Cicero's Finest Hour (44 to 43 B.C.E.)

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 15. 05. 2020
  • Early Access on Patreon | historiacivilis.com/patreon
    Early Access on CZcams | historiacivilis.com/members
    Donate | historiacivilis.com/donate
    Merch | historiacivilis.com/merch
    Mailing List | historiacivilis.com/mailinglist
    Twitter | historiacivilis.com/twitter
    Website | historiacivilis.com
    Sources:
    Cicero, "Letters to Atticus" | amzn.to/3b8EQby
    Cicero, "The Philippics" | amzn.to/35EHcOe
    Suetonius, "The Life of Julius Caesar" | amzn.to/2xJesHH
    Plutarch, "The Life of Julius Caesar" | amzn.to/35DG6lZ
    Plutarch, "The Life of Cicero" | amzn.to/2Laca7w
    Plutarch, "The Life of Brutus" | amzn.to/2SLaWUC
    Nicolaus of Damascus, "The Life of Augustus" | amzn.to/3dlQeCg
    Appian, "The Civil Wars: Book 3" | amzn.to/2WbJXU4
    Cassius Dio, "Roman History: Book 44" | amzn.to/35HC4ce
    Cassius Dio, "Roman History: Book 45" | amzn.to/35HC4ce
    Cassius Dio, "Roman History: Book 46" | amzn.to/2WDNIka
    ---
    Barry Strauss, "The Death of Caesar: The Story of History's Most Famous Assassination" | amzn.to/2WAUxTD
    Tom Holland, "Dynasty: The Rise and Fall of the House of Caesar" | amzn.to/2zjG4n4
    Adrian Goldsworthy, "Antony and Cleopatra" | amzn.to/2L8MQ1F
    Anthony Everitt, "Cicero: The Life and Times of Rome's Greatest Politician" | amzn.to/3bbrKKM
    Tom Holland, "Rubicon" | amzn.to/3dombKn
    Adrian Goldsworthy, "Augustus" | amzn.to/3fAInmD
    Anthony Everitt, "Augustus: The Life of Rome's First Emperor" | amzn.to/2Wf9CLH
    Adrian Goldsworthy, "Caesar: Life of a Colossus" | amzn.to/3cfFQvU
    Music:
    "Moving Forward," by Adi Goldstein
    "Blonde," by Nctrnm
    "Heliograph," by Chris Zabriskie
    "The House Glows (With Almost No Help)," by Chris Zabriskie
    "Hallon," by Christian Bjoerklund
    We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.

Komentáře • 6K

  • @HistoriaCivilis
    @HistoriaCivilis  Před 4 lety +15253

    F

  • @DarthMeteos
    @DarthMeteos Před 3 lety +12090

    "Why are you crying so hard, kiddo?"
    "YOU DON'T UNDERSTAND, THE GREEN SQUARE IS GONE AND THE PURPLE SQUARE RESPECTED HIM"

    • @Omar-lq3ri
      @Omar-lq3ri Před 3 lety +232

      Underrated comment

    • @musichalloffame
      @musichalloffame Před 3 lety +736

      The exact truth of this statement has shook me in to both a fit of uncontrollable laughing and the realization that I also have genuine feelings for colored squares! I can mourn for squares and laugh at the same time!

    • @JamesJJSMilton
      @JamesJJSMilton Před 3 lety +383

      @@musichalloffame its now weird thinking these squares used to be skin having people who fought for real issues.

    • @program4215
      @program4215 Před 3 lety +341

      @@JamesJJSMilton "skin having people" omg

    • @francesconesi7666
      @francesconesi7666 Před 3 lety +44

      Still, why are you crying?
      Green square was a lame republican.

  • @rexgrimes7562
    @rexgrimes7562 Před 4 lety +3626

    "We're anti murder in this house" literally two minutes later... "if it's of any consolation, Brutus retaliated by killing Anthony's brother"" LMAO RIP

    • @jensjensen9035
      @jensjensen9035 Před 4 lety +63

      rip who? Cicero or cockheads brother ?

    • @SnekNOTSnake
      @SnekNOTSnake Před 4 lety +37

      BTW how did you commented this a week earlier before the video even get uploaded, which is only 30 mins ago?

    • @SnekNOTSnake
      @SnekNOTSnake Před 4 lety +1

      @@archdukefranzferdinand567 Ahh, that explains everything. I thought it was another CZcams's bug.

    • @resileaf9501
      @resileaf9501 Před 4 lety +23

      @@SnekNOTSnake Someone asks about it every single week XD

    • @jophielswings
      @jophielswings Před 4 lety +65

      To be fair like the entire world at this point is becoming very anti-rich very fast in 2020. And for frankly good reason.

  • @randomcarbonaccumulation6478
    @randomcarbonaccumulation6478 Před 2 lety +2003

    Imagine you killed Gaius Julius Caesar and another one just arrives from Illyricum I'd be mad af

    • @saadselkent367
      @saadselkent367 Před rokem +306

      Bro respawned

    • @Hugh_Morris
      @Hugh_Morris Před 11 měsíci +15

      ​@@saadselkent367 lmao

    • @roger9430
      @roger9430 Před 11 měsíci +128

      @@saadselkent367 Literally respawned lmao, and Caesar's death taught Octavian exactly what not to do, pardon your enemies.

    • @chrish4439
      @chrish4439 Před 10 měsíci +4

      ​@@roger9430Yet that's exactly what he did....

    • @tomlxyz
      @tomlxyz Před 9 měsíci +5

      First mad, then dead

  • @alexross1816
    @alexross1816 Před 2 lety +2076

    Octavian's mom: Return to Rome, but hide your identity!"
    Octavian's step-father: "Renounce the adoption, and keep your keep your head down!"
    Octavian: *"WHAT'S UP, BITCHES?! JULIUS CAESAR 2: OCTAVIAN BOOGALOO IS COMING TO ROME!!!"*

  • @ElVindicto
    @ElVindicto Před 4 lety +6581

    "Cicero switched to a much more aggressive posture."
    What did he do?
    "He made a series of speeches and distributed a series of pamphlets that directly denounced Anthony."
    Oh snap, what else?
    "He sent a stern letter co-signed by the senate instructing him to stand down"
    Yeah, fuck him up, Cicero.

    • @lukaszkonsek7940
      @lukaszkonsek7940 Před 4 lety +649

      "The pen is mightier than the sword"

    • @88fibonaccisequence
      @88fibonaccisequence Před 4 lety +144

      World Star!

    • @MitchellD249
      @MitchellD249 Před 4 lety +724

      @@lukaszkonsek7940 Unfortunately, it's difficult to wield a pen when your enemy has cut both your hands off and nailed them to the Senate speaking platform. Swords are useful in that regard.

    • @louisswanepoel1614
      @louisswanepoel1614 Před 4 lety +16

      "Stupid face = BAD"

    • @belland_dog8235
      @belland_dog8235 Před 4 lety +39

      @gillecroisd 92 According to the definition of the word, it's very possible for the pen to be, in fact, mightier than the sword. Though like most things it's all circumstancial.

  • @Blake_Stone
    @Blake_Stone Před 4 lety +6977

    The story of Cicero sure makes the guy a compelling character. Then again, it was written by Cicero.

    • @a2falcone
      @a2falcone Před 4 lety +921

      Showing that Cicero's method (the pen over the sword) payed off in the long term.

    • @lordbiscuitthetossable5352
      @lordbiscuitthetossable5352 Před 4 lety +610

      Or almost paid off. In the end, he was let down by his allies, Brutus was practically useless.

    • @notepad9883
      @notepad9883 Před 4 lety +742

      ​@@lordbiscuitthetossable5352 I think he's talking even longer term than that. Cic got himself killed a handful of years ahead of his time; but twenty centuries later one he is one of the most famous, studied, and admired men in history--and this has only become *more* true with the passage of time over this period. Twenty centuries from now, I wouldn't bet he won't be bigger than ever.
      He didn't exactly have the last laugh, because you can't laugh with a head that's detached from your body... But if you believe in posthumous "payoffs," if you believe that history's "immortality" counts for something, then yeah, his enemies came with their swords way too late to stop the ultimate victory of those hands and tongue.
      RIP Cicero. Long live Cicero.

    • @lordbiscuitthetossable5352
      @lordbiscuitthetossable5352 Před 4 lety +184

      @@notepad9883 That is very true, but for Rome that time would never come again. This was the only chance that the Republic had at stopping the rise of Tyrants and when push came shove; his fellow senators completely failed him. The assassins despite acting on the effective behalf of the senate acted indecisively and thus effectively squandered their own goals of re-instating the senate as the primary authority, and later Cic's gains in putting Ceasers successors in putting them in an awkward position. He even complains about this many times. A true republic only works when the will of the senate is united, the United Kingdom is a prime example of what I consider to be a modern day Rome; indecisive, corrupt and steadily loaning out chunks of it's authority out to companies instead of it's generals. One day, it will be British in name only.
      Of course, he was an excellent politician and had managed to decisively set up a situation where both of Ceasers successor's could've been defeated. But Brutus chose not to move and doomed the republic.
      This is speaking high praises by the way; only Cic could engineer a situation where all it's Tryants could potentially be dispatched, yet believe in the republic so heavily as to bring that he did it all in the proper way. It's really inspiring in the way that he came so far despite having never commanded an single soldier in the entire civil war.

