Classics Essay                                                                                     James Fish Webster

 'The Roman Dictator' – Julius Caesar          

        The Roman republic was beginning to break down in the years after Marius's victories over the German barbarians. A saviour of the country (Marius) was driven into exile, a consul (Sulla) led an army into Rome itself to restore order, and a successful general;s (Lucullus's) own troops mutinied against him at the height of his campaigns in foreign fields. Law and order could not be maintained without the help of an army. Corruption ran riot through Rome in high places, and governors of foreign provinces seemed anxious only to line their own pockets with wealth.

        Clearly, this state of affairs could not continue if the Roman empire, which was already enormous, was to grow or even to survive. Kingship had been tried and discarded. An aristocratic republic had not worked, nor had a democratic one. Dictatorship seemed the only answer. In Julius Caesar, Rome found a ruler more than capable of the task.

        Gaius Julius Caesar, born around 100 B.C., was tall, with a fair complexion and dark eyes. From quite an early age in life he began to lose the hair on his head and, in later life, he combed it forward to try and cover his baldness. He was a remarkable horseman, and was said to have had the ability of riding bareback at great speeds with his hands tied behind his back. He had extraordinary powers of endurance, would sleep in the open and share the worst dangers and bitterest weathers with the hardiest of his troops; he was braver than any man in his armies and his troops adored him for it so they followed him everywhere.

        This unique man, whom Shakespeare called 'the noblest man that ever lived in the tide of times', excelled in everything that he did. He was extremely versatile and talented. He had been a general, a statesman, a lawgiver, a jurist, an orator, a poet, a historian, a mathematician, and an architect. He would had surpassed any other man in a subject to which he devoted his time. He was also kind and munificent, and more generous to defeated enemies and to wrong-doers than any ruler of ancient history.

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        The career of Caesar amply testifies to this seemingly exaggerated combination of virtues and characteristics.

        In about 70 B.C., Caesar had began to make his name in Rome. Born from a patrician family, one side of which claimed direct descent from the God's themselves, he was also the nephew of Marius, the popular plebeian general. All his life Caesar's sympathies rested with the plebeians rather than with his own class, which he despised for its weakness. Until the time of his dictatorship he was one of the leaders of the democratic party.

        In 68 B.C. he won ...

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