Crassus, and the other prolonged Caesar's provincial
      government for five additional years. By the law of Vatinius, passed in <date when-custom="-59">B.
       C. 59</date>, Gaul and Illyricum were assigned to Caesar for five years, namely, from the 1st
      of January, <date when-custom="-58">B. C. 58</date> to the end of December, <date when-custom="-54">B. C.
       54</date> ; and now, by the law of Trebonius, the provinces were continued to him for five
      years more, namely, from the 1st of January, <date when-custom="-53">B. C. 53</date> to the end of
      the year 49.</p><p>In <date when-custom="-55">B. C. 55</date>, Caesar left Italy earlier than usual, in order to make
      preparations for a war with the Germans. This was his fourth campaign in Gaul. The Gauls had
      suffered too much in the last three campaigns to make any further attempt against the Romans
      at present; but Caesar's ambition would not allow him to be idle. Fresh wars must be
      undertaken and fresh victories gained to keep him in the recollection of the people, and to
      employ his troops in active service. Two German tribes, the Usipetes and the Tenchtheri, had
      been driven out of their own country by the Suevi, and had crossed the Rhine, at no great
      distance from its mouth, with the intention of settling in Gaul. This, however, Caesar was
      resolved to prevent, and accordingly prepared to attack them. The Germans opened negotiations
      with him, but while these were going on, a body of their cavalry attacked and defeated
      Caesar's Gallic cavalry, which was vastly superior in numbers. On the next day, all the German
      chiefs came into Caesar's camp to apologize for what they had done; but, instead of accepting
      their excuse, Caesar detained them, and straightway led out his troops to attack the enemy.
      Deprived of their leaders, and taken by surprise, the Germans after a feeble resistance took
      to flight, and were almost all destroyed by the Roman cavalry. The remainder fled to the
      confluence of the Mosa (Meuse) and the Rhine, but few crossed the river in safety. To strike
      terror into the Germans, Caesar resolved to cross the Rhine. In ten days he built a bridge of
      boats across the river, probably in the neighbourhood of Cologne, and, after spending eighteen
      days on the eastern side of the river, and ravaging the country of the Sigambri, he returned
      to Gaul and broke down the bridge.</p><p>Although the greater part of the summer was now gone, Caesar resolved to invade Britain. His
      object in undertaking this expedition at such a late period of the year was more to obtain
      some knowledge of the island from personal observation, than with any view to permanent
      conquest at present. He accordingly took with him only two legions, with which he sailed from
      the port Itius (probably Witsand, between Calais and Boulogne), and effected a landing
      somewhere near the South Foreland, after a severe struggle with the natives. Several of the
      British tribes hereupon sent offers of submission to Caesar; but, in consequence of the loss
      of a great part of the Roman fleet a few days afterwards, they took up arms again. Being
      however defeated, they again sent offers of submission to Caesar, who simply demanded double
      the number of hostages he had originally required, as he was anxious to return to Gaul before
      the season should be further advanced. He did not, therefore, wait for the hostages, but
      commanded them to be brought to him in Gaul. On his return, he punished the Morini, who had
      revolted in his absence; and, after leading his troops into winter-quarters <pb n="547"/>
      among the Belgians, repaired, as usual, to the north of Italy. Caesar had not gained ally
      victories in this campaign equal to those of the three former years; but his victories over
      the Germans and far-distant Britons were probably regarded by the Romans with greater
      admiration than his conquests of the Gauls. The senate accordingly voted him a public
      thanksgiving of twenty days, notwithstanding the opposition of Cato, who declared, that Caesar
      ought to be delivered up to the Usipetes and Tenchtheri, to prevent the gods from visiting
      upon Rome his violation of the law of nations in seizing the sacred persons of
      ambassadors.</p><p>The greater part of Caesar's fifth campaign, <date when-custom="-54">B. C. 54</date>, was occupied
      with his second invasion of Britain. After making an expedition into Illyricum, and afterwards
      into the country of the Treviri, who had shewn a disposition to revolt, he set sail from the
      port Itius with an army of five legions, and landed without opposition at the same place as in
      the former year. The British states had entrusted the supreme command to Cassivellaunus, a
      chief whose territories were divided from the maritime states by the river Tamesis (Thames).
      The Britons bravely opposed the progress of the invaders, but were defeated in a series of
      engagements. Caesar crossed the Thames at the only place where it was fordable, took the town
      of Cassivellaunus, and conquered great part of the counties of Essex and Middlesex. In
      consequence of these disasters, Cassivellaunus sued for peace; and, after demanding hostages,
      and settling the tribute which Britain should pay yearly to the Roman people, Caesar returned
      to Gaul towards the latter part of the summer. Caesar gained no more by his second invasion of
      Britain than by his first. He had penetrated, it is true, further into the country, but he had
      left no garrisons or military establishments behind him; and the people obeyed the Romans just
      as little afterwards as they had done before.</p><p>In consequence of the great scarcity of corn in Gaul, arising from a drought this year,
      Caesar was obliged, contrary to his practice in former years, to divide his forces, and
      station his legions for the winter in different parts of Gaul. This seemed to the Gauls a
      favourable opportunity for recovering their lost independence, and destroying their
      conquerors. The Eburones, a Gallic people between the Meuse and the Rhine, near the modern
      Tongres, led on by their chiefs, Ambiorix and Cativolcus, were the first to begin the revolt,
      and attacked the camp of the legion and five cohorts under the command of T. Titurius Sabinus
      and L. Aurunculeius Cotta, only fifteen days after they had been stationed in their country.
      Alarmed at the vast hosts which surrounded them, and fearing that they should soon be attacked
      by the Germans also, the Romans quitted their camp, with the intention of marching to the
      winter-quarters of the legions nearest them under promise of a safe-conduct from Ambiorix.
      This step was taken by Sabinus against the wish of Cotta, who mistrusted the good faith of
      Ambiorix. The result verified his fears : the Romans were attacked on their march by Ambiorix,
      and were destroyed almost to a man. This was the first serious disaster that Caesar had
      experienced in Gaul. Flushed with victory, Ambiorix and the Eburones now proceeded to attack
      the camp of Q. Cicero, the brother of the orator, who was stationed with one legion among the
      Nervii. The latter people and the Aduatici readily joined the Eburones, and Cicero's camp was
      soon surrounded by an overwhelming host. Seconded by the bravery of his soldiers, Cicero,
      though in a weak state of health, repulsed the enemy in all their attempts to storm the camp,
      till he was at length relieved by Caesar in person, who came to his assistance with two
      legions, as soon as he heard of the dangerous position of his legate. The forces of the enemy,
      which amounted to 60,000, were defeated by Caesar, who then joined Cicero, and praised him and
      his men for the bravery they had shewn. In consequence of the unsettled state of Gaul, Caesar
      resolved to remain with his army all the winter, and accordingly took up his quarters at
      Samarobriva (Amiens). About the same time, Indutiomarus, a chief of the Treviri, attempted to
      form a confederacy against the Romans, but was attacked and killed by Labienus, who was
      stationed in the country of the Treviri.</p><p>In September of this year, <date when-custom="-54">B. C. 54</date>, Julia, Caesar's daughter and
      Pompey's wife, died in childbirth ; but her death did not at the time affect the relations
      between Caesar and Pompey. In order, however, to keep up a family connexion between them,
      Caesar proposed that his niece Octavia, the wife of C. Marcellus and the sister of the future
      emperor Augustus, should marry Pompey, and that he himself should marry Pompey's daughter, who
      was now the wife of Faustus Sulla. This proposal, however, was declined, but for what reason
      we are not told.</p><p>In the next year, <date when-custom="-53">B. C. 53</date>, which was Caesar's sixth campaign in
      Gaul, the Gauls again took up arms, and entered into a most formidable conspiracy to recover
      their independence. The destruction of the Roman troops under Sabinus and Cotta, and the
      unsettled state of Gaul during the winter, had led Caesar to apprehend a general rising of the
      natives; and he had accordingly levied two new legions in Cisalpine Gaul, and obtained one
      from Pompey, who was remaining in the neighbourhood of Rome as proconsul with the imperium.