    • @douglasphillips5870
      @douglasphillips5870 Před 4 lety +104

      Ultimately his goal was to save the republic which he failed. He failed well, but he failed

  • @Sarjsh
    @Sarjsh Před 2 lety +1170

    Octavius: "From now on call me Gaius Julius Caesar"
    Historians, 2000 years later: "The artist formerly known as Octavius"

    •  Před rokem +58

      Most people actually refer to him as Augustus 😂

    • @lolmasterjerkit1531
      @lolmasterjerkit1531 Před rokem +21

      Either way my man octavian, octavius, Augustus, giaus julius caesar* is rolling in his grave 💀💀

    • @leexcite2903
      @leexcite2903 Před rokem +14

      Ceasar was just sooo too much of a chad for him to be mixed up by some brony

  • @joeynelson9761
    @joeynelson9761 Před 3 lety +3070

    * Somebody raises an army and marches on Rome *
    Romans in 88BC: Noooo, we're all gonna die! Unprecedented!
    Romans in 44BC: Is it that time of year already?

    • @sorcierenoire8651
      @sorcierenoire8651 Před 2 lety +371

      Romans in the 3rd Century AD: wake me up when someone gets appointed as emperor again.

    • @Liveforgamingman
      @Liveforgamingman Před 2 lety +184

      @@sorcierenoire8651 You're not gonna do much sleeping then.

    • @sheldon-cooper
      @sheldon-cooper Před 2 lety +140

      @@Liveforgamingman * Correction *
      "Wake me up when there's only one emperor"

    • @HiHi-lh3ps
      @HiHi-lh3ps Před 2 lety +46

      @@sheldon-cooper Diocletian: yeah, about that...

    • @therearenoshortcuts9868
      @therearenoshortcuts9868 Před 2 lety +49

      as an American Consul once said:
      "we are always 1 generation away from losing all our freedoms"
      something unthinkably illegal in your teenage years
      can become normalized politically by the time you are 50-60

  • @Masterblader158
    @Masterblader158 Před 4 lety +2504

    Everyone: *Playing 4D chess against each other*
    Octavian: *Playing 5D chess to prepare for the future*
    Brutus: "LMAO I'm just gonna sit here"

    • @bsantini3616
      @bsantini3616 Před 4 lety +90

      Brutus just staring

    • @IDontWantThisStupidHandle
      @IDontWantThisStupidHandle Před 4 lety +72

      I mean, it seems to have worked out in the end for him, no? He got to control half the Eastern half of the empire AND keep his head, as well as his hands, attached to his body. Sounds like a win-win to me.

    • @aleksanderlenartowicz5659
      @aleksanderlenartowicz5659 Před 4 lety +158

      @@IDontWantThisStupidHandle Brutus is the worst lesson to children in history.
      Remember, children, if you are a traitor, murder, abandon and backstab your friends hard enough, you MIGHT become a rich, powerful man with a quarter of the civilised world as your dominion.

    • @ArtfulDodger566
      @ArtfulDodger566 Před 4 lety +171

      You guys knows brutus was eventually killed in the civil war by octavian right?

    • @D3D3D
      @D3D3D Před 4 lety +30

      Butus : Breathing is fun.

  • @spooneater9001
    @spooneater9001 Před 4 lety +5226

    Also, after all this, I wonder if "et tu, brute?" wasn't caesar being surprised at Brutus' betrayal, but rather: "Holy shit, you decided to do something drastic for once, Brutus?"

    • @azarishere6442
      @azarishere6442 Před 4 lety +369

      Lmao

    • @JoseHernandez-bv5gr
      @JoseHernandez-bv5gr Před 4 lety +302

      Roasted

    • @bogdandamaschin9381
      @bogdandamaschin9381 Před 4 lety +640

      he did what his father told him: not to do anything without the permission of Tribune Aquila

    • @Heldarion
      @Heldarion Před 4 lety +122

      "Et tu, Brute?" is an invention by Shakespeare ...

    • @Dubanx
      @Dubanx Před 4 lety +46

      LOL. Funny, but "Et Tu Brutus" is a work of shakespear's telling of the story, and was not actually said.

  • @cageybee7221
    @cageybee7221 Před 3 lety +4284

    cicero has essentially taken over rome on like 4 seperate occasions trying to restore order. what a madlad.

    • @tylerdurden3722
      @tylerdurden3722 Před 3 lety +481

      Cicero wanted to restore things to a state of pre Ceasar.
      Cicero had no plan to fix Rome (perhaps he didn't even realize that Rome was broken). They say insanity is doing the same thing over and over expecting a different result.

    • @Captain-Jinn
      @Captain-Jinn Před 3 lety +430

      @@tylerdurden3722 You're spot on. And pre-Caesar Rome is like a powder keg with a half-second left on its fuse. That's some Greek tragedy levels of irony for a man who cared so much about his Republic.

    • @racoon251
      @racoon251 Před 3 lety +25

      @@tylerdurden3722 cringe

    • @pozkodeth
      @pozkodeth Před 3 lety +181

      @@racoon251 14 year old

    • @racoon251
      @racoon251 Před 3 lety +15

      @@pozkodeth cringe

  • @sohflipz4439
    @sohflipz4439 Před 2 lety +594

    Brutus seems to always know how to seize failure from the jaws of victory.

  • @aetu35
    @aetu35 Před 4 lety +3939

    Goodbye, Cicero. We will remember that green square.

    • @resileaf9501
      @resileaf9501 Před 4 lety +165

      A square of principles who tried his best, every day, until his assassination.

    • @johnyoutuber9781
      @johnyoutuber9781 Před 4 lety +128

      The worst thing about this is that with him gone, the number of remaining originators has reduced to just one: Antony. Of all the characters that were with us from the beginning, and did not come to be LATER down the road, Antony is the ONLY one left, and he's not got long to go...

    • @vectrom21
      @vectrom21 Před 4 lety +93

      too many deaths! First the red square, now the green, soon we will be out of colors... tragic!

    • @nooneinparticular3370
      @nooneinparticular3370 Před 4 lety +31

      RIP in pepperoni. Never forghetti.

    • @thesunking7365
      @thesunking7365 Před 4 lety +6

      I like Cicero but I also hate him for being part of Ceasar's assassination

  • @simen3971
    @simen3971 Před 4 lety +2341

    Fun fact: Cicero invented a whole range of Latin words that still exist in recognizable form in Modern English: argumentum, conclusio, essentia, forma, intellectus, moralia, natura, propositio, ratio, species, possibly more. And he was a man of principles, unlike pretty much all his contemporaries. What a dude.

    • @themechanicalentry8353
      @themechanicalentry8353 Před 4 lety +50

      @@sdsd2e2321 Petrarch*

    • @themechanicalentry8353
      @themechanicalentry8353 Před 4 lety +109

      @Domantas It probably was less stupidity and more limited information, plus some bit of being too hopeful and truthful to his own ideals. I wouldn't be surprised if he knew it could've been his demise, but he preferred to go that way than to let Rome's system fail even further.

    • @itaieiron7275
      @itaieiron7275 Před 4 lety +20

      He wasn't all good, but yeah. RIP

    • @thibautnarme6402
      @thibautnarme6402 Před 4 lety +30

      @Domantas I concur, he could have easily remained the consul-maker that he was and use his influence on young Octavian to limit (or rather delay) the slide toward cesarism.

    • @ryanross6973
      @ryanross6973 Před 4 lety +6

      Man of principles. Explains why he got fucked at almost every turn when things got hectic.

  • @burpbot7555
    @burpbot7555 Před 3 lety +1953

    "Brutus was... Indecisive" Story of his fucking life.
    "Whether he meant it or not, he had just stabbed his ally in the back" This one is even more fitting.

    • @randomcenturion7264
      @randomcenturion7264 Před 2 lety +107

      Brutus is so useless.

    • @parkerflorence5332
      @parkerflorence5332 Před 2 lety +54

      Stabbed him in the groin actually

    • @danceymetal5484
      @danceymetal5484 Před rokem +60

      @@parkerflorence5332 much like everything else he did, a superficial and loud action, that in the end made little effect.

    • @florians9949
      @florians9949 Před rokem +22

      @@randomcenturion7264 The most impact he had was by leading Ceasar’s assassination, which he was beought in last minute.

    • @tatuloa
      @tatuloa Před rokem

      For Brutus , when a senator is banging your mom for a long time and wonder if he is your Papa ...it was a toxic mix ..

  • @harryheller4476
    @harryheller4476 Před 3 lety +1490

    It’s really impressive that Cicero was able to form a powerful faction in the senate after ceasar packed it with his boys

    • @Sticktothemodels
      @Sticktothemodels Před 3 lety +144

      Sheep will always look for a shepherd. Man lost it almost as quick as he got it

    • @LOL-zu1zr
      @LOL-zu1zr Před rokem +40

      Man was too based to be defeated by moron Anthony

    • @neilb143
      @neilb143 Před 5 měsíci +4

      ​@@LOL-zu1zrstill lost his head lol. He fucked with the wrong people and tried to help the biggest back stabber in history

    • @kingeddiam2543
      @kingeddiam2543 Před 5 měsíci +7

      ​@@neilb143octavian tried to save cicero, just antonys help was more important to him than ciceros life. Cicero was a noble man who believed in loyalty and trust, octavian and antony exploited that

  • @tisFrancesfault
    @tisFrancesfault Před 4 lety +3465

    Imagine if Cicero had allies that were actually useful.

    • @toddharig8142
      @toddharig8142 Před 4 lety +249

      My team every game.

    • @alessandronavone6731
      @alessandronavone6731 Před 4 lety +385

      Honestly, all except Brutus did pretty much their best. Decimus' and Cassius' resolve in taking control of their provinces in advance and their skill in raising armies and support in the provinces are remarkable.
      The odds were stacked against them from the start, with both the people and the veterans being with the Caesarians.

    • @papapok13
      @papapok13 Před 4 lety +227

      Cicero should have picked his allies better. I mean look at their conspircy to kill Caesar: from begining to end, it was a bumbling mess. It's a miracle it worked, yet it went down as one of the most consequential murder in history.

