Dan Snow's History Hit - The Ides