      Being thus at the head of a powerful army, he was able to subdue the nations that revolted,
      and soon compelled the Nervii, Senones, Carnutes, Menapii, and Treviri to return to obedience.
      But as the Treviri had been supported by the Germans, he crossed the Rhine again a little
      above the spot where he had passed over two years before, and having received the submission
      of the Ubii, proceeded to march into the country of the Suevi. The latter people, however,
      retired to their woods and fastnesses as he advanced; and, finding it impossible to come up
      with the enemy, he again recrossed the Rhine, having effected as little as in his previous
      invasion of the country. On his return, he made a vigorous effort to put down Ambiorix, who
      still continued in arms. The country of the Eburones was laid waste with fire and sword; the
      troops of Ambiorix were again and again defeated, but he himself always escaped falling into
      the hands of the Romans. In the midst of this war, when the enemy were almost subdued,
      Cicero's camp was surprised by a body of the Sigambri, who had crossed the Rhine, and was
      almost taken. At the conclusion of the campaign, Caesar prosecuted a strict inquiry into the
      revolt of the Senones and Carnutes, and caused Acco, who had been the chief ringleader in the
      conspiracy, to be put to death. He then stationed his troops for the winter among <pb n="548"/> the Treviri, Lingones, and Senones, and departed to Cisalpine Gaul.</p><p>Upon Caesar's arrival in Cisalpine Gaul, he heard of the death of Clodius, who was killed by
      Milo at the latter end of January, <date when-custom="-52">B. C. 52</date>. This event was followed
      by tumults, which rent both Rome and Italy asunder; and it was currently reported in Gaul that
      Caesar could not possibly leave Italy under these circumstances. The unsuccessful issue of
      last year's revolt had not yet damped the spirits of the Gauls; the execution of Acco had
      frightened all the chiefs, as every one feared that his turn might come next; the hatred of
      the Roman yoke was intense; and thus all the materials were ready for a general conflagration.
      It was first set alight by the Carnutes, and in an incredibly short time it spread from
      country to country, till almost the whole of Gaul was in flames. Even the Aedui, who had been
      hitherto the faithful allies of the Romans, and had assisted them in all their wars,
      subsequently joined the general revolt. At the head of the insurrection was Vercingetorix, a
      young man of noble family belonging to the Arverni, and by far the ablest general that Caesar
      had yet encountered. Never before had the Gauls been so united: Caesar's conquests of the last
      six years seemed to be now entirely lost. The war, therefore, of this year, <date when-custom="-52">B. C. 52</date>, was by far the most arduous that Caesar had yet carried on; but his genius
      triumphed over every obstacle, and rendered it the most brilliant of all.</p><p>It was in the depth of winter when the news of this revolt reached Caesar, for the Roman
      calendar was now nearly three months in advance of the real time of the year. Caesar would
      gladly have remained in Italy to watch the progress of events at Rome; but not merely were his
      hard-won conquests at stake, but also his army, the loss of which would have ruined all his
      prospects for the future. He was therefore compelled to leave Rome in Pompey's power, and set
      out to join his army. It was, however, no easy matter to reach his troops, as the intermediate
      country was in the hands of the enemy, and he could not order them to come to him without
      exposing them to be attacked on their march. Having provided for the safety of the province in
      Transalpine Gaul, he resolved to surprise the enemy by crossing the Cebenna and descending
      into the country of the Arverni (Auvergne). With the forces already in the province, and with
      those which he had himself brought from Italy, he effected a passage over these mountains,
      though it was the depth of winter, and the snow lay six feet on the ground. The Arverni, who
      looked upon these mountains as an impregnable fortress, had made no preparations to resist
      Caesar, and accordingly sent to Vercingetorix to pray him to come to their assistance. This
      was what Caesar had anticipated: his only object was to direct the attention of the enemy to
      this point, while he himself stole away to his legions. He accordingly remained only two days
      among the Arverni, and leaving his troops there in command of D. Brutus, he arrived by rapid
      journeys in the country of the Lingones, where two of his legions were stationed, ordered the
      rest to join him, and had assembled his whole army before Vercingetorix heard of his arrival
      in that part of the country. He lost no time in attacking the chief towns in the hands of the
      enemy. Vellaunodunum (in the country of Château-Landon), Genabum (Orléans), and
      Noviodunum (Nouan, between Orleans and Bourges), fell into his hands without difficulty.
      Alarmed at Caesar's rapid progress, Vercingetorix persuaded his countrymen to lay waste their
      country and destroy their towns, that Caesar might be deprived of all sustenance and quarters
      for his troops. This plan was accordingly carried into effect; but Avaricum (Bourges), the
      chief town of the Bituriges, and a strongly fortified place, was spared from the general
      destruction, contrary to the wishes of Vercingetorix. This town Caesar accordingly laid siege
      to, and, notwithstanding the heroic resistance of the Gauls, it was at length taken, and all
      the inhabitants, men, women, and children, were indiscriminately butchered by the Roman
      soldiery.</p><p>Caesar now divided his army into two parts : one division, consisting of four legions, he
      sent under the command of T. Labienus against the Senones and Parisii; the other, comprising
      six legions, he led himself into the country of the Arverni, and with them laid siege to
      Gergovia (near Clermont). The revolt of the Aedui shortly afterwards compelled him to raise
      the siege, but not until he had received a severe repulse in attempting to storm the town.
      Meantime, the Aedui had taken Noviodunum, in which Caesar had placed all his stores; and, as
      his position had now become very critical, he hastened northwards to join Labienus in the
      country of the Senones. By rapid marches he eluded the pursuit of the enemy, crossed the
      Ligeris (Loire), and joined Labienus in safety.</p><p>The revolt of the Aedui inspired fresh courage in the Gauls, and Vercingetorix soon found
      himself at the head of a much larger army than he had hitherto commanded. Fearing now for the
      safety of the province, Caesar began to march southwards through the country of the Lingones
      into that of the Sequani. The Gauls followed him in vast numbers, and attacked him on his
      march. After an obstinate engagement, in which Caesar is said to have lost his sword, the
      Gallic cavalry were repulsed by the German horse whom Caesar had procured from beyond the
      Rhine. Thereupon, Vercingetorix led off his infantry, and retreated towards Alesia (Alise in
      Burgundy, between Semur and Dijon), whither he was pursued by Caesar. After dismissing his
      cavalry, Vercingetorix shut himself up in the town, which was considered impregnable, and
      resolved to wait for succours from his countrymen. Caesar immediately laid siege to the place,
      and drew lines of circumvallation around it. The Romans, however, were in their turn soon
      surrounded by a vast Gallic army, which had assembled to raise the siege. The Roman army was
      thus placed in imminent peril, and in no instance in Caesar's whole life was his military
      genius so conspicuous. He was between two great armies: Vercingetorix had 70,000 men in
      Alesia, and the Gallic army without consisted of between 250,000 and 300,000 men. Still, he
      would not raise the siege. He prevented Vercingetorix from breaking through the lines,
      entirely routed the Gallic army without, and finally compelled Alesia to surrender.