    • @jevinliu4658
      @jevinliu4658 Před 4 lety +136

      Imagine Brutus actually did something

    • @Flyingclam
      @Flyingclam Před 4 lety +109

      @@papapok13 cicero never knew about the plot to kill caeser

  • @jamestaylor3623
    @jamestaylor3623 Před 4 lety +3281

    Antony: "I want a swap, I get everything, and you get nothing"

    • @legate6680
      @legate6680 Před 4 lety +121

      that IS the law of equivalent exchange... Maybe.

    • @TheSecondVersion
      @TheSecondVersion Před 4 lety +150

      Quintus Jeffus Bezos

    • @TheHej2
      @TheHej2 Před 4 lety +22

      But that wasn't a part of the deal.

    • @Bloodprince1234
      @Bloodprince1234 Před 4 lety +156

      @@TheHej2 He is altering the deal. Pray he doesn't alter it any further.

    • @joaquindirie1448
      @joaquindirie1448 Před 4 lety +27

      Art of the deal

  • @calistman222
    @calistman222 Před 3 lety +949

    (Invents time machine)
    (Meets Cicero in real life)
    "Huh, you looked a lot different in the documentary"

    • @tomlxyz
      @tomlxyz Před 2 lety +227

      "less green and square"

    • @tap1148
      @tap1148 Před rokem

      @@tomlxyz fake news!!!!!! Big history might claim Cicero was a "human being" but the truth is he was floating green square

    • @ner0833
      @ner0833 Před rokem +64

      @@tomlxyz wait...they aren't squares!?

    • @stefanodegioia1598
      @stefanodegioia1598 Před rokem +25

      Plot twist, they are all actually squares

    • @polygonalfortress
      @polygonalfortress Před rokem +18

      they're actually circles

  • @herpyderpy2869
    @herpyderpy2869 Před rokem +477

    When everyone wanted Caesar gone, Cicero wanted order
    When Caesar was in power, all Cicero cared about was stability
    When the Second Triumvirate was formed, Cicero wanted peace
    He's the rare kind of politician who's competent and still cares about the country's order

    • @florians9949
      @florians9949 Před 11 měsíci +38

      And in return, he got murdered.

    • @keiththomas1180
      @keiththomas1180 Před 11 měsíci +3

      Damn

    • @nashzahm
      @nashzahm Před 11 měsíci +46

      When Cicero died, i believe the Republic died with him. He just wanted the Republic to be stable, and without him stability could never return. His position and popularity in Italy made him the last hope.

    • @snickims9717
      @snickims9717 Před 11 měsíci +22

      @@nashzahm But, although he truely seemed to love the republic, he had no ideas on how to deal with the many insititional problems that had lead to the rise of Caesar. I can not help but think that even if he had been succesful, he would have failed, for the republic was simply too far down the road of collapse for anyone to save it.

    • @Tarnatos14
      @Tarnatos14 Před 10 měsíci +9

      @@snickims9717 Actually he had an Idear, he wanted to strenghen the senat, more as it was normaly before that. If thats a good idear is another debate, but he actually had an idear.
      We know (or at least I do, there are maybe more) two ancient 'concepts' how to safe the republik. The one is form Polybios: his idear follows the existing technic of the republik, the chec and balances of: senat, People, magistrates, and the tribuni of the people as the thing between all that.
      Ciceros idear, as he identifed the strenghen magistrates and pro-magistrates (as Marius, Sulla and Pmpeius where) as the problem (and technically he was right about that, as we see the centralising of the power in the hand of the 'first-high-magistrate' the piricipatus/Caeasr/Emperor later), was to strenghen the senat (In his eyes the core of the republic, and I think it was) and weaken the magistrates, letting so the 'parlamentry' system of this group of aristoctrats defend the republik both against people 'mass' agitation/following and the to powerfull ambitions of singular people.
      Source: Dreyer, Boris: Die Innenpolitik der römischen Republik, 264.- 133. v. Chr., 2006, Darmstadt, S. 15.

  • @TheSecondVersion
    @TheSecondVersion Před 4 lety +988

    Brutus: "Oh no, I'm not brave enough for politics"
    Cicero: "Hang on, this whole operation was *your* idea. "

    • @samc9516
      @samc9516 Před 4 lety +47

      In this analogy, does it work to make Octavian Emperor Palpatine? "In order to ensure the security and continuing stability, the Republic will be reorganised into the FIRST GALACTIC/ROMAN EMPIRE!"
      Edit: and therefore Caesar could be the legendary Darth Plagueis the wise himself! :o

    • @KarakNornClansman
      @KarakNornClansman Před 4 lety +61

      @@samc9516 Palpatine is very much based on Octavianus. It's an obvious parallell. He's the senate.

    • @luciusvernus3174
      @luciusvernus3174 Před 4 lety

      Lmao

    • @forasago
      @forasago Před 4 lety +5

      @@samc9516 Palpatine is more like the original Caesar. Octavian followed Caesar's blueprint on how to run things whereas Palpatine was a pioneer, at least until Disney retcons it.

    • @crystos-he
      @crystos-he Před 4 lety

      @@KarakNornClansman you mean caesar

  • @JingleJangle256
    @JingleJangle256 Před 4 lety +2032

    So Brutus, Cassius, and Decimus murdered Caesar out of fear that he’d declare himself king and start killing members of the opposition, only to fuel the ambitions of younger men who were more keen to purge than Caesar ever was.
    Palpatine (in the shadows): Ironic.

    • @GrandMoffTarkinsTeaDispenser
      @GrandMoffTarkinsTeaDispenser Před 4 lety +339

      "Caesar wants to be king" was PR on their part, they killed him because Caesar had started to reward plebs and retired soldiers with public land and forcing the rich landowner class to employ unemployed roman freeman instead of slaves (1/3 of the workforce at least if i remember right). The optimates killed Caesar to stop social reform and in doing so they ensured their own deaths. So yeah ironic, fuck them.

    • @ben76326
      @ben76326 Před 4 lety +218

      @@GrandMoffTarkinsTeaDispenser it was not just PR.
      Caesar monopolized power in Rome and got declared declared dictator for life. During that time here are some of the especially kingly things he had done. He passed legislation to have an ornate chair (some would say throne) set between the two consuls chairs. And he passed another law enabling him to ware a purple toga (which was the dress of the old kings of Rome). No legislation behind this one, but Caesar had a bust of himself placed in Temple that housed busts of the original kings of Rome.
      With all of that I don't think it's unfair to say Caesar wanted to be King. Even if he was also passing reforms to help the common people.

    • @gaminbros316
      @gaminbros316 Před 4 lety +28

      @@ben76326 man ceasar is almost like President Marcos in the Phil. They both resorted to dictatorial powers thinking thier country would be better with them ruling

    • @Pyxis10
      @Pyxis10 Před 4 lety +197

      @@ben76326 How dare you!? That was just a special golden chair made for the guy who dressed like a king and acted like a king, but definitely wasn't one!

    • @requited2568
      @requited2568 Před 4 lety +46

      @@ben76326 Wonder why he wanted to be king? Probably nothing to do with the low life senators who liked assassinating people and would betray their friends.

  • @andrewbresnan1449
    @andrewbresnan1449 Před 2 lety +335

    We remember and mourn Antony + Cleopatra's deaths but we should really remember and mourn Labienus' and Cicero's deaths

    • @hihi-nm3uy
      @hihi-nm3uy Před rokem +46

      God, Labeinus didn’t even get his moment in the sun in Unbiased History.
      The guy was literally an anime rival to the teeth, and perfect drama material.

    • @sidlukkassen9687
      @sidlukkassen9687 Před rokem +22

      Yes. A movie about the relationship between Caesar and Labienus would be a tremendous success.

    • @cjmcc5231
      @cjmcc5231 Před 11 měsíci

      Antony was an asshole- no mourning for me.

  • @angelortiz4815
    @angelortiz4815 Před rokem +129

    It's sad watching Cicero masterfully thread the political needle just to have Octavian come in with a hammer

  • @Janny890
    @Janny890 Před 4 lety +3009

    "When in doubt march on Rome"
    -Caesar Family motto

  • @dr.pepperyoutube.trustmeit843
    @dr.pepperyoutube.trustmeit843 Před 4 lety +2359

    "it was starting to look like a 5 sided civil war"
    Kaiserreich: Write that down, write that down!

    • @gardenpop
      @gardenpop Před 4 lety +60

      I don't think anyone understood the reference but I did

    • @anonymouscommenter7578
      @anonymouscommenter7578 Před 4 lety +16

      I also did!

    • @BubbleBrawler
      @BubbleBrawler Před 4 lety +8

      waynetraub3 I think the hoi4 mod is based on a book or something, may be it

    • @respublica4373
      @respublica4373 Před 4 lety +25

      @@BubbleBrawler Tee 'Hoi4 mod' is based on a Hoi2 mod.

    • @autoclockk
      @autoclockk Před 4 lety +44

      Holy shit is that a MOTHERFUCKING KAISERREICH REFERENCE?!?!

  • @AlexGreeneHypnotist
    @AlexGreeneHypnotist Před 3 lety +653

    It's funny that the term "backstabbing" is synonymous with betrayal, and that it was popularised by the suposedly most famous literal backstab, that of Brutus to Julius Caesar - when in the prior episodes of this series, we learned that Brutus stuck his knife in Caesar's groin, a frontal attack.

    • @fhornmichaelmac
      @fhornmichaelmac Před 3 lety +123

      It would be a very different world if betrayal was referred to as "getting stabbed in the groin."

