Caesar Destroyed the Republic While Claiming to Save It
By Frost, Alina
Published by epubli
English
2026
ISBN 9783565203345
eBook
About this book
Gaius Julius Caesar remains history's most examined paradox—brilliant general and ruthless autocrat, reformer and demagogue, victim of assassination and architect of his own murder. He crossed the Rubicon claiming to defend republican liberties while commanding legions against the Senate. He forgave enemies publicly while systematically eliminating political rivals. He refused the crown yet accumulated powers making monarchy inevitable. Understanding Caesar requires separating the legend he crafted from the constitutional crisis he engineered.
This book reconstructs Caesar's career through contemporary sources—Cicero's letters revealing senatorial panic, Caesar's own commentaries justifying Gallic conquest, Suetonius and Plutarch recording contradictory testimony about motives and character. It traces his calculated rise through debt-financed spectacle, strategic marriages, and the first triumvirate binding Pompey and Crassus to shared interests. It follows the Gallic Wars as military genius and genocidal conquest, examining how battlefield success created veteran legions loyal to Caesar personally rather than to Rome.
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