      Vercingetorix himself thus fell into his hands. The fall of Alesia was followed by the
      submission of the Aedui and Arverni. Caesar then led his troops into winter-quarters, and
      resolved to pass the winter himself at Bibracte, in the country of the Aedui. After receiving,
      Caesar's despatches, the senate voted him a public thanksgiving of twenty days, as in the year
      55. <pb n="549"/></p><p>The victories of the preceding year had determined the fate of Gaul; but many states still
      remained in arms, and entered into fresh conspiracies during the winter. The next year, <date when-custom="-51">B. C. 51</date>, Caesar's eighth campaign in Gaul, was occupied in the reduction
      of these states, into the particulars of which we need not enter. It is sufficient to say,
      that he conquered in succession the Carnutes, the Bellovaci, and the Armoric states in western
      Gaul, took Uxellodunum, a town of the Cadurci (Cahors), and closed the campaign by the
      reduction of Aquitania. He then led his troops into winterquarters, and passed the winter at
      Nemetocenna in Belgium. He here employed himself in the pacification of Gaul; and, as he
      already saw that his presence would soon be necessary in Italy, he was anxious to remove all
      causes for future wars. He accordingly imposed no new taxes, treated the states with honour
      and respect, and bestowed great presents upon the chiefs. The experience of the last two years
      had taught the Gauls that they had no hope of contending successfully against Caesar ; and as
      he now treated them with mildness, they were the more readily induced to submit patiently to
      the Roman yoke. Having thus completed the pacification of Gaul, Caesar found that he could
      leave his army in the spring of <date when-custom="-50">B. C. 50</date>, and therefore, contrary to
      his usual practice, repaired at the end of the winter to Cisalpine Gaul.</p><p>While Caesar had thus been actively engaged in Gaul during the last two years, affairs at
      Rome had taken a turn, which threatened a speedy rupture between him and Pompey. The death of
      Crassus in the Parthian war in <date when-custom="-53">B. C. 53</date> had left Caesar and Pompey
      alone at the head of the state. Pompey had been the chief instrument in raising Caesar to
      power in order to serve his own ends, and never seems to have supposed it possible that the
      conqueror of Mithridates could be thrown into the shade by any man in the world. This,
      however, now began to be the case; Caesar's brilliant victories in Gaul were in every body's
      mouth; and Pompey saw with ill-disguised mortification that he was becoming the second person
      in the state. Though this did not lead him to break with Caesar at once, it made him anxious
      to increase his power and influence, and he had therefore resolved as early as <date when-custom="-53">B. C. 53</date> to obtain, if possible, the dictatorship. He accordingly used no
      effort to put an end to the disturbances at Rome between Milo and Clodius in that year, in
      hopes that all parties would be willing to accede to his wishes in order to restore peace to
      the city. These disturbances broke out into perfect anarchy on the death of Clodius at the
      beginning of the following year, <date when-custom="-52">B. C. 52</date>, and led to the appointment
      of Pompey as sole consul with the concurrence of the senate. This, it is true, did not
      entirely meet Pompey's wishes, yet it was the first step which the aristocracy had taken to
      gratify Pompey, and it paved the way for a reconciliation with them. The acts of Pompey's
      consulship, which were all directed to the increase of his power, belong to Pompey's life; it
      is sufficient to mention here, that among other things he obtained the prolongation of his
      government in Spain for five years more; and as he was not yet prepared to break entirely with
      Caesar, he allowed some of the tribunes to carry a law exempting Caesar from the necessity of
      coming to Rome to become a candidate for the consulship. The ten years of Caesar's government
      would expire at the end of <date when-custom="-49">B. C. 49</date>, and he was therefore resolved to
      obtain the consulship for <date when-custom="-48">B. C. 48</date>, for otherwise he would become a
      private man.</p><p>In the following year, <date when-custom="-51">B. C. 51</date>, Pompey entered into still closer
      connexions with the aristocracy, but at the same time was not willing to support all the
      violent measures of the consul M. Claudius Marcellus, who proposed to send a successor to
      Caesar, on the plea that the war in Gaul was finished, and to deprive him of the privilege of
      becoming a candidate for the consulship in his absence. At length a decree of the senate was
      passed, that the consuls of the succeeding year, <date when-custom="-50">B. C. 50</date>, should on
      the first of March consult the senate respecting the disposal of the consular provinces, by
      which time it was hoped that Pompey would be prepared to take decisive measures against
      Caesar. The consuls for the next year, <date when-custom="-50">B. C. 50</date>, L. Aemilius Paullus
      and C. Claudius Marcellus, and the powerful tribune C. Curio, were all reckoned devoted
      partizans of Pompey and the senate. Caesar, however, gained over Paullus and Curio by large
      bribes, and with an unsparing hand distributed immense sums of money among the leading men of
      Rome. Thus this year passed by. without the senate coming to any decision. The great fear
      which Pompey and the senate entertained was, that Caesar should be elected consul while he was
      still at the head of his army, and it was therefore proposed in the senate by the consul C.
      Marcellus, that Caesar should lay down his command by the 13th of November. This it could not
      be expected that Caesar would do ; his proconsulate had upwards of another year to run; and if
      he had come to Rome as a private man to sue for the consulship, there can be little doubt that
      his life would have been sacrificed. Cato had declared that he would bring Caesar to trial as
      soon as he laid down his command; but the trial would have been only a mockery, for Pompey was
      in the neighbourhood of the city at the head of an army, and would have overawed the judges by
      his soldiery as at Milo's trial. The tribune Curio consequently interposed his veto upon the
      proposition of Marcellus. Meantime Caesar had come into Cisalpine Gaul in the spring of <date when-custom="-50">B. C. 50</date>, as already mentioned. Here he was received by the municipal
      towns and colonies with the greatest marks of respect and affection; and after remaining there
      a short time, he returned to Transalpine Gaul and held a review of his whole army, which he
      had so long led to victory. Anxious to diminish the number of his troops, the senate had,
      under pretext of a war with the Parthians, ordered that Pompey and Caesar should each furnish
      a legion to be sent into the East. The legion which Pompey intended to devote to this service
      was the one he had lent to Caesar in <date when-custom="-53">B. C. 53</date>, and which he now
      accordingly demanded back; and although Caesar saw that he should thus be deprived of two
      legions, which would probably be employed against himself, he did not think it advisable break
      with the senate on this point, and felt that he was sufficiently strong to spare even two
      legions. He accordingly sent them to the senate, after bestowing liberal presents upon each
      soldier. Upon their arrival in Italy, they were not, as Caesar had anticipated, sent to the
      East, but were ordered to pass the winter at Capua. After this Caesar stationed his remaining
      eight legions in winter-quarters, four in Belgium and four among the Aedui, and then repaired
       <pb n="550"/> to Cisalpine Gaul. He took up his quarters at Ravenna, the last town in his
      province bordering upon Italy, and there met C. Curio, who informed him more particularly of
      the state of affairs at Rome.</p><p>Though war seemed inevitable, Caesar still shewed himself willing to enter into negotiations
      with the aristocracy, and accordingly sent Curio with a letter addressed to the senate, in
      which he expressed his readiness to resign his command if Pompey would do the same, but
      intimated that he would continue to hold it if Pompey did not accede to his offer. Curio
      arrived at Rome on the first of January, <date when-custom="-49">B. C. 49</date>, the day on which
      the new consuls L. Cornelius Lentulus and C. Claudius Marcellus entered upon their office. It
      was with great difficulty that the tribunes M. Antonius and Q. Cassius Longinus forced the
      senate to allow the letter to be read, but they could not prevail upon the house to take the
      subject of it into deliberation and come to a vote upon it. The consuls, however, brought
      before the house the state of the republic in general; and after a violent debate the motion
      of Scipio, Pompey's father-in-law, was carried, " that Caesar should disband his army by a
      certain day, and that if he did not do it he should be regarded as an enemy of the state."
