enormous, enabling them to dominate the political scene
and achieve their basic aims: Pompey received lands for
his veterans and a command in Spain, Crassus was given
a command in Syria, and Caesar was granted a special
military command in Gaul (modern France). When Cras-
sus was killed in battle in 53B.C.E., his death left two
powerful men with armies in direct competition. Caesar
had used his time in Gaul wisely. He had conquered all
of Gaul and gained fame, wealth, and military experience
as well as an army of seasoned veterans who were loyal
to him. When leading senators fastened on Pompey as
the less harmful to their cause and voted for Caesar to
lay down his command and return as a private citizen to
Rome, Caesar refused. Such a step was intolerable, as it
would leave him totally vulnerable to his enemies (see
the box on p. 114). Caesar chose to keep his army and
moved into Italy by illegally crossing the Rubicon, the
river that formed the southern boundary of his prov-
ince. (The phrasecrossing the Rubiconis still used today
to mean taking a decisive action from which there is no
turning back.) According to his ancient biographer Sue-
tonius, Caesar said to his troops, “Even now we could
turn back; but once we cross that tiny bridge, then
everything will depend on armed force.”^4 Caesar
marched on Rome, starting a civil war between his
forces and those of Pompey and his allies. The defeat of
Pompey’s forces left Caesar in complete control of the
Roman government.
Caesar had officially been made dictator in 47B.C.E.,
and three years later he was made dictator for life. He
continued to hold elections for offices but saw to it that
his supporters chose the people he recommended. Upon
becoming Rome’s ruler, he quickly instituted a number
of ambitious reforms. He increased the senate to nine
hundred members by filling it with many of his support-
ers and granted citizenship to a number of people in the
provinces who had helped him. By establishing colonies
of Roman citizens in North Africa, Gaul, and Spain, he
initiated a process of Romanization in those areas. He
also reorganized the administrative structures of cities
in Italy in an attempt to create a sense of order in their
government. Caesar was a generous victor and pardoned
many of the republican leaders who had opposed him,
allowing them to return to Rome. He also reformed
the calendar by introducing the Egyptian solar year of
365 days (with changes implemented in 1582C.E., it
became the basis of our current calendar). He
planned much more in the way of building projects
and military adventures in the East, but in 44B.C.E., a
group of leading senators who resented his domina-
tion assassinated him in the belief that they had
struck a blow for republican liberty. In truth, they
had set the stage for another civil war that delivered
the death blow to the republic.
Within a few years after Caesar’s death, two men had
divided the Roman world between them—Octavian
(ahk-TAY-vee-un), Caesar’s heir and grandnephew, took
the West, and Antony, Caesar’s ally and assistant, the
East. But the empire of the Romans, large as it was, was
still too small for two masters, and Octavian and Antony
eventually came into conflict. Antony allied himself with
the Egyptian queen Cleopatra VII, with whom, like
Cicero,Letter to Atticus
Pray, what’s all this? What is going on? I am in the
dark. Is it a Roman general or Hannibal we are talking
of? Deluded wretch, with never in his [Caesar’s] life a
glimpse of even the shadow of Good! And he says he is
doing all this for his honor’s sake! Where is honor
without moral good? And is it good to have an army
without public authority, to seize Roman towns by way
of opening the road to the mother city, to plan debt
cancellations, recall of exiles, and a hundred other vil-
lainies “all for that first of deities, Sole Power”? He is
welcome to his greatness. I would rather a single hour
with you, warming myself in that “bonus” sunshine of
yours, than all such autocracies, or rather I had sooner
die a thousand deaths than entertain one such
thought.
Q How did Caesar view the steps he had taken? How
did Cicero view those steps? What do the
differences between Caesar and Cicero tell you
about the end of the republic? How do the views of
Caesar and Cicero give support to Sallust’s
argument? What do these three selections have in
common in regard to the fall of the republic? How
do they differ?
Sources: Sallust,The War with Catiline. Reprinted fromSallust, Loeb Classical Library, trans. by J. C. Rolfe, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1921. The Loeb Classical Library is a
registered trademark of the President and Fellows of Harvard College. Caesar,The Civil Wars. Reprinted from Caesar,The Civil Wars, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1966. The
Loeb Classical Library is a registered trademark of the President and Fellows of Harvard College. Cicero’sLetter to Atticus. Reprinted from Cicero’sLetters to Atticus, Vol. IV, D. R. Shackleton
Bailey, ed., Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1968. The Loeb Classical Library is a registered trademark of the President and Fellows of Harvard College.
The Decline and Fall of the Roman Republic (133–31B.C.E.) 115
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