The name of the dictator Julius Caesar- Latin script: CAIVS IVLIVS CAESAR-was often extended by the official filiation Gai filius ("son of Gaius"), rendered as Gaius Iulius Gai filius Caesar. Gaius (Iulius) Caesar Germanicus (AD 12–41), Roman emperor, commonly referred to as Caligula, seldomly as Gaius.Gaius Iulius Caesar (Vipsanianus) (20 BC – AD 4), adopted son of Augustus, commonly referred to as Gaius Caesar.Gaius Iulius Caesar (63 BC – AD 14), the first emperor Augustus, born Gaius Octavius, often referred to by scholars as Octavian for the time until January 16, 27 BC.Gaius Iulius Caesar (100–44 BC), dictator perpetuo, commonly referred to as Julius Caesar.130–87 BC), son of Lucius Iulius Caesar and Poppilia Gaius Iulius Caesar Strabo (Vopiscus) (ca.Gaius Iulius Caesar († 85 BC), proconsul, father of the dictator Julius Caesar.Gaius Iulius Caesar, son of the former, father of proconsul Gaius Iulius Caesar, married to Marcia (daughter of consul Quintus Marcius Rex).Gaius Iulius Caesar, son of Sextus Iulius Caesar.Gaius Iulius Caesar ( Greek: ΓAIOΣ IOYΛΙΟΣ KAIΣAΡ ) was a prominent name of the gens Iulia since Roman Republican times, borne by a number of figures from history, most notably the dictator Julius Caesar. 5.4 Sabine origin of caesar: a possible "true etymology".Rolfe, I: 2-119.įrom CHAUCER NAME DICTIONARY Copyright © 1988, 1996 Jacqueline de Weever Published by Garland Publishing, Inc., New York and London. Offord, 18-19 Suetonius, De vita Caesarum, ed. Aiken, "Vincent of Beauvais and Chaucer's Monk's Tale." Speculum 27 (1942): 56-58 Lucan, Pharsalia, ed. It appears seven times in medial positions, MLT 1, 2692, 2700, 2703, 2711 HF III.1502, and three times in final rhyming position, KnT 2031 MLT 4. Julius, "descendant of Iulus" since the family claimed descent from Aeneas's son, is the name of the Roman clan to which Caesar belonged. When Caesar revised the calendar, he adapted the Egyptian solar calendar to Roman use and inserted a day between February 23 and 24 in the leap year or bissextile year. Chaucer says that Julius took two days from February and added two days to July, Astr I.10. Lucan, historian of the Roman civil war caused by Julius, stands on a pillar of iron, Mars's metal, HF III.1497-1502. The Monk tells the story of Julius, MkT 2670-2726, and gives his sources as Lucan, Suetonius, Valerius, MkT 2719-2721, but he also uses Vincent of Beauvais, Speculum historiale VI.35-42, as Pauline Aiken shows. The Man of Law says, erroneously, that Lucan describes Julius's triumph, MLT 400-401. The death of Julius is painted on the walls of Mars's oratory, KnT 2031, and foretold in the stars, MLT 199. He is one of the Nine Worthies in The Parlement of the Thre Ages, 405-420. Pharsalia III is Lucan's lament that Caesar had no triumph. in the Senate (Suetonius, The Deified Julius). Although he refused the title Rex, his increasing powers offended many senators, and he was assassinated on March 15, 44 B.C. In 46 he was appointed dictator for ten years, and in 44 he was made dictator for life, and the month Quintilis was named Julius after him. he was appointed dictator to hold elections. ![]() On January 10, 49 B.C., Caesar crossed the Rubicon into Italy and plunged Italy into civil war. ![]() Between 59 and 49 B.C., Caesar's successes in Gaul and Britain increased his power in the Senate, but on January 1, 49 B.C., the Senate voted that Caesar lay down his command. In 60 B.C., he formed the first triumvirate with Pompey and Crassus, and in 59 B.C. ![]() ![]() JULIUS Main Menu | List of entries | finished
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