    • @serotonin.scavenger
      @serotonin.scavenger Před 2 lety +9

      Caesar was banging Servilia, Brutus' mum; I would think that stab to the groin was fitting lol

    • @tutituti4344
      @tutituti4344 Před 2 lety +20

      Can you imagine Rammstein singing SackStabu?

    • @tomlxyz
      @tomlxyz Před 2 lety

      @@tutituti4344 that song isn't about back stabbing, the title is a made up word and is a desired thing in the song

    • @LordTelperion
      @LordTelperion Před rokem +2

      I'd rather have this dagger in front of me THAN a frontal gonadetomy! XD

  • @WereDictionary
    @WereDictionary Před 2 lety +206

    "This battle happened on Decimus' birthday. Which is not important. But it _is_ funny."
    The sheer deadpan delivery of this line had me in stitches. Which is not important. But it _is_ funny.

    • @SomeDude518
      @SomeDude518 Před 7 měsíci

      No go watch him talk about birthday boy in the video released after this.
      That is funny! 🥳💀

  • @mikelius28
    @mikelius28 Před 4 lety +2756

    I love how Brutus thinks he is the "chosen one" to save the Republic and then does absolutely nothing. I wonder if the characters have been romanticized or were just out of touch with reality.

    • @Mitaka.Kotsuka
      @Mitaka.Kotsuka Před 3 lety +321

      probably both

    • @noneinparticular2338
      @noneinparticular2338 Před 3 lety +78

      The word brute gives the game away about that Brute

    • @someopinion2846
      @someopinion2846 Před 3 lety +35

      An ancient BoJo

    • @kylemendoza8860
      @kylemendoza8860 Před 3 lety +106

      I think out of touch. He was probably in an echo chamber.

    • @SHDW-nf2ki
      @SHDW-nf2ki Před 3 lety +225

      I think its a bit of being out of touch
      But not really in a bad way
      Keep in mind Romans were MAD superstitious so Brutus probably didn't just think he was the "Chosen one"
      Imagine your whole life is built on the legacy of someone who isn't you, and everyone around you outright takes it as fact that you will continue that legacy. But you have none of your ancestors training or knowledge and the situation is radically different than what he faced before you.
      I imagine Brutus was probably paralyzed with fear of messing up and ruining his family name, one of the most historically important names in all of Rome.

  • @mojeo522
    @mojeo522 Před 4 lety +879

    "My child, this was a learned man and a lover of his country".
    That hit hard :(

    • @germanyballwork5301
      @germanyballwork5301 Před 4 lety +78

      :( indeed, I feel rome would have been far stronger had cicero, caesar, pompey and a lot of other people not been murdered in the civil wars of that time

    • @JoseHernandez-bv5gr
      @JoseHernandez-bv5gr Před 4 lety +59

      @@germanyballwork5301 It is true. Civil War do not benefit a state in anyway.

    • @frankwu4747
      @frankwu4747 Před 4 lety +5

      Who was that grandson?

    • @Arduu123
      @Arduu123 Před 4 lety +16

      @@frankwu4747 Same question popped into my head instantly too. Seems like it is mentioned by Plutarch but i cant find, atleast online, who he's referring to. Maybe Claudius?

    • @JohnBehrens118
      @JohnBehrens118 Před 4 lety +54

      @@germanyballwork5301 Maybe. However Octavian's rule ushered in the Pax Romana and a century of relative peace. It wasn't until Marcus Aurelius started the trend of leaving the Emperor position to be inherited by incompetent progeny (*cough*Commodus*cough*) that the Crisis of the Third Century began and with it the slow decline of the Western Roman Empire.

  • @chadsworthgigafuck
    @chadsworthgigafuck Před 2 lety +89

    Imagine being recognized by face by a Roman checkpoint soldier in ancient times. You can't have worse luck than Decimus.

  • @TaeSunWoo
    @TaeSunWoo Před 2 lety +331

    Cicero: “we must stop Marc Antony! He’ll become another Caesar!”
    Octavian/Augustus: (laughs in the distance)

    • @friendcomputer2293
      @friendcomputer2293 Před 2 lety +42

      Cicero: 'I'll ally myself with the man who literally named himself Caesar after the original one. What could possibly go wrong?'

    • @LOL-zu1zr
      @LOL-zu1zr Před rokem +13

      @@friendcomputer2293 “his a kid I can still change him”

    • @sidlukkassen9687
      @sidlukkassen9687 Před rokem +10

      There are letters predating the Philippicae in which Cicero recognizes that this will happen. But still goes by the course of allying with Octavian against M.A. probably because he went so all-in and personal in his speeches against M.A. that there was really no way back.

  • @rgm96x49
    @rgm96x49 Před 4 lety +1423

    "No plan, no system, no method!"
    Jeez, Cicero, you didn't have to narrate my life up to now like that, man.

    • @resileaf9501
      @resileaf9501 Před 4 lety +70

      Well stop doing a Brutus of yourself and be a Ceasar instead!

    • @Vienna3080
      @Vienna3080 Před 4 lety +67

      I relate to Brutus the most: Incompetent and lazy

    • @b43xoit
      @b43xoit Před 4 lety +12

      US official response to the novel coronavirus of 2019: no plan, no system, no method.

    • @brianmessemer2973
      @brianmessemer2973 Před 3 lety +7

      It's funny - I thought that to be a particularly modern-sounding comment. What a brilliant man he truly must have been.

    • @karlhans6678
      @karlhans6678 Před 3 lety +1

      @@resileaf9501 if i become a Caesar then it wont end well for me...

  • @maxstr
    @maxstr Před 4 lety +4841

    I started watching this on my TV, and to my surprise my 6 year old daughter sat down and started watching with me. This girl has a 10 second attention span, but she ended up watching the entire thing! She was even asking me questions like what an empire is, and if the "envelopes" are armies. Thank you for this video and making an awesome father-daughter experience for me

    • @JamesJJSMilton
      @JamesJJSMilton Před 3 lety +167

      @Loonytoones85 no no put her in govt. schools so she can learn 10 seconds of the byzantine empire.

    • @macfly6237
      @macfly6237 Před 3 lety +45

      Soylent green is people!!

    • @Jessie_Helms
      @Jessie_Helms Před 3 lety +116

      Congrats man!
      I was around her age myself when I started being fascinated by history.
      Here’s my suggestion as a 21 year old life long lover of history:
      use as many organic methods of teaching history as possible like (supervised until she’s old enough) historical YT videos (preferably from entertaining channels like this, Extra Credits, LindyBiege, etc...), find ways to make timelines feel natural rather than memorizing “x person did y thing on z date”, and introduce her to various periods (the Shaw’s of Persia are really neat, the unification of Germany, formation of China, and The Western Confederacy are great example they won’t teach much of in school).
      If you home school her, I’d look hard for interesting and well written history material.
      If she goes to a school you don’t control the material of, look for ways to help her learn about it organically and see the people as, well, people rather than info dumps.
      The time I hated history more than ever was in middle school with the same boring tone being used to teach me about the same events I’d already heard about every year.
      That’s, IMO, when most people develop an apathy or even hatred of history.

    • @EiriktheNordAndersen-ju4gl
      @EiriktheNordAndersen-ju4gl Před 3 lety +1

      SOYLENT GREEN IS PEOPLE!

    • @ImTheMariner
      @ImTheMariner Před 3 lety +47

      I bet shes even cuter than those squares, haha reading this comment made me happy, thank you for that. i really hope she keeps an interest in history, better than all the shenanigans of modern entertainment bullshit.

  • @angelovargas938
    @angelovargas938 Před 2 lety +239

    Jesus Christ man, your telling made me so attached to a green square that I genuinely felt bad when he died. HBO is sleeping on this, they should remake Rome with your telling as a baseline, this is incredible

    • @ghfudrs93uuu
      @ghfudrs93uuu Před rokem +7

      Rome is gone, man. We can only hope they won't repeat history and exchange something of the same caliber for a dragon show, but we know they will

    • @InDadequate
      @InDadequate Před rokem +3

      you're right, an HBPO sequel to later years after Julius would be fantastic to see

    • @zumis1011
      @zumis1011 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@InDadequate It already exists, it's a great show

  • @Niwdog
    @Niwdog Před 3 lety +175

    “Octavian gave up Cicero”
    Me: 😮

  • @D3D3D
    @D3D3D Před 4 lety +1333

    Octavian: "I used the anti-Caesarian Faction to destroy the anti-Caesarian Faction"

    • @pokey796
      @pokey796 Před 4 lety +162

      After the anti-Caesarian faction tried to use the Caesarian faction to destroy the Caesarian faction

    • @jeffreyroot6300
      @jeffreyroot6300 Před 4 lety +14

      pokey79 How Roman!

    • @oswald7597
      @oswald7597 Před 4 lety +30

      Octavian will return in Rome: Endgame

    • @FourOf92000
      @FourOf92000 Před 4 lety +11

      "I used the squares to destroy the squares"

    • @Mitaka.Kotsuka
      @Mitaka.Kotsuka Před 4 lety +1

      was super efective

  • @MalcolmTown
    @MalcolmTown Před 4 lety +3236

    We've now been in quarantine long enough for this man to upload twice.

  • @BumblinIdiot
    @BumblinIdiot Před 3 lety +222

    I legitimately started crying at the end of this. The world can always use more people like Cicero. Whenever people like this get torn from us we are all poorer for it.

    • @billrich9722
      @billrich9722 Před rokem +7

      Pretty sure those Centurion were richer for it.

    • @Beno27591
      @Beno27591 Před rokem +3

      u cryin over squares lol

    • @createrz8433
      @createrz8433 Před 7 měsíci

      At least Anthonys brother was killed as a result of this, and later on he himself was killed in an unwinnable war.