      Upon this motion the tribunes M. Antonius and Q. Cassius put their veto; but their opposition
      was set at naught. Pompey had now made up his mind to crush Caesar, if possible, and
      accordingly the more violent counsels prevailed. Antonius and Cassius were ejected from the
      senate-house, and on the sixth of January the senate passed the decree, which was tantamount
      to a declaration of martial law, that the consuls and other magistrates " should provide for
      the safety of the state." Antonius and Cassius considering their lives no longer safe, fled
      from the city in disguise to Caesar's army, and called upon him to protect the inviolable
      persons of the tribunes. War was now declared. The senate entrusted the whole management of it
      to Pompey, made a fresh distribution of the provinces, divided the whole of Italy into certain
      districts, the defence of each of which was to be entrusted to some distinguished senator,
      determined that fresh levies of troops should be held, and voted a sum of money from the
      public treasury to Pompey. Pompey had had all along no apprehensions as to the result of a
      war; he seems to have regarded it as scarcely possible that Caesar should ever seriously think
      of marching against him; his great fame, he thought, would cause a multitude of troops to
      flock around him whenever he wished them; and thus in his confidence of success, he had
      neglected all means for raising an army. In addition to this he had been deceived as to the
      disposition of Caesar's troops, and had been led to believe that they were ready to desert
      their general at the first opportunity. Consequently, when the war broke out, Pompey had
      scarcely any troops except the two legions which he had obtained from Caesar, and on the
      fidelity of which he could by no means rely. So unpopular too was the senatorial party in
      Italy, that it was with great difficulty they could levy troops, and when levied, they took
      the first opportunity of passing over to Caesar.</p><p>As soon as Caesar learnt the last resolution of the senate, he assembled his soldiers,
      informed them of the wrongs he had sustained, and called upon them to support him. Finding
      them quite willing to follow him, he crossed the Rubicon which separated his province from
      Italy, and occupied Ariminum, where he met with the tribunes. He commenced his enterprise with
      only one legion, consisting of 5000 foot soldiers and 300 horse, but others had orders to
      follow him from Transalpine Gaul, and he was well aware of the importance of expedition, that
      the enemy might have no time to complete their preparations. Therefore, though it was the
      middle of winter, he pushed on with the utmost rapidity, and such was the popularity of his
      cause in Italy, that city after city opened its gates to him, and his march was like a
      triumphal progress. Arretium, Pisaurum, Fanum, Ancona, Iguvium, and Auximum, fell into his
      hands. These successes caused the utmost consternation at Rome; it was reported that Caesar's
      cavalry was already near the gates of the city; a general panic seized the senate, and they
      fled from the city even without taking with them the money from the public treasury, and did
      not recover their courage till they had got as far south as Capua. Caesar continued his
      victorious march through Picenum till he came to Corfinium, which was the first town that
      offered him any vigorous resistance. L. Domitius Ahenobarbus, who had been appointed Caesar's
      successor in Gaul, had thrown himself into Corfinium with a strong force; but as Pompey did
      not come to his assistance, he was unable to maintain the place, and fell himself into
      Caesar's hands, together with several other senators and distinguished men. Caesar, with the
      same clemency which he displayed throughout the whole of the civil war, dismissed them all
      uninjured, and hastened in pursuit of Pompey, who had now resolved to abandon Italy and was
      accordingly hastening on to Brundisium, intending from thence to sail to Greece. Pompey
      reached Brundisium before Caesar, but had not sailed when the latter arrived before the town.
      Caesar straightway laid siege to the place, but Pompey abandoned it on the 17th of March and
      embarked for Greece. Caesar was unable to follow Pompey for want of ships, and therefore
      determined to march against Afranius and Petreius, Pompey's legates in Spain, who possessed a
      powerful army in that country. He accordingly marched back from Brundisium and repaired to
      Rome, having thus in three months become the supreme master of the whole of Italy.</p><p>After remaining in the neighbourhood of Rome for a short time, he set out for Spain, having
      left M. Lepidus in charge of the city and M. Antonius in command of the troops in Italy. He
      sent Curio to drive Cato out of Sicily, Q. Valerius to take possession of Sardinia, and C.
      Antonius to occupy Illyricum. Curio and Valerius obtained possession of Sicily and Sardinia
      without opposition ; and Curio then passed over into Africa, which was in possession of the
      Pompeian party. Here, however, he met with strong opposition, and at length was defeated and
      lost his life in a battle with Juba, king of Mauritania, who supported P. Atius Varus, the
      Pompeian commander. C. Antonius also met with bad success in Illyricum, for his army was
      defeated and he himself taken prisoner. These events, however, happened at a later period in
      this year; and these disasters were more than counterbalanced by Caesar's victories in the
      meantime in Spain. Caesar left Rome about the middle of April, and on his <pb n="551"/>
      arrival in Gaul found, that Massilia refused to submit to him. He forthwith laid siege to the
      place, but unable to take it immediately, he left C. Trebonius and D. Brutus with part of his
      troops to prosecute the siege, and continued his march to Spain. In this country Pompey had
      seven legions, three under the command of L. Afranius in the nearer province, two under M.
      Petreius in the further, and two under M. Terentius Varro also in the latter province west of
      the Anas (Guadiana). Varro remained in the west; but Afranius and Petreius on the approach of
      Caesar united their forces, and took up a strong position near the town of Ilerda (Lerida in
      Catalonia) on the right bank of the Sicoris (Segre). Into the details of this campaign we
      cannot enter. It is sufficient to state, that, after experiencing great difficulties at first
      and some reverses, Caesar at length reduced Afranius and Petreius to such difficulties that
      they were obliged to surrender. They themselves were dismissed uninjured, part of their troops
      disbanded, and the remainder incorporated among Caesar's troops. Caesar then proceeded to
      march against Varro; but after the victory over Afranius and Petreius, there was no army in
      Spain capable of resisting the conqueror, and Varro accordingly surrendered to Caesar when the
      latter arrived at Corduba (Cordova). Having thus subdued all Spain, which had engaged him only
      forty days, he returned to Gaul. Massilia had not yet yielded, but the siege had been
      prosecuted with so much vigour, that the inhabitants were compelled to surrender the town soon
      after his arrival before the walls.</p><p>While Caesar was before Massilia, he received intelligence that he had been appointed
      dictator by the praetor M. Lepidus, who had been empowered to do so by a law passed for the
      purpose. This appointment, which was of course made in accordance with Caesar's wishes, was
      contrary to all precedent; for a praetor had not the power of nominating a dictator, and the
      senate was entirely passed over : but it is idle to talk of established forms under such
      circumstances; it was necessary that there should be a higher magistrate than praetor to hold
      the comitia for the election of the consuls; and Caesar wished to enter Rome invested with
      some high official power, which he could not do so long as he was merely proconsul.
