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Caesar and followed
Both Octavian and Mark Antony had fought against their common enemies in the civil war that followed the assassination of Julius Caesar.
Here he followed the precedent of Lucius Junius Brutus and Julius Caesar.
In the cavalry battle that followed, the Helvetii prevailed over Caesar ’ s Aedui allies under Dumnorix ’ command, and continued their journey, while Caesar ’ s army was being detained by delays in his grain supplies, caused by the Aedui on the instigations of Dumnorix, who had married Orgetorix ’ daughter.
In 55 BC, Caesar repelled an incursion into Gaul by two Germanic tribes, and followed it up by building a bridge across the Rhine and making a show of force in Germanic territory, before returning and dismantling the bridge.
The friendship of the Emperor Constantine raised him from penury and he became tutor in Latin to his son Crispus, whom Lactantius may have followed to Trier in 317, when Crispus was made Caesar ( lesser co-emperor ) and sent to the city.
The city reappears in the sources during the Roman civil war that followed the assassination of Julius Caesar.
The first phase, sometimes referred to as the Diarchy (" rule of two "), involved the designation of the general Maximian as co-emperor — firstly as Caesar ( junior emperor ) in 285, followed by his promotion to Augustus in 286.
When civil war broke out in 49 BC between Pompey and Caesar, Brutus followed his old enemy and present leader of the Optimates, Pompey.
* 49 BC: Brutus followed Pompey to Greece during the civil war against Caesar.
In the Civil War between Caesar and Pompey, the citizens of Caralis were the first to declare in favor of the former, an example soon followed by the other cities of Sardinia ; and Caesar himself touched there with his fleet on his return from Africa.
However, when the date of the Roman invasion is given, it is immediately followed by mention of the fact that Caesar was " compelled to invade Britain again the following year ( 54 BC, not 56, owing to the peculiar Roman method of counting )".
In 63 BC, the law of Sulla was abolished by the tribune Titus Labienus, and a modified form of the lex Domitia was reinstated providing for election by comitia tributa once again: Gaius Julius Caesar followed Ahenobarbus's precedent by being elected by public vote, although Caesar at least had previously been a pontiff.
In the civil war that followed, Albinus was initially allied with Septimius Severus, who had captured Rome, took his own name Septimius and accepted the title of Caesar from him ; the two shared a consulship in 194.
Membership in this ecclesiastical college ( collegium ) was for life, and the college was increased to a quindecimvirate — that is, a college of fifteen members — and renamed accordingly ( see quindecimviri sacris faciundis ) in the last century of the Republic, possibly by the dictator Lucius Cornelius Sulla ; the dictator Gaius Iulius Caesar added a sixteenth member, but this precedent was not followed ...
Small roles in several other films followed including the high profile Caesar and Cleopatra, produced by Gabriel Pascal.
Caesar replied that he would agree to resign his military command if Pompey followed suit.
This was followed by an exposé of the global arms industry, Iron, Blood and Profits ( 1934 ) and an account of Benito Mussolini, Sawdust Caesar ( 1935 ).
When Caesar crossed the Rubicon in 49 BC, thus starting a civil war, Sextus ' older brother Gnaeus followed their father in his escape to the East, as did most of the conservative senators.
858 he was promoted to to the highest state offices ( magistros and chartoularios tou kanikleiou ), followed by his promotion to kouropalates — according to Symeon Logothetes, this happened after a failed assassination attempt masterminded by Theodora — and finally, on 22 ( or 26 ) April 862, to Caesar.
When Caesar crossed the Rubicon in 49 BC, thus starting a civil war, Gnaeus followed his father in their escape to the East, as did most of the conservative senators.
Caesar soon followed and, on March 17, 45 BC, the armies met in the battle of Munda.

Caesar and example
For example, Alfonso halted his army in pious respect before the birthplace of a Latin writer, carried Livy or Caesar on his campaigns with him, and his panegyrist Panormita even stated that the king was cured of an illness when a few pages of Quintus Curtius Rufus ' history of Alexander the Great were read to him.