    • @creatrixZBD
      @creatrixZBD Před 6 měsíci

      The assholes get ever richer

    • @neilb143
      @neilb143 Před 5 měsíci

      Cicero deserved it fully as he was waging a war against people who rightfully were the heir of Caesar. And while his intentions were to not have another king like leader, he had no clue how to unite the empire, which Antony and Octavian successful did

  • @rocinante4609
    @rocinante4609 Před 2 lety +79

    I would argue that Cicero's finest hour was when he suppressed the Catiline conspiracy during his consulship and then had Roman citizens killed without a trial.
    After Caesar's death Cicero got outmanoeuvred by a young Octavius. Although he managed to corner Antonius he got lulled into a false sense of security by a tame Senate. He mistook the wolf for a sheep in Octavius. Cicero belonged to an earlier era of Roman history when people respected the rule of law and Roman armies didn't decide the ruler.

    • @TheAdmirableAdmiral
      @TheAdmirableAdmiral Před 2 lety +17

      Cicero would probably argue that was his finest hour too. Though I don't discount this event either. If Cicero had just retired after cesar's death Antony probably would have won the brief followup civil war.

    • @shadanahmad6843
      @shadanahmad6843 Před 11 měsíci

      👆 This guy gets it.

    • @createrz8433
      @createrz8433 Před 7 měsíci

      That's why it was *his* year

  • @hitchens1959
    @hitchens1959 Před 3 lety +2950

    "My child, this was a learned man, and a lover of his country."

    • @thiagooliveira7935
      @thiagooliveira7935 Před 3 lety +189

      "one that I got him killed"

    • @theleetworldbest
      @theleetworldbest Před 3 lety +154

      And yet, he allowed him to die. Octavianus is forever tainted in my eyes as the one allowing one of the greatest, if not THE greatest men, of his time to die

    • @acebalistic1358
      @acebalistic1358 Před 3 lety +198

      @@theleetworldbest it was antony's fault, he was insistent, he was forcing octavian to allow it. what was octavian supposed to do, start another civil war within a civil war that would take at least tens of thousands more lives?

    • @friedkeenan
      @friedkeenan Před 3 lety +40

      @@acebalistic1358 He (and everyone else) should have never allowed it to get to that point

    • @gandalfgrey91
      @gandalfgrey91 Před 3 lety +207

      If it’s any consolation, Brutus retaliated by killing Antony’s brother.

  • @TheSecondVersion
    @TheSecondVersion Před 4 lety +565

    Old woman: "What is your name?"
    Octavius: "...Gaius. Gaius Julius Caesar."

  • @AlexGreeneHypnotist
    @AlexGreeneHypnotist Před 3 lety +173

    So in effect, when Antony was refusing to hand over Caesar's money to Octavian, Octavian started up the first crowdfunding campaign in history just to rub it in Antony's face. And it worked!

    • @serotonin.scavenger
      @serotonin.scavenger Před 2 lety +14

      "Crowdfunding," as you put it, was more common than you would think.
      Another example was Caesar, Octavian's adoptive _tata_ , raising his 50-talent ransom from the city of Rhodes, when he was captured by pirates.

  • @SiveenO
    @SiveenO Před rokem +72

    "No Plan, No System, No Method!" must be my favorite quote of the day.

  • @michaelsmart7445
    @michaelsmart7445 Před 4 lety +1251

    "This was a learned man, and a lover of his country."
    Ow, my heart. :(

    • @josephclaessens8160
      @josephclaessens8160 Před 4 lety +30

      Almost brought a tear to my eye 😢

    • @kim2894
      @kim2894 Před 4 lety +77

      can definitely imagine old and aged Augustus laying it down if anybody within his earshot talked bad about Cicero

    • @christosvoskresye
      @christosvoskresye Před 4 lety +4

      That's what Caesar said.

    • @captainrackham2004
      @captainrackham2004 Před 4 lety +39

      I got a lump in my throat when that scene happened lol. It seems like they had a lot of respect for each other, even if someone lost the game. it's amazing the drama the unfolds in these stories! it feels like we KNOW them! 🥺

    • @Hugh_Morris
      @Hugh_Morris Před 4 lety +52

      Augustus knew the deal. It’s also worth noting that he pardoned Cicero’s son and allowed him to be the one that declared Marcus Antonius’ death as well as revoke his honours and ban the name Marcus within that family.

  • @aurelian5234
    @aurelian5234 Před 4 lety +1265

    “This battle happened on Decimus’s birthday, which is not important, but it is funny.” - Proceeds to die alone, away from his friends and family. Happy birthday bruh!!!

    • @pez4
      @pez4 Před 3 lety +23

      20:15 Happy birthday!!

    • @ethanstaaf404
      @ethanstaaf404 Před 2 lety +7

      He died months after the battle

    • @Ikxi
      @Ikxi Před 2 lety +8

      @@ethanstaaf404 still, that was his last great experience really
      after that everything went downhill because all his men defected

    • @sushamaborkar6657
      @sushamaborkar6657 Před rokem

      Cassius died on his birthday

  • @csxfan_
    @csxfan_ Před 3 lety +126

    It's so infuriating watching Brutus do nothing time and time again. Octavian understood being in and near Rome gave him both better information and the ability to exert influence. Brutus just didn't understand this at like any point.

    • @Deboniako
      @Deboniako Před 11 měsíci +3

      It's just as remote work

    • @markalanajon3295
      @markalanajon3295 Před 9 měsíci +1

      He deadass didn't move until he died when he killed ceasar

  • @reconnectingtryagain6986
    @reconnectingtryagain6986 Před 3 lety +67

    Green square: shakes back and forth
    Me: You show him Cicero!

  • @TheJaviferrol
    @TheJaviferrol Před 4 lety +2486

    Decimus: "I was handpicked by Caesar!"
    Says one of the dudes who literally "hand picked" Caesar...

    • @itsMe_TheHerpes
      @itsMe_TheHerpes Před 3 lety +10

      instead of watching this nonsense video, you should ask yourself what do you do to support the black lives matter movement, and how do you fight against white supremacy ?

    • @Marshal_Rock
      @Marshal_Rock Před 3 lety +441

      @@itsMe_TheHerpes Get lost

    • @williammoore6534
      @williammoore6534 Před 3 lety +206

      @@itsMe_TheHerpes why would i help an evil communist movement that wants to destroy America?

    • @METALFREAK03
      @METALFREAK03 Před 3 lety +126

      @@itsMe_TheHerpes history truly repeats. stop making it about race. Then we will succeed.

    • @1112viggo
      @1112viggo Před 3 lety +44

      @@METALFREAK03 Funny i can´t think of any wars that was started because of race? Unless your one of those people who think the main reason the Nazis invaded the world was to kill Jews and the American civil war was fought to free slaves, then maybe there is a few. But still the overwhelming reason we wage war on each other on this planet is wealth and territory. The rest are just petty and transparent excuses to try and justify the bloodshed, usually after the fact.

  • @RaixsOreh
    @RaixsOreh Před 2 lety +120

    as much as I love Julius Caesar and Augustus and the empire whose foundation they had laid, I feel so bad about Cicero. he was the Republic's last true Leader.

    • @justmesantana
      @justmesantana Před rokem +17

      Agreed, say what you will about Cicero. He was one of the greatest statesmen in history, and also, perhaps, the truest patriot Rome ever had.

    • @neilb143
      @neilb143 Před 5 měsíci +1

      His intentions were good but I have no clue wtf he was trying to achieve by not giving power to Octavian and well....he paid the price for it

    • @RaixsOreh
      @RaixsOreh Před 5 měsíci +5

      @@neilb143 it was more on brutus and cassius for not doing jack shit. Cicero did fail the republic but onpy becsuse brutus and cassius already put the final nail on the republic's coffin. Those two were as much warlords as caesar and pompey.

    • @neilb143
      @neilb143 Před 5 měsíci

      @@RaixsOreh he relied on the wrong people for sure and I think did not expect Octavian to betray him. Shame he didn't side with Antony

  • @galactized7760
    @galactized7760 Před 3 lety +46

    “Friendly neighborhood historian Tom Holland”
    Spider-Man, Spider-Man, all fed up with the Romans

  • @jgagnier
    @jgagnier Před 4 lety +516

    "Whether he knew it or not, Brutus had stabbed Decimus in the back."
    You're not really helping his stabby reputation here buddy.

  • @owenb8636
    @owenb8636 Před 4 lety +742

    As an act of defiance, Decimus killed some Gauls. Is this just the way Romans vent their anger?

    • @BradyPostma
      @BradyPostma Před 4 lety +75

      Yes. I'm going to say yes.

    • @BradyPostma
      @BradyPostma Před 4 lety +20

      Also, hi fellow Brady!

    • @Axalon900
      @Axalon900 Před 4 lety +9

      These Romans are crazy!

    • @MrCantStopTheRobot
      @MrCantStopTheRobot Před 4 lety +40

      "Any day is a good day for killing Gauls,-- but today it feels especially RIGHT! AND! PROPER!"

    • @namekman01
      @namekman01 Před 4 lety +36

      a roman stubs his toe on a table
      "THE GALL OF THE PERSON WHO PUT THIS IN MY WAY!!!"
      gears turn in his head
      "THE GAUL... I BET THE GAULS DID THIS! I WILL HAVE VENGENCE!"

  • @Friedrich2DerGrosse
    @Friedrich2DerGrosse Před 2 lety +67

    "No plans, no system, no methods!" By Cicero was the roman equivalent of "No bitches, no hoes"
    Cicero working with scraps man.

    • @greyfoxninja1239
      @greyfoxninja1239 Před rokem +8

      It’s funny how much those two phrases carry the same energy 😂

    • @Memelord1117
      @Memelord1117 Před 11 dny

      "No bread (sestercii)", too.