      Accordingly, as soon as Massilia surrendered, Caesar hastened to Rome and entered upon his
      dictatorship, but laid it down again at the end of eleven days after holding the consular
      comitia, in which he himself and P. Servilius Vatia Isauricus were elected consuls for the
      next year. But during these eleven days he caused some very important laws to be passed. The
      first, which was intended to relieve debtors, but at the same time protect to a great extent
      the rights of creditors, was in the present state of affairs a most salutary measure. (For the
      provisions of this lex, see <hi rend="ital">Dict. of Ant. s. v. Julia Lex de Foenore.</hi>) He
      next obtained the reversal of the sentences which had been pronounced against various persons
      in accordance with the laws passed in Pompey's last consulship; he also obtained the recall of
      several other exiles; he further restored the descendants of those who had been proscribed by
      Sulla to the enjoyment of their rights, and rewarded the Transpadani by the citizenship for
      their faithful support of his cause.</p><p>After laying down the dictatorship, Caesar went in December to Brundisium, where he had
      previously ordered his troops to assemble. He had lost many men in the long march from Spain,
      and also from sickness arising from their passing the autumn in the south of Italy. Pompey had
      not been idle during the summer, and had employed his time in raising a large army in Greece,
      Egypt, and the East, the scene of his former glory. He thus collected an army consisting of
      nine legions of Roman citizens, and an auxiliary force of cavalry and infantry; and, though it
      is impossible to estimate its exact strength, as we do not know the number of men which each
      legion contained, it was decidedly greater than the army which Caesar had assembled at
      Brundisium. His fleet entirely commanded the sea, and so small was the number of Caesar's
      ships, that it seemed impossible that he should venture to cross the sea in face of Pompey's
      superior fleet. This circumstance, and also the time of the year caused M.Bibulus, the
      commander of Pompey's fleet, to relax in his guard; and thus when Caesar set sail from
      Brundisium, on the 4th of January, he arrived the next day in safety on the coast of Epeirus.
      In consequence, however, of the small number of his ships, Caesar was able to carry over only
      seven legions, which, for the causes previously mentioned, had been so thinned as to amount
      only to 15,000 foot and 500 horse. After landing this force, he sent back his ships to bring
      over the remainder; but part of the fleet was intercepted in its return by M. Bibulus, who
      cruelly put all the crews to death; and the Pompeian fleet kept up such a strict watch along
      the coast, that the remainder of Caesar's army was obliged for the present to remain at
      Brundisium. Caesar was thus in a critical position, in the midst of the enemy's country, cut
      off from the rest of his army; but he knew that he could thoroughly rely on his men, and
      therefore immediately commenced acting on the offensive. After gaining possession of Oricum
      and Apollonia, he hastened northwards, in hopes of surprising Dyrrhachium, where all Pompey's
      stores were deposited; but Pompey, by rapid marches, reached this town before him, and both
      armies then encamped opposite to each other, Pompey on the right and Caesar on the left bank
      of the river Apsus. Caesar was at length joined by the remainder of his troops, which were
      brought over from Brundisium with great difficulty by M. Antonius and Q. Fufius Calenus.
      Pompey meantime had retired to some high ground near Dyrrhachium, and as he would not venture
      a battle with Caesar's veterans, Caesar began to blockade him in his position, and to erect
      lines of circumvallation of an extraordinary extent; but when these were nearly completed,
      Pompey forced a passage through Caesar's lines, and drove back his legions with considerable
      loss. Caesar thus found himself compelled to retreat from his present position, and
      accordingly commenced his march for Thessaly, pursued by Pompey's army, which was not however
      able to come up with him. Pompey's plan of avoiding a general engagement with Caesar's
      veterans till he could place more reliance upon his own troops, was undoubtedly a wise one,
      and had been hitherto crowned with success; but his victory at Dyrrhachium and the retreat of
      the enemy inspired him with more confidence, and induced him to give heed to those of his
      officers who recommended him to bring the contest to an issue by an immediate battle.
      Accordingly, <pb n="552"/> when Pompey came up with Caesar, who was encamped on the plains of
      Pharsalus or Pharsalia, in Thessaly, he offered him battle, which was readily accepted by
      Caesar. Their numbers were very unequal : Pompey had 45,000 footsoldiers and 7000 horse,
      Caesar 22,000 foot-soldiers and 1000 horse. The battle, which was fought on the 9th of August,
       <date when-custom="-48">B. C. 48</date>, according to the old calendar, ended in the total defeat
      of Pompey's army. Pompey fled to the court of Egypt, pursued by Caesar, but was murdered there
      before the latter arrived in the country. [<ref target="pompeius-bio-22">POMPEIUS.</ref>]</p><p>The battle of Pharsalia decided the fate of the republic. When news of it reached Rome,
      various laws were passed, which conferred in fact supreme power upon Caesar. Though absent, he
      was nominated dictator a second time, and that not for six months or a shorter time, but for a
      whole year. He appointed M. Antonius his master of the horse, and entered upon the office in
      September of this year (<date when-custom="-48">B. C. 48</date>), so that the commencement and
      termination of his dictatorship and consulship did not coincide, as some modern writers have
      represented. He was also nominated to the consulship for the next five years, but this
      privilege he did not avail himself of; he was invested, moreover, with the tribunicial power
      for life, and with the right of holding all the comitia for the election of the magistrates,
      with the exception of those for the choice of the plebeian tribunes; and it was for this
      reason that no magistrates except the tribunes of the plebs were elected for the next year, as
      Caesar did not return to Rome till September in <date when-custom="-47">B. C. 47</date></p><p>Caesar went to Egypt, as we have already said, in pursuit of Pompey, and upon his arrival
      there, he became involved in a war, which detained him several months, and gave the remains of
      the Pompeian party time to rally and to make fresh preparations for continuing the war. The
      war in Egypt, usually called the Alexandrine war, arose from Caesar's resolving to settle the
      disputes respecting the succession to the kingdom. Caesar determined that Cleopatra, whose
      fascinations completely won his heart, and her elder brother Ptolemy should reign in common;
      but as this decision was opposed by the guardians of the young king, a war broke out between
      them and Caesar, in which he was for some time exposed to great danger on account of the small
      number of his forces. But, having received reinforcements, he finally prevailed, and placed
      Cleopatra and her younger brother on the throne, as the elder had perished in the course of
      the contest. It was soon after this, that Cleopatra had a son by Caesar. [<hi rend="smallcaps">CAESARION</hi> ; <hi rend="smallcaps">CLEOPATRA.</hi>]</p><p>After bringing the Alexandrine war to a close, in the latter end of March, <date when-custom="-47">B. C. 47</date>, Caesar marched through Syria into Pontus in order to attack Pharnaces, the
      son of the celebrated Mithridates, who had defeated Cn. Domitius Calvinus, one of Caesar's
      legates. This war, however, did not detain him long; for Pharnaces, venturing to come to an
      open battle with the dictator, was utterly defeated, on the 2nd of August, near Zela. He
      thence proceeded to Rome, settling the affairs of the provinces in the way, and arrived in the
      capital in September. As the year of his dictatorship was nearly expiring, he caused himself
      to be appointed to the dignity again for a year, and he nominated M. Aemilius Lepidus his
      master of the horse. His third dictatorship consequently begins before, the termination of the
      year 47. The property of Pompey and of several others of the aristocracy was now confiscated
      and sold by public auction. That he might the more easily reward his own friends, the dictator
      increased the number of praetors and of the members of the priestly colleges, and also
      introduced a great number of his partizans into the senate. For the remainder of this year he
      elevated Q. Fufius Calenus and P. Vatinius to the consulship, but he caused himself and his
      master of the horse, M. Aemilius Lepidus to be elected consuls for the next year. It was
      during this time that he quelled a formidable mutiny of his troops which had broken out in
