Ides of March
Marked Murder of Julius Caesar
Jennifer Vernon for National
Geographic News
March 12, 2004 http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2004/03/0311_040311_idesmarch_2.html
Julius
Caesar's bloody assassination on March 15, 44 B.C., forever marked March 15, or
the Ides of March, as a day of infamy. It has fascinated scholars and writers
ever since. For ancient
Romans living before that event, however, an ides was merely one of several
common calendar terms used to mark monthly lunar events. The ides simply marked
the appearance of the full moon. But the Ides of March assumed a whole
new identity after the events of 44 B.C. The phrase came to represent a
specific day of abrupt change that set off a ripple of repercussions throughout
Roman society and beyond. Josiah Osgood, an assistant professor of classics at
By
the time of Caesar,
The
Romans had no love for kings. According to legend, they expelled their last one
in 509 B.C. While Caesar had made pointed and public displays of turning down
offers of kingship, he showed no reluctance to accept the office of
"dictator for life" in February 44 B.C. According to Osgood, this
action may have sealed his fate in the minds of his enemies. "We can see
[now] that that was enough to get him killed," Osgood said. Caesar had
pushed the envelope for some time before his death. "Caesar was the first
living Roman ever to appear on the coinage," Osgood said. Normally, the
honor was reserved for deities. He notes that some historians suspect that
Caesar might have been attempting to establish a cult in his honor in a move
towards deification.
It
is unclear if Caesar was aware of the plot to kill him on March 15 in 44 B.C.
But Caesar was not oblivious to the mounting danger of a backlash, noted
Charles McNelis, an assistant professor of classics
and Osgood's colleague at
Brutus's
involvement in the murder is made tragic given his close affiliations with
Caesar. His mother, Servilia, was one of Caesar's
lovers. And although Brutus had fought against Caesar during
Brutus, however, was torn in his
allegiance to Caesar, Osgood noted. Brutus's family had a tradition of
rejecting authoritarian powers. Ancestor Junius
Brutus was credited with throwing out the last king of
It
is this moral dilemma that has caused debate over whether or not Brutus should
be branded a villain. Plutarch's Life of Brutus,
Osgood noted, is quite sympathetic in comparison to surviving documents naming
other enemies of Caesar and his successors.
Shakespeare
later used Plutarch's Brutus as one of the
bases for his play Julius Caesar, where Brutus is portrayed as a tragic
hero and Caesar as an unequivocal tyrant. The poet Dante, however, took a
different stance: Brutus, in killing the man who spared him, was doomed to the
lowest levels of hell. "He's perceived not as a liberator but [as] somebody
who threatened the stability of the political system," McNelis
said.
Scholars
disagree on just who was the on the side of "good." McNelis believes neither side is entirely in the clear.
"We need to realize that we're dealing with very brutal and ruthless men
on both sides."
In
the end, the legacy of power Caesar established lived on through his heir
Octavian, who later became
The Murder
On the Ides of March, the senate was to
meet in the Curia Pompeii, an annex of the colonnaded Porticus
adjacent to the stage of the Theater of Pompeii, which had been built by Pompey
(Pompeius) just a decade or so before. Caesar was
late. As Brutus and Cassius anxiously waited for him to arrive, one of the
senators confided that his prayers were with them. "May your plan
succeed," relates Plutarch, "but whatever you do, make haste.
Everyone is talking about it by now." But there was nothing the
conspirators could do except grasp their daggers and prepare to use them on
themselves, if need be. Porcia, the daughter of Cato,
whom Brutus had married within a year of her father's death, had insisted that
she be told of the plan. The day of the assassination, her anxiety was so great
that she became hysterical and fainted from apprehension.
Suetonius relates that a soothsayer had warned
Caesar that he was in grave danger, which would not pass until the Ides had
ended. Entering the building, Caesar now chided him that the day had arrived.
"Yes," he replied, "but they have not yet gone." As Caesar
took his seat, the conspirators gathered around him on the pretext of
presenting a petition. One then took hold of his purple toga and ripped it away
from his neck. A dagger was thrust at Caesar's throat but missed and only
wounded him. Another assassin then drove a dagger into his chest as he twisted
away from the first assailant. Brutus struck Caesar in the groin. Hemmed in,
"Caesar kept turning," writes Appian,
"from one to another of them with furious cries like a wild beast."
When he saw that Brutus, too, had drawn his dagger, Plutarch relates that
Caesar covered his head with his toga and sank to the ground, reproaching him
in Greek, says Suetonius, with the words "You,
too, my child?"
Even after he had fallen, the
conspirators continued to strike, at times cutting one
another with their own daggers, until they, too, were covered in blood. (Having
recently sworn to defend the person of Caesar, which was sacred and inviolate,
the assassins must have paused at enormity of their deed; only the second wound
later was thought to have been fatal.) Slumped against the pedestal of Pompey's
statue, Caesar died, having been stabbed twenty-three times. "The pedestal
was drenched with blood," writes Plutarch, "so that one might have
thought that Pompey himself was presiding over this act of vengeance against
his enemy, who lay there at his feet struggling convulsively under so many
wounds."
If the conspirators had killed in the
name of Republican libertas, it was the
liberty of the Optimates for which they acted.
There was to be no popular support for the deed; nor, perhaps, was what the
conspirators had sought to preserve even the same. To Appian,
at least, "The Republic has been rotten for a long time. The city masses
are now thoroughly mixed with foreign blood, the freed slave has the same
rights as a citizen, and those who are still slaves look no different from
their masters." It was as if, for the conspirators, the death of the
tyrant was sufficient, with no thought being given to what would happen in consequence.
It all had been planned, relates
SPOTLIGHT:
JULIUS CAESAR
Article 1: Womanizing ‘god’ conquered
Article 2: Ides of March Marked
Murder of Julius Caesar