  • @CalvinNoire
    @CalvinNoire Před rokem +28

    Cicero is a very honourable man, and the ending of this video with octavian's grandson made my heart pour, F.

  • @primusinterpares5767
    @primusinterpares5767 Před 4 lety +982

    "All this work, and all my money wasted!"

  • @bguy32
    @bguy32 Před 4 lety +940

    Never thought I'd cry over the death of man who lived over 2000 years ago but I did.
    Rest in Power to my main man Cicero 😔✊

    • @WorthlessWinner
      @WorthlessWinner Před 4 lety +41

      Cicero had done his own mass killing of political enemies in his youth, so it is hard for me to feel too bad about his death

    • @filmicreviews3270
      @filmicreviews3270 Před 4 lety +63

      Well those enemies were planning on creating treason against Rome.

    • @Marshal_Rock
      @Marshal_Rock Před 4 lety +17

      @@WorthlessWinner Well, to be fair he brought all that upon himself anyway

    • @caiawlodarski5339
      @caiawlodarski5339 Před 4 lety +86

      @@WorthlessWinner It wasn't really a mass killing like the proscriptions, they weren't just anyone who opposed him, they were conspiring with Catiline to overthrow the government.

    • @johnyoutuber9781
      @johnyoutuber9781 Před 4 lety +41

      I'm gonna make this worse for y'all by adding my own terrible realization, that, with the death of Cicero, Antony is the ONLY ONE of our beloved characters left that was with us the whole time. Everyone else who's currently still with us, over 3/4 of which also didn't make it in the end, came here MUCH later down the road. This is truly the end of an era :(

  • @cooldudep
    @cooldudep Před 3 lety +62

    Maybe Caesar saw something in young Octavian: Qualities, values and a sharp mind that would make him a fine man to finish what he started and set Rome on a glorious path to becoming an Empire, if he were to pass away early. It's no mistake that the insane amount of money given to Octavian was to remove any monetary barriers to carry out high level political manuevering and also to pocket the legions in his grasp. He probably saw the same ambitious mind within the young Octavian that fueled his drive to the peak of the Roman political world. Man Caesar was a genius through and through.

    • @talisikid1618
      @talisikid1618 Před rokem +1

      Or just greedy, ambitious and ruthless.

    • @Mitaka.Kotsuka
      @Mitaka.Kotsuka Před rokem +3

      @@talisikid1618 Qualities too, you need those if you want to make a glorious empire

  • @felixhampe6480
    @felixhampe6480 Před 2 lety +17

    I love Cicero as well! He almost single-handedly saved the Republic. Absolute Hero.

  • @TheSecondVersion
    @TheSecondVersion Před 4 lety +236

    I like how you made Octavian *purple* because he was the first true Emperor

  • @jevinliu4658
    @jevinliu4658 Před 4 lety +380

    Antony: Decimus, hand over everything and let it be called a swap
    Decimus: No
    Antony: *Surprised pikachu face*

    • @sarasamaletdin4574
      @sarasamaletdin4574 Před 4 lety +6

      I am glad Decimus is even mentioned since he is too often ignored.

    • @caiawlodarski5339
      @caiawlodarski5339 Před 4 lety +1

      @@sarasamaletdin4574 Yeah, he is often confused and merged with his cousin, i blame Shakespeare

  • @jamesdunn3864
    @jamesdunn3864 Před 3 lety +19

    And let’s not forget that Fulvia, Antony's wife, vented her hatred of Cicero, who had argued so eloquently against her husband, by using her hair pins to pierce Cicero’s tongue before his head was exposed on the Rostra. They so did things differently in those days.

  • @SC-tl3rh
    @SC-tl3rh Před 2 měsíci +3

    Just watched this for the 50th time or something like that. This video was Historia Civilis’ finest hour. Hands down. Thank you for the wonderful content you make. Been a fan since your Alessia video. Keep up the good work!

  • @novomute4281
    @novomute4281 Před 4 lety +243

    I can't belive i felt emotional to a death of a little green square

    • @_fourtwoseven
      @_fourtwoseven Před 4 lety +36

      First it was the little red one, now its the little green one

    • @cheydinal5401
      @cheydinal5401 Před 4 lety

      @jpc1918 Brutus could have pretty easily saved him, right?

    • @hansnase364
      @hansnase364 Před 4 lety +11

      Man. I miss Cicero.

    • @Jackal_007
      @Jackal_007 Před 4 lety +3

      Rip decimus. Used and manipulated.

  • @michaeltariga5285
    @michaeltariga5285 Před rokem +22

    Can you imagine if Brutus's legions were in Italy when Octavius asked to be made Consul? Octavius wouldn't have the balls to just march his army into Rome like that after he got denied said consulship and would perhaps go into negotiations to share said consulship with someone.

  • @nikoslav
    @nikoslav Před 3 lety +21

    "Lepidus gave up his brother"
    Literally a certified frater momentum

    • @alanpennie8013
      @alanpennie8013 Před rokem +9

      Actually he didn't.
      He pretended to but then hid him until the proscriptions ended.
      He was a good brother after all.

    • @SD-mi2vc
      @SD-mi2vc Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@alanpennie8013proof?

    • @IdiotNESS
      @IdiotNESS Před 6 měsíci +1

      ​@@SD-mi2vcCassius Dio claims so, in book 47 of his history of Rome. "So Caesar saved the lives of as many as he could; and Lepidus allowed his brother Paulus to escape to Miletus and was not inexorable toward the others." (Cassius Dio 47.8.1)

    • @sheldon-cooper
      @sheldon-cooper Před měsícem

      ​@@SD-mi2vcI was there, it happened

  • @Captain_Carrot
    @Captain_Carrot Před 3 lety +2709

    "Whether he [Brutus] meant it or not, he had just stabbed Decimus in the back."
    At least not in the groin.
    Also, post-assassination Brutus definitely deserves the Bibulus award.

    • @Mitaka.Kotsuka
      @Mitaka.Kotsuka Před 3 lety +144

      Octavian stabbed Cicero, Decimus, Brutus and Cassius in the back... welll... thats why he was there in first plaace... the irony

    • @Lius525
      @Lius525 Před 3 lety +101

      Brutus was like that "this is fine" meme the entire time 😂

    • @acebalistic1358
      @acebalistic1358 Před 3 lety +68

      eu tu, bru- AH WHY THE BALLS

    • @falistor8969
      @falistor8969 Před 3 lety +7

      @@acebalistic1358 genius 😂😂😂

    • @Julio974
      @Julio974 Před 2 lety +11

      We need to make the Bibulus award a thing

  • @GravitoRaize
    @GravitoRaize Před 4 lety +335

    "Freedom suppressed and again regained bites with keener fangs than freedom never endangered." -- Cicero

    • @francesconesi7666
      @francesconesi7666 Před 4 lety +12

      When did he produce such a nice quote?
      Not during Catiline's trial, for sure.

    • @riccardoorlando2262
      @riccardoorlando2262 Před 4 lety +29

      Cicero, De Officiis, Book 2, paragraph 24:
      "Acriores autem morsus sunt intermissae libertatis quam retentae."
      Actual translation:
      "For they shall be bitten more sharply by interrupted freedom than by continued."
      If I had used the above translation in my Latin class, I'd have gotten zero marks for basically making up half the sentence. You can't claim you've done a translation if you only attempt to keep the (perceived) meaning; you must translate the letter, even if (obviously) it doesn't sound as good in English.

    • @SilentShadowLT
      @SilentShadowLT Před 4 lety +18

      @@riccardoorlando2262 Translation is not the same as transcription. The first conveys original meaning in an other language, even if the sentence structure changes completely. The other roughly uses synonyms in an other language without putting much consideration in the original meaning behind the words themselves. As a result, the first creates a fluid sentence, while the second creates a Frankenstein monster of literal design.

    • @johnyoutuber9781
      @johnyoutuber9781 Před 4 lety +11

      @@SilentShadowLT Too bad that "Freedom suppressed and again regained bites with keener fangs than freedom never endangered." is barely a coherent sentence, whereas "For they shall be bitten more sharply by interrupted freedom than by continued." actually makes some sense, so it's still more of a translation than the first one.

    • @SilentShadowLT
      @SilentShadowLT Před 4 lety +6

      @@johnyoutuber9781 Both versions are rather convoluted. While the first one would be better with an added comma, the second one isn't fixed that easily. Both "for they shall" and "interrupted [rather] than by continued" are not standard speech -- needlessly archaic. Continued and interrupted are hardly even antonyms, as 'continue' has the implication that the thing in question has been interrupted at some point. I'd suggest coming up with a different translation. For instance: "Freedom, which had been interrupted, bites sharper than freedom which hadn't." Even then, the "bites" part needs further thought, as it seems out of place -- rather forced.

  • @washikaafrozi1469
    @washikaafrozi1469 Před 3 lety +26

    “Anthony friggin’ stinks!” - Cicero, probably

    • @misterpayah7723
      @misterpayah7723 Před 3 lety +3

      Truly a masterful orator, such elegance.

    • @lazyatthedisco
      @lazyatthedisco Před 2 lety

      "Anthony is a drunken bum and a whore" Literally Cicero.

  • @VietTran-IAMV
    @VietTran-IAMV Před 5 měsíci +5

    Cicero said that "to philosophize is nothing more than to prepare for death" (basically, to learn philosophy is to learn how to live in a way as preparation for our death to be meaningful and great)
    Man truly lived and died on his word. Respect

  • @phrophetsamgames
    @phrophetsamgames Před 4 lety +646

    “Hey let’s swap but put these conditions”
    Conditions: Literally make it so Antony gets everything and Decimus gets nothing.
    Senators: well no use causing a fuss over the swap

  • @feliscatus5161
    @feliscatus5161 Před 3 lety +743

    Cicero: "Sooooo how long are you just going to sit there for?"
    Brutus: "Yes."