According to Tacitus, they drew inspiration from the example of Arminius, the prince of the Cherusci who had driven the Romans out of Germany in AD 9, and their own ancestors who had driven Julius Caesar from Britain.
For example: if five ancient historians, none of whom knew each other, all claim that Julius Caesar seized power in Rome in 49 BCE, this is strong evidence in favor of that event occurring even if each individual historian is only partially reliable.
The evidence from the ancient historians could also converge with evidence from other fields, such as archeology: for example, evidence that many senators fled Rome at the time, that the battles of Caesar ’ s civil war occurred, and so forth.
* Caesar ( as, for example, in Suetonius ' Twelve Caesars ).
Patrick Henry refers to Tarquin in his famous speech ending, " Tarquin and Caesar each had his Brutus, Charles the First his Cromwell and George the Third ... may profit by their example.
Antony left Rome and joined Caesar and his armies at Ariminium, where he was presented to Caesar's soldiers still bloody and bruised as an example of the illegalities that his political opponents were perpetrating, and as a casus belli.
* The title of Rex Stout's Nero Wolfe novel Some Buried Caesar comes from one of the Tentmaker's quatrains ( FitzGerald's XVIII ), for example.
The recruitment of non-citizens was rare but appears to have occurred in times of great need ; For example Caesar appears to have recruited the Legio V Alaudae mostly from non-citizen Gauls.
A simple encryption system, for example, is the Caesar cipher.
* Plutarch writes his Parallel Lives of Famous Men ( in Greek Βίοι Παράλληλοι ) containing fifty biographies, of which 46 are presented as pairs comparing Greek and Roman celebrities — for example Theseus and Romulus, Alexander the Great and Julius Caesar, Demosthenes and Cicero.
The best-known example is the year 46 BC: as part of the reform that initiated the Julian calendar of that name, 46 BC was allotted 445 days by Julius Caesar.
For example, the year we know as 59 BC would have been described as " the consulship of Marcus Calpurnius Bibulus and Gaius Julius Caesar " ( although that specific year was known jocularly as " the consulship of Julius and Caesar " because of the insignificance of Caesar's counterpart ).
Caesar, wishing to make an example of the Veneti for violating the customs of diplomacy by imprisoning the envoys, executes their chief nobles and sells the rest of them into slavery.
One example is having Caesar talk about himself in the third person as in the book.
ROT13 is an example of the Caesar cipher, developed in ancient Rome.
Sorge used the examples of Julius Caesar and Ferdinand Magellan using brutal methods to crush mutinies to argue that great leaders throughout history had always used extreme violence to maintain discipline, and through he emphasized that a good officer should never had to be confronted with the threat of mutiny, but if such a threat did emerge, the best thing that could be done was to follow Hitler ’ s example in 1934, and have all the mutineers ’ summarily executed.
Ussher's chronology represented a considerable feat of scholarship: it demanded great depth of learning in what was then known of ancient history, including the rise of the Persians, Greeks and Romans, as well as expertise in the Bible, biblical languages, astronomy, ancient calendars and chronology, Ussher's account of historical events for which he had multiple sources other than the Bible is usually in close agreement with modern accounts – for example, he placed the death of Alexander in 323 BC and that of Julius Caesar in 44 BC.
For example, Gaius Julius Caesar argued that exile and disenfranchisement would be sufficient punishment for the conspirators.
The most important sources for French tragic theatre in the Renaissance were the example of Seneca and the precepts of Horace and Aristotle ( and contemporary commentaries by Julius Caesar Scaliger and Lodovico Castelvetro ), although plots were taken from classical authors such as Plutarch, Suetonius, etc., from the Bible, from contemporary events and from short story collections ( Italian, French and Spanish ).
For example, there appears to be continuity between the character of Cleopatra and the historical figure of Queen Elizabeth I, and the unfavourable light cast on Caesar has been explained as deriving from the claims of various 16th century historians.

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