      Campania.</p><p>Caesar did not remain in Rome more than two or three months. With his usual activity and
      energy, he set out to Africa before the end of the year (<date when-custom="-47">B. C. 47</date>),
      in order to carry on the war against Scipio and Cato, who had collected a large army in that
      country. Their forces were far greater than Caesar could bring against them at present ; but
      he was well aware of the advantage which a general has in acting on the offensive, and had too
      much reliance on his own genius to be alarmed by mere disparity of numbers. At the
      commencement of the campaign, however, Caesar was in considerable difficulties; but, having
      been joined by some of his other legions, he was able to prosecute the campaign with more
      vigour, and finally brought it to a close by the battle of Thapsus, on the 6th of April, <date when-custom="-46">B. C. 46</date>, in which the Pompeian army was completely defeated. Cato,
      finding himself unable to defend Utica, put an end to his own life. The other towns in Africa
      submitted to the conqueror, and Caesar was thus able to be in Rome again by the latter end of
      July, according to the old calendar.</p><p>Caesar was now the undisputed master of the Roman world. As he drew near to Rome, great
      apprehensions were entertained by his enemies lest, notwithstanding his former clemency, he
      should imitate Marius and Sulla, and proscribe all his opponents. But these fears were
      perfectly groundless. A love of cruelty was no part of Caesar's nature; and, with a
      magnanimity which victors rarely shew, and least of all those in civil wars, he freely forgave
      all who had borne arms against him, and declared that he should make no difference between
      Pompeians and Caesarians. His object was now to allay animosities, and to secure the lives and
      property of all the citizens of his new kingdom. As soon as the news of his African victory
      reached Rome, and before he himself arrived there, a public thanksgiving of forty days was
      decreed in his honour, and the dictatorship was bestowed upon him for ten years, and the
      censorship, under the new title of " Praefectus Morum," for three years. Caesar had never yet
      enjoyed a triumph ; and, as he had now no further enemies to meet, he availed himself of the
      opportunity of celebrating his victories in Gaul, Egypt, Pontus, and Africa by four
      magnificent triumphs. None of these, however, were in honour of his successes in the civil
      war; and consequently his African triumph was to commemorate his victory over Juba, and not
      over Scipio and Cato. These triumphs were followed by largesses of corn and money to the
      people and the soldiers, by public banquets, and all sorts of entertainments. Never before had
       <pb n="553"/> the games of the circus and the amphitheatre been celebrated with such
      splendour; for Caesar well knew the temper of the Roman populace, and that they would be
      willing enough to surrender their so-called liberties if they were well fed and amused.</p><p>Caesar next appears in the character of a legislator. He now proceeded to correct the
      various evils which had crept into the state, and to obtain the enactment of several laws
      suitable to the altered condition of the commonwealth. He attempted by severe sumptuary laws
      to restrain the extravagance which pervaded all classes of society. In order to prevent any
      other general from following his own career, he obtained a law by which no one was to be
      allowed to hold a praetorian province for longer than one year, or a consular for more than
      two years. But the most important of his changes this year (<date when-custom="-46">B. C. 46</date>)
      was the reformation of the calendar, which was a real benefit to his country and the civilized
      world, and which he accomplished in his character as pontifex maximus, with the assistance of
      Sosigenes, the Alexandrine mathematician, and the scribe M. Flavius, though he himself also
      was well acquainted with astronomy. The regulation of the Roman calendar had always been
      entrusted to the college of pontiffs, who had been accustomed to lengthen or shorten the year
      at their pleasure for political purposes; and the confusion had at length become so great,
      that the Roman year was three months in advance of the real time. To remedy this serious evil,
      Caesar added 90 days to this year, and thus made the whole year consist of 445 days; and he
      guarded against a repetition of similar errors for the future by adapting the year to the
      sun's course. (<hi rend="ital">Dict. of Ant. s.v. Calendarium.</hi>)</p><p>In the midst of these labours, Caesar was interrupted by intelligence of a formidable
      insurrection which had broken out in Spain, where the remains of the Pompeian party had again
      collected a large army under the command of Pompey's sons, Cneius and Sextus. Having been
      previously designated consul and dictator for the following year, Caesar set out for Spain at
      the latter end of <date when-custom="-46">B. C. 46</date>. With his usual activity, he arrived at
      Obulco near Corduba in twenty-seven days from the time of his leaving Rome. He found the enemy
      able to offer stronger opposition than he had anticipated ; but he brought the war to a close
      by the battle of Munda, on the 17th of March, <date when-custom="-45">B. C. 45</date>, in which he
      entirely defeated the enemy. It was, however, a hard-fought battle : Caesar's troops were at
      first driven back, and were only rallied again by their general's exposing his own person,
      like a common soldier, in the front line of the battle. Cn. Pompeius was killed shortly
      afterwards, but Sextus made good his escape. The settlement of the affairs in Spain detained
      Caesar in the province some months longer, and he consequently did not reach Rome till
      September. He entered the city at the beginning of October in triumph on account of his
      victories in Spain, although the victory had been gained over Roman citizens, and he also
      allowed triumphs to his legates Fabius Maximus and Q. Pedius. The senate received him with the
      most servile flattery. They had in his absence voted a public thanksgiving of fifty days on
      account of his victory in Spain, and various other honorary decrees, and they now vied with
      each other in paying him every species of adulation and homage. He was to wear, on all public
      occasions, the triumphal robe; he was to receive the title of " Father of his country ;"
      statues of him were to be placed in all the temples; his portrait was to be struck on coins;
      the month of Quintilis was to receive the name of Julius in his honour, and he was to be
      raised to a rank among the gods. But there were still more important decrees than these, which
      were intended to legalise his power and confer upon him the whole government of the Roman
      world. He received the title of imperator for life; he was nominated consul for the next ten
      years, and both dictator and praefectus morum for life; his person was declared sacred; a
      guard of senators and knights was appointed to protect him, and the whole senate took an oath
      to watch over his safety.</p><p>If we now look at the way in which Caesar exerted his sovereign power, it cannot be denied
      that he used it in the main for the good of his country. He still pursued his former merciful
      course : no proscriptions or executions took place; and he began to revolve vast schemes for
      the benefit of the Roman world. He was at the same time obliged to reward his followers, and
      for that reason he greatly increased the number of senators, augmented the number of public
      magistrates, so that there were to be sixteen praetors, forty quaestors, and six aediles, and
      he added new members to the priestly colleges. Among his other plans of internal improvement,
      he proposed to frame a digest of all the Roman laws, to establish public libraries, to drain
      the Pomptine marshes, to enlarge the harbour of Ostia, and to dig a canal through the isthmus
      of Corinth. To protect the boundaries of the Roman empire, he meditated expeditions against
      the Parthians and the barbarous tribes on the Danube, and had already begun to make
      preparations for his departure to the East. In the midst of these vast projects he entered
      upon the last year of his life, <date when-custom="-44">B. C. 44</date>, and his fifth consulship
      and dictatorship. He had made M. Antony his colleague in the consulship, and M. Lepidus the
      master of the horse. Caesar had for some time past resolved to preserve the supreme power in
      his family; and, as he had no legitimate children, had fixed upon his greatnephew Octavius
      (afterwards the emperor Augustus) as his successor. Possessing royal power, he now wished to
      obtain the title of king, which he might hand down to his successor on the throne, and
      accordingly got his colleague Antony to offer him the diadem in public on the festival of the