    • @booketoiles1600
      @booketoiles1600 Před 3 lety +24

      Literally didn't move until his death

    • @billrich9722
      @billrich9722 Před rokem

      Stupid fucking meme.

    • @Trancymind
      @Trancymind Před 8 měsíci

      Brutus takes entitlement to a different level. Brutus: "I deserve this."

  • @eliparker7151
    @eliparker7151 Před 3 lety +67

    "Decimus I want to swap, but I have some conditions."
    "Okay let's hear them."
    "I want to bring my six legions with my to Cisalpine Gaul."
    "Mmmm, maybe. Anything else?"
    "Oh yeah, by swap I of course mean you giving me Cisalpine Gaul and me giving you nothing."

  • @camacdonnell1
    @camacdonnell1 Před 2 lety +11

    I watched this video when you published it and probably 30 times since. Truly one of the best and most emotionally evocative historical videos on the internet.

  • @Vincent-S
    @Vincent-S Před 4 lety +315

    I'd imagine Caesar's ghost would be pretty horrified at the proscription that Antony, Octavian and Lepidus was pulling off

    • @justinian-the-great
      @justinian-the-great Před 4 lety +57

      Nah, I don't believe so. Infact I think that he would've complemented them! The fact that Caesar never made a proscriptions is based on the fact that he actually never needed to do that. Why? Because all of his enemies already died in the civil war! Caesar was a man who was personally responsible for the deaths of at least hundreds of thousands or, much more likely, even millions of Gauls, Romans and people from many other nations! Would he really be horrified by the deaths of mere couple of thousands? I don't think so.

    • @The-Plaguefellow
      @The-Plaguefellow Před 4 lety +18

      Something tells me he would've been quite upset to learn about it, but eventually accept that it was probably necessary in the end.

    • @caiawlodarski5339
      @caiawlodarski5339 Před 4 lety +4

      @jpc1918 The only people who deserve to be purged are tyrants.

    • @washizukanorico
      @washizukanorico Před 4 lety +46

      Steva Stevanović Cesar was no humanist indeed, but my guess is that he wanted to put his name way up there (or even above) Alexander as a historical figure. He wanted to be remembered as the best of the romans for centuries to come. And as he experienced Sulla and his proscriptions he knew they would have grant him absolute power now, but would have diminished his image in the long run (as Sylla was hated by most).
      Remember he offered peace to Pompey before crossing the rubicon and he genuinely (I think) got upset when Ptolemy the 74th killed Pompey.
      Well that s how I see it at least.
      Do you believe Ceasar would have killed Pompey had he captured him?
      I see him giving Pompey some kind of honorary job with no military/legal power but who knows really ...

    • @justinian-the-great
      @justinian-the-great Před 4 lety +13

      @@washizukanorico Well, there you are right, Caesar was a man who very carefully thought about his public image. Although I think that, if he captured Pompey, he would have probably either kept him under the lock for the rest of his life (i.e. throw him in the dungeon) or force him to commit suicide and make up the story to the Senate and the people that he didn't have anything to do with his death. But, fortunately for Caesar, Egyptians already did an excellent job for him, riding him of every responsibility for the Pompey's fate and actually even giving him the he excuse to "weep" for his dead "friend". I mean, to think it thorough, would've Caesar really ever even started the civil war if he wasn't ready to kill Pompey at any given time? As for that peace/political compromise before Rubicon, I think that Caesar knew that it will be refused and that he proposed it just so he could claim that he was the one ready to negotiate, to make peace, while Pompey was the warmonger who refused any peace deal. There is no doubt that Caesar was a cunning manipulator and with such kind of people we must always look what benefit they might get out of their in-a-good-will proposals.

  • @Krnballerzzz
    @Krnballerzzz Před 4 lety +1955

    32 minutes of bliss from all the coronavirus mess. Thank you Historia :3

    • @Geeza-rc9kz
      @Geeza-rc9kz Před 4 lety

      Here here

    • @Ultrawup
      @Ultrawup Před 4 lety +17

      2000 years from now, Historia Civilis will make a hologram series about the era 2016-2024, and coronavirus will surely be a part of that.

    • @dylancrooks6548
      @dylancrooks6548 Před 4 lety +4

      Always a good day when historia uploads

    • @reinatr4848
      @reinatr4848 Před 4 lety

      @AlexNOSAM he/she said "coronavirus mess"

    • @reinatr4848
      @reinatr4848 Před 4 lety +2

      @Micheal Prendergast Did you though?

  • @turinturambar1159
    @turinturambar1159 Před 3 lety +6

    I absolutely love this channel. The way you portray these snippets of history are astonishingly entertaining, but it seems like you also genuinely quite enjoy these stories (not that I'd be surprised)

  • @j0nnyism
    @j0nnyism Před 3 lety +60

    Cicero is a really funny guy too. Read his defence speeches they’re great

    • @jy3n2
      @jy3n2 Před 2 lety +24

      "This woman's husband - I mean brother, I don't know why I'm always making that mistake..."

    • @PRubin-rh4sr
      @PRubin-rh4sr Před 2 lety +4

      Charismatic people tend to be humorous

    • @liam2745
      @liam2745 Před 2 lety +1

      @@jy3n2 what trial did this happen in?

    • @jy3n2
      @jy3n2 Před 2 lety

      @@liam2745 Pro Caelio, or as I call it In Clodiam.
      Context: Caelius had been accused of several things, including conspiracy, murder, and attempting to poison Clodia Metellii.
      Clodia was quite possibly the most infamous woman in Rome, wearing scandal like a near-transparent gown. The rumors around her included murdering her husband (which gives the "Clytamnestra-for-a-quadrans" line from the same speech) and incest with her brother.

    • @niccolorichter1488
      @niccolorichter1488 Před rokem +2

      @@jy3n2 ís that Clodius , Clodia ?

  • @hyperion3145
    @hyperion3145 Před 4 lety +441

    When we went over this in Middle school, they never mentioned how confusing this was at the start. We went straight to the Liberators War and to Octavian's Civil War.
    How did anyone keep track of these alliances and betrayals is more astonishing than the actual battles.

    • @Justaguy5678
      @Justaguy5678 Před 4 lety +19

      tf kinda middle school did you go to? We barely talked about Rome at even a surface level at mine. And I live in the US state with probably the best education system lmao.

    • @Justaguy5678
      @Justaguy5678 Před 4 lety +9

      @Danny n I said the best as in within America. Shoosh.

    • @reinatr4848
      @reinatr4848 Před 4 lety +1

      @@Justaguy5678 Italy probably as they were talking about Rome.

    • @Justaguy5678
      @Justaguy5678 Před 4 lety +1

      @@reinatr4848 that would be the only way I could understand. World history is packed with stuff, too much for you to focus that much on one state unless its in your own history.

    • @kelli2783
      @kelli2783 Před 4 lety +2

      Harrison Loch British schools cover Ancient Rome and Greece on Classics classes. Some schools have Classics as a subject.

  • @Morilore
    @Morilore Před 4 lety +198

    It's hard to imagine anyone failing harder than the assassins of Julius Ceasar. They tried to prevent the restoration of the monarchy by killing Ceasar, but what happened instead was that Ceasar's name became a word that means "king" in all the lands ruled by Rome and beyond FOR THE NEXT TWO THOUSAND YEARS.

    • @TristanHayes
      @TristanHayes Před 4 lety +44

      @Sheldon Robertson No, it's not, King is derived from the Anglo-Saxon word for King, "Cyning" which in turn was derived from Germanic "kuningaz". What is derived from Caesar is the various variations of it being used as titles for monarchs such as "Kaiser", "Tsar", etc...

    • @wulfherecyning1282
      @wulfherecyning1282 Před 4 lety +24

      @Sheldon Robertson "King" from "cyning", or transliterated to modern English, "kin -ing" meaning "(first) son of the kin", with "kin" (cyn) in its broad sense of a tribe (the origin of "kith and kin"). Essentially, a king is "first among equals" in the Anglo Saxon/Early Germanic world. This is unrelated to Caesar.

    • @patrickwang671
      @patrickwang671 Před 4 lety +3

      @@wulfherecyning1282 So basically King means Princeps... niceee

    • @Gentleman...Driver
      @Gentleman...Driver Před 4 lety +6

      @@patrickwang671 Princeps means leader. More like Primus. Primus inter pares was the designation for first among equals. ;)

    • @AudieHolland
      @AudieHolland Před 4 lety

      *patrick wang* That's what I thought! *@@Gentleman...Driver* Dang, that's even truer.

  • @CERTAIND00M
    @CERTAIND00M Před 3 lety +54

    I feel like every dislike on this video is from guys who didn't like how hard you made them cry with that last line.

  • @23dojo
    @23dojo Před 2 lety +2

    Your artwork, narration, and music you choose is just so amazing, thank you for the awesome videos

  • @sabotsscraps
    @sabotsscraps Před 4 lety +416

    Decimus: Why does everyone keep stabbing me in the back
    Everyone else: Because it’s easy, and it does a lot of damage

  • @riccardoorlando2262
    @riccardoorlando2262 Před 4 lety +244

    You love Cicero because you didn't spend 5 years in high school translating his damned convoluted Latin. Caesar wrote as he ate: simple and straightforward. I could translate the De Bello Gallico by sight. Cicero, on the other hand, means spending hours sweating with a dictionary just to translate one unending sentence with subordinates of subordinates, random word order, verbs used for their 14th meaning in the dictionary instead of the first... Yeah, it sounded nice, but it was bloody incomprehensible.

    • @alfiehaigh8412
      @alfiehaigh8412 Před 4 lety +57

      Oh no, he was clever, what a crime

    • @honoratagold
      @honoratagold Před 4 lety +24

      Maybe it's that I was one of the weird Classics students who started with Greek and learned Latin later, so basically everything in Latin seemed less frustrating just because it... wasn't Greek, but I always really liked translating Cicero.

    • @alejandrojoserodriguezarre45
      @alejandrojoserodriguezarre45 Před 4 lety +45

      Caesar was a man of action, he didn't have to write this grandiose works of literature and legalese. Cicero was a pure statesman, he wasn't a general, and he also used to be a lawyer. His thing was writting so he put flair on it because that's what he did, he wanted to it make more beatiful.

    • @vaylonkenadell
      @vaylonkenadell Před 4 lety +5

      The ideal, it seems to me, is to be both a man of action and of poetry.

    • @markog1999
      @markog1999 Před 4 lety +43

      In fairness Cicero's private letters were fine, and there's something special about reading hot gossip from 2000 years ago

  • @CeeCee962
    @CeeCee962 Před 2 lety +1

    The work you put in to help visualise this is amazing thank you 😊

  • @josephvitale137
    @josephvitale137 Před rokem +11

    Sir, you have really gone above and beyond in honoring the name of Cicero... Im sure if he where alive today to see your videos on him, he would have felt the utmost in gratitude for them, as we feel.

  • @tiodichia5309
    @tiodichia5309 Před 4 lety +1710

    Historia Civilis: (29:20) “we’re anti murder in this house”
    Also Historia Civilis (32:25) “if its any consolation, Brutus retaliated by killing his brother”

    • @Mitaka.Kotsuka
      @Mitaka.Kotsuka Před 4 lety +86

      Double standards

    • @VRC3118A
      @VRC3118A Před 3 lety +117

      Still the best consolation I could get.

    • @ironriderslsm
      @ironriderslsm Před 3 lety +2

      Heeheeheeeheeehwheheee!

    • @rustyshackleford1508
      @rustyshackleford1508 Před 3 lety +82

      Also Historia Civilis: *on the fence on whether it's justifiable to murder random people just for being rich*
      If you're going to eat the rich, make sure they're actual bad people first. (Most probably are but that's beside the point)

    • @Trepur349
      @Trepur349 Před 3 lety +11

      is it bad that I agreed with both statements?

  • @Caerere
    @Caerere Před 4 lety +213

    There's more backstabbing here than on the Ides of March.
    I don't know if Tribune Aquila approves of that.

    • @Marshal_Rock
      @Marshal_Rock Před 4 lety +1

      To be fair, they had it coming with Brutus being not so proactive when needed.

    • @TheSecondVersion
      @TheSecondVersion Před 4 lety +15

      The Ides of march had a lot of crotch-stabbing

    • @JoseHernandez-bv5gr
      @JoseHernandez-bv5gr Před 4 lety +5

      @@TheSecondVersion featuring also shoulder-stabing, rib-stabing, leg-stabing and face-stabing.

    • @einhauchvontullru3187
      @einhauchvontullru3187 Před 4 lety +7

      sadly Tribune Aquila fell in the Battle of Mutina (the one were Anthony was driven our of Italy)

    • @Mitaka.Kotsuka
      @Mitaka.Kotsuka Před 3 lety +3

      @@einhauchvontullru3187 now i understand why nobody was consulting nobody about marching on Rome

  • @theDENIMMAN
    @theDENIMMAN Před 2 lety +9

    I watch these videos for several reasons
    You present topics in an engaging and easy to understand way so that even if Im not that interested (I dont much like Roman history) I still enjoy it
    Also your ending music is amazing

  • @jackcassidy7317
    @jackcassidy7317 Před 5 měsíci +1

    I’m re-watching all of my liked videos starting from the beginning and I’m about halfway through. Your videos on the fall of the Roman Republic really got me interested in the history of the classical era and beyond. This is one of the first videos of yours I liked because it really made me feel for Cicero, a man who died over 2000 years ago and I knew very little about before watching your videos. Thank you for the history lessons.

  • @iamseamonkey6688
    @iamseamonkey6688 Před 4 lety +267

    octavian: can I please be elected emergency consul even though there's actually nothing wrong with Rome's government at the moment?
    cicero: no.
    octavian: *C O W A B U N G A I T I S*

    • @weckar
      @weckar Před 3 lety +29

      Octavian: "Nothing wrong?"
      "Let me correct that."

    • @buckplug2423
      @buckplug2423 Před 3 lety +18

      Classic Roman diplomacy
      "You decline my ridiculous and over-the-top offer that will not benefit you in any way? How dare you!!!"

  • @direweeb
    @direweeb Před 4 lety +703

    Octavian: "Everybody's expecting a coup, but nobody's expecting it right now. Make me dictator, losers."
    Antony: "He's invading Rome?! I'd better stop him!"
    Decimus: "Now I did murder that guy's dad for doing exactly this, but honestly I'm siding with Octavian on this one."
    Antony: "?????????????"
    Rome: "ANTONY! Why are you taking up arms?! I thought we were friends!"
    Antony: "???????????????????????????"
    Rome: "Kill Antony! Get him outta here! Save us, Octavian!"
    Octavian: "I did it. I drove off Antony, the foremost enemy of the Republic."
    Rome: "Thank you so much! My hero!"
    Octavian: "K I'm gonna kill you now."
    Rome: "HOW COULD THIS BE"
    Octavian: "I did it all for myself and my good friend Mark Antony."
    Antony: "????????????????????????????????????????????????????"

    • @erelghania355
      @erelghania355 Před 4 lety +56

      NNNAAAAAAAAANNIIII??!!?!

    • @toddharig8142
      @toddharig8142 Před 4 lety +104

      Ceasar: Thats my boy!

    • @dovwallack4688
      @dovwallack4688 Před 4 lety +56

      HBO had the right idea, it truly is a soap opera

    • @hyperion3145
      @hyperion3145 Před 4 lety +30

      Brutus: Wack

    • @marcorc5167
      @marcorc5167 Před 4 lety +32

      I don't know if Octavian was a genius or what the hell was going on in his head with these weird decisions.

  • @Leo_1975
    @Leo_1975 Před 2 lety +1

    I love the way this chanel tells the history.
    Congratulations, good stuff !

  • @Will6753
    @Will6753 Před rokem +1

    Hey man, I love your videos, you've taught me so much about something I'd previously had little interest in (always found post antiquity more fun to learn about). I've been watching for a few years now and just came back again to catch up. Love your work, thank you for doing so much research and putting it together in a great and easy to swallow presentation!

  • @Pro_Butcher_Amateur_Human
    @Pro_Butcher_Amateur_Human Před 4 lety +403

    Tom Holland is very much the friendly neighbourhood historian. He did a talk at my college once, he happily signed the 3 of his books I had back then, and after the talk ended stayed for over an hour just chatting to us. It was the end of our day, but the entire class stayed late too.
    Great guy.

    • @GreeneyedApe
      @GreeneyedApe Před 4 lety +90

      Note to anyone reading this: It's referring to the historian Tom Holland, credited in the description in the video, not the actor. I was a bit confused at this comment for a minute.

    • @Udontkno7
      @Udontkno7 Před 4 lety +3

      Greeneye oh thank god

    • @TheRenegade...
      @TheRenegade... Před 4 lety +21

      @@GreeneyedApe "friendly neighborhood" tho

    • @phoenixinvictus9880
      @phoenixinvictus9880 Před 4 lety +22

      @@TheRenegade... pun completely intended

    • @GreeneyedApe
      @GreeneyedApe Před 4 lety +5

      ​@@TheRenegade... Even more reason for my clarification.

  • @Arcian
    @Arcian Před 4 lety +361

    Liberatores after killing Caesar: Wow, I'm glad that's over with
    Octavius: Well, yes, but actually no

    • @gavinsmith9871
      @gavinsmith9871 Před 4 lety +35

      Octavian: Time for me to become the Tyrant you thought my father was, and take the power he let you keep.

    • @krissp8712
      @krissp8712 Před 4 lety +14

      I'm Gaius Julius, and this is my favourite Pontifex in the capital

    • @charleslambert3368
      @charleslambert3368 Před 4 lety +8

      We did it patrick, we saved the Republic!

    • @Imperium83
      @Imperium83 Před 4 lety +5

      Defenders of the aristocracy and enemy of the people*

    • @jasonmartin4775
      @jasonmartin4775 Před 4 lety

      Hi! MY name is Gaius Julius and this is JACKASS

  • @dumbeh
    @dumbeh Před 3 lety +17

    poor cicero, did everything right and was abandoned by brutus, octavian, and cassius.

  • @VarnasL
    @VarnasL Před 2 lety

    Wideos like this're a reason why I subbed few years ago.
    I keep coming back to this video, the way you told that story grip my heart, throat and few more places

  • @YodasPapa
    @YodasPapa Před 4 lety +302

    I almost just shed a tear because of all those Fs for Cicero. Something genuinely beautiful about people paying their respects over 2 thousand years ago for a man who consistently tried to act for the greater good, within the constraints of his time.

    • @sebastianschiltz6359
      @sebastianschiltz6359 Před 2 lety +8

      Truly beautiful, legends never die

    • @SerunaXI
      @SerunaXI Před 2 lety +1

      I find it amusing that we genuinely use "F" as a sign of respect thanks to the memes, when it was originally a joke to mock the scene from a call of honorfield game that used "F" as a quick time prompt to "pay respect" What was mocked as silly became genuine due to the meme.

    • @ImOvervalued
      @ImOvervalued Před 7 měsíci

      @@SerunaXI I fail to understand how it's perceived as respectful when talking about real people