      Lupercalia (the 15th of February); but, seeing that the proposition was not favourably
      received by the people, he resolved to decline it for the present. Caesar's wish for the title
      of king must not be regarded as merely a desire to obtain an empty honour, the reality of
      which he already possessed. Had he obtained it, and been able to bequeath it to his successor,
      he would have saved the state from many of the evils which subsequently arose from the
      anomalous constitution of the Roman empire as it was finally established by Augustus. The
      state would then have become an hereditary and not an elective monarchy, and would not have
      fallen into the hands of an insolent and rapacious soldiery.</p><p>Meantime, the conspiracy against Caesar's life had been already formed as early as the
      beginning of the year. It had been set afoot by Cassius, a personal enemy of Caesar's, and
      there were more than sixty persons privy to it. Personal hatred alone seems to have been the
      motive of Cassius, and probably of several others. Many <pb n="554"/> of them had taken an
      active part in the war against Caesar, and had not only been forgiven by him, but raised to
      offices of rank and honour; but forgiveness by an enemy, instead of exciting gratitude, only
      renders the benefactor still more hateful to men of low and base minds. They pretended that
      their object was to restore liberty to the state, and some, perhaps M. Brutus among the rest,
      believed that they should be doing good service to their country by the assassination of its
      ruler. But the majority were undoubtedly actuated by the mere motive of restoring their own
      party to power : every open attempt to crush their enemy had failed, and they had now recourse
      to assassination as the only means of accomplishing their object. Their project was nearly
      discovered; but Caesar disregarded the warnings that had been given him, and fell by the
      daggers of his assassins in the senatehouse, on the ides, or fifteenth, of March, <date when-custom="-44">B. C. 44</date>. Caesar's death was undoubtedly a loss not only for the Roman
      people, but the whole civilized world. The republic was utterly lost; it could not have been
      restored; and if there had been any possibility of establishing it again, it would have fallen
      into the hands of a profligate aristocracy, which would only have sought its own
      aggrandizement upon the ruins of its country. Now the Roman world was called to go through
      many years of disorder and bloodshed, till it rested again under the supremacy of Augustus,
      who had neither the talents, the power, nor the inclination to carry into effect the vast and
      salutary plans of his uncle. When we recollect the latter years of the Roman republic, the
      depravity and corruption of the ruling class, the scenes of anarchy and bloodshed which
      constantly occurred in the streets of the capital, it is evident that the last days of the
      republic had come, and that its only hope of peace and security was under the strong hand of
      military power. And fortunate was it in obtaining a ruler so mild and so beneficent as Caesar.
      Pompey was not naturally cruel, but he was weak and irresolute, and was surrounded by men who
      would have forced him into the most violent and sanguinary acts, if his party had
      prevailed.</p><p>Caesar was in his fifty-sixth year at the time of his death. His personal appearance was
      noble and commanding; he was tall in stature, of a fair complexion, and with black eyes full
      of expression. He never wore a beard, and in the latter part of his life his head was bald.
      His constitution was originally delicate, and he was twice attacked by epilepsy while
      transacting public business; but, by constant exercise and abstemious living, he had acquired
      strong and vigorous health, and could endure almost any amount of exertion. He took great
      pains with his person, and was considered to be effeminate in his dress. His moral character,
      as far as the connexion of the sexes goes, was as low as that of the rest of the Romans of his
      age. His intrigues with the most distinguished Roman ladies were notorious, and he was equally
      lavish of his favours in the provinces.</p><div><head>Intellectual Character of Caesar</head><p>If we now turn to the intellectual character of Caesar, we see that he was gifted by nature
       with the most various talents, and was distinguished by the most extraordinary genius and
       attainments in the most diversified pursuits. He was at one and the same time a general, a
       statesman, a lawgiver, a jurist, an orator, a poet, an historian, a philologer, a
       mathematician and an architect. He was equally fitted to excel in all, and has given proofs
       that he would have surpassed almost all other men in any subject to which he devoted the
       energies of his extraordinary mind. Julius Caesar was the greatest man of antiquity; and this
       fact must be our apology for the length to which this notice has extended. His greatness as a
       general has been sufficiently shewn by the above sketch; but one circumstance, which has been
       generally overlooked, places his genius for war in a most striking light. Till his fortieth
       year, when he went as propraetor into Spain, Caesar had been almost entirely engaged in civil
       life. He had served, it is true, in his youth, but it was only for a short time, and in
       campaigns of secondary importance; he had never been at the head of an army, and his whole
       military experience must have been of the most limited kind. Most of the greatest generals in
       the history of the world have been distinguished at an early age : Alexander the Great,
       Hannibal, Frederick of Prussia, and Napoleon Bonaparte, gained some of their most brilliant
       victories under the age of thirty; but Caesar from the age of twenty-three to forty had seen
       nothing of war, and, notwithstanding, appears all at once as one of the greatest generals
       that the world has ever seen.</p></div><div><head>Works</head><div><head><title xml:lang="la">Commentarii</title></head><p>During the whole of his busy life Caesar found time for literary pursuits, and always took
        pleasure in the society and conversation of men of learning. He himself was the author of
        many works, the majority of which has been lost. The purity of his Latin and the clearness
        of his style were celebrated by the ancients themselves, and are conspicuous in his <title xml:lang="la">Commentarii</title>, which are his only works that have come down to us. They
        relate the history of the first seven years of <title xml:id="phi-0448.001">the Gallic
         war</title> in seven books, and the history of <title xml:id="phi-0448.002">the Civil
         war</title> down to the commencement of the Alexandrine in three books. In them Caesar has
        carefully avoided all rhetorical embellishments; he narrates the events in a clear
        unassuming style, and with such apparent truthfulness that he carries conviction to the mind
        of the reader. They seem to have been composed in the course of his campaigns, and were
        probably worked up into their present form during his winter-quarters. The Commentaries on
        the Gallic War were published after the completion of the war in Gaul, and those on the
        Civil War probably after his return from Alexandria. The " Ephemerides" of Caesar must not
        be regarded as a separate work, but only as the Greek name of the " Commentarii." Neither of
        these works, however, completed the history of the Gallic and Civil wars. The history of the
        former was completed in an eighth book, which is usually ascribed to Hirtius, and the
        history of the <title><ref target="phi-0428.001"><title xml:lang="la">Alexandrine</title></ref></title>, <title><ref target="phi-0426.001"><title xml:lang="la">African</title></ref></title>, and <title><ref target="phi-0430.001"><title xml:lang="la">Spanish wars</title></ref></title> were written in three separate books,
        which are also ascribed to Hirtius. The question of their authorship is discussed under <ref target="a-hirtius-bio-1">Hirtius.</ref></p></div><div><head>Other works</head><p>Besides the Commentaries, Caesar also wrote the following works, which have been lost, but
        the mere titles of which are a proof of his literary activity and diversified knowledge:
        --</p><div><head>1. <title xml:lang="la">Orationes</title></head><p><title xml:lang="la">Orationes,</title> some of which have been mentioned in the
         preceding account, and a complete list of which is given in <bibl>Meyer's <hi rend="ital">Oratorum Romanorum Fragmenta,</hi> p. 404, &amp;c., 2nd ed.</bibl> The ancient writers
         speak of Caesar as one of the first orators of his age, and describe him as only second to
         Cicero. (<bibl n="Quint. Inst. 10.1.114">Quint. Inst. 10.1.114</bibl>; <bibl n="Vell. 2.36">Vell. 2.36</bibl>; <pb n="555"/>
         <bibl n="Cic. Brut. 72">Cic. Brut. 72</bibl>,74; <bibl n="Tac. Ann. 13.3">Tac. Ann.
          13.3</bibl>, <hi rend="ital">Dial. de Orat.</hi> 21 ; <bibl n="Plut. Caes. 3">Plut. Caes.
          3</bibl>; <bibl n="Suet. Jul. 55">Suet. Jul. 55</bibl>.)</p></div><div><head>2. <title xml:lang="la">Epistolae</title></head><p><title xml:lang="la">Epistolae,</title> of which several are preserved in the collection
         of Cicero's letters, but there were still more in the time of Suetonius (<bibl n="Suet. Jul. 56">Suet. Jul. 56</bibl>) and Appian (<bibl n="App. BC 2.11.79">App. BC
          2.79</bibl>).</p></div><div><head>3. <title xml:id="phi-0448.005" xml:lang="la">Anticato</title></head><p><ref target="phi-0448.005"><title xml:lang="la">Anticato,</title></ref> in two books,
         hence sometimes called " Anticatones," a work in reply to Cicero's " Cato," which the Roman
         orator wrote in praise of Cato after the death of the latter in <date when-custom="-46">B. C.
          46</date>. (Suet. <hi rend="ital">l.c.;</hi>
         <bibl n="Gel. 4.16">Gel. 4.16</bibl>; <bibl n="Cic. Att. 12.40">Cic. Att. 12.40</bibl>,
          <bibl n="Cic. Att. 12.41">41</bibl>, <bibl n="Cic. Att. 13.50">13.50</bibl>, &amp;c.)</p></div><div><head>4. <title xml:id="phi-0448.004" xml:lang="la">De Analogia</title></head><p><ref target="phi-0448.004"><title xml:lang="la">De Analogia,</title></ref> or as Cicero
         explains it, " De Ratione Latine loquendi," in two books, which contained investigations on
         the Latin language, and were written by Caesar while he was crossing the Alps in his return
         from his winter-quarters in the north of Italy to join his army in further Gaul. It was
         dedicated to Cicero, and is frequently quoted by the Latin grammarians. (Suet. <hi rend="ital">l.c.;</hi>
         <bibl n="Cic. Brut. 72">Cic. Brut. 72</bibl>; <bibl n="Plin. Nat. 7.30.31">Plin. Nat. 7.30.
          s. 31</bibl>; <bibl n="Gel. 19.8">Gel. 19.8</bibl>; <bibl n="Quint. Inst. 1.7.34">Quint.
          Inst. 1.7.34</bibl>.)</p></div><div><head>5. <title xml:lang="la">Libri Auspiciorum</title></head><p><title xml:lang="la">Libri Auspiciorum,</title> or " Auguralia." As pontifex maximus
         Caesar had a general superintendence over the Roman religion, and seems to have paid
         particular attention to the subject of this work, which must have been of considerable
         extent as the sixteenth book is quoted by Macrobius. (<hi rend="ital">Sat.</hi> 1.16; comp.
         Priscian, vi. p. 719, ed. Putsch.) </p></div><div><head>6. <title xml:lang="la">De Astris</title></head><p><title xml:lang="la">De Astris,</title> in which he treated of the movements of the
         heavenly bodies. (Macrob. <hi rend="ital">l.c.;</hi>
         <bibl n="Plin. Nat. 18.25.57">Plin. Nat. 18.25. s. 57</bibl>, &amp;c.)</p></div><div><head>7. <title xml:lang="la">Apophthegmata</title></head><p><title xml:lang="la">Apophthegmata,</title> or " Dicta collectanea," a collection of good
         sayings and witty remarks of his own and other persons. It seems from Suetonius that Caesar
         had commenced this work in his youth, but he kept making additions to it even in his
         dictatorship, so that it at length comprised several volumes. This was one of Caesar's
         works which Augustus suppressed. (Suet. <hi rend="ital">l.c.;</hi>
         <bibl n="Cic. Fam. 9.16">Cic. Fam. 9.16</bibl>.)</p></div><div><head>8. <title xml:lang="la">Poemata.</title></head><p><title xml:lang="la">Poemata.</title> Two of these written in his youth, <title xml:lang="la">Laudes Herculis</title> and a tragedy <title xml:lang="la">Oedipus</title>,
         were suppressed by Augustus. He also wrote several epigrams, of which three are preserved
         in the Latin Anthology. (Nos. 68-70, ed. Meyer.) There was, too, an astronomical poem of
         Caesar's, probably in imitation of Aratus's, and lastly one entitled <title xml:lang="la">Iter</title>, descriptive of his journey from the city to Spain, which he wrote at the
         latter end of the year <date when-custom="-46">B. C. 46</date>, while he was on this journey.</p></div></div></div><div><head>Editions</head><p><bibl>The editio princeps of Caesar's Commentaries was printed at Rome in 1449, fol.</bibl>
       Among the subsequent editions, the most important are by <bibl>Jungermann, containing a Greek
        translation of the seven books of the Gallic war made by Planudes (Francf. 1606, 4to., and
        1669,4to.)</bibl>; by <bibl>Graevius, with the life of Caesar, ascribed to Julius Celsus
        (Amst. 1697, 8vo., and Lug. Bat. 1713, 8vo.)</bibl>; by <bibl>Cellarius (Lips. 1705)</bibl>;
       by <bibl>Davis, with the Greek translation of Planudes (Cant. 1706, 1727, 4to.)</bibl>; by
        <bibl>Oudendorp (Lugd. Bat. 1737, 4to., Stuttgard, 1822, 8vo.)</bibl>; by <bibl>Morus (Lips.
        1780, 8vo.)</bibl>, <bibl>reedited by Oberlin (Lips. 1805, 1819, 8vo.)</bibl>.</p></div><div><head>Ancient Sources</head><p>The principal ancient sources for the life of Caesar are the biographies of him by
       Suetonius and Plutarch, the histories of Dio Cassius, Appian, and Velleius Paterculus, and
       the letters and orations of Cicero. The life of Caesar ascribed to Julius Celsus, of
       Constantinople, who lived in the seventh century after Christ, is a work of Petrarch's, as
       has been shewn by C. E. Ch. Schneider in his work entitled " Petrarchae, Historia Julii
       Caesaris," Lips. 1827.</p></div><div><head>Modern Bibliography</head><p>Among modern works the best account of Caesar's life is in <bibl>Drumann's <hi rend="ital">Geschichte Roms.</hi></bibl> Caesar's campaigns have been criticised by <bibl>Napoleon in
        the work entitled <title xml:lang="fr">Précis des Guerres de César par
         Napoléon, écrit par M. Marchand, à I'île
         Sainte-Hélène, sous la dictée de I'Empereur,</title> Paris,
        1836.)</bibl></p></div><div><head>Caesar's Coins</head><p>For an account of Caesar's coins, see <bibl>Eckhel, vol. vi. pp. 1-17</bibl>. His likeness
       is given in the two coins annexed; in the latter the natural baldness of his head is
       concealed by a crown of laurel. (See also p. 516.)</p><p><figure/></p></div></div></div></body></text></TEI>
                </passage>
            </reply>
            </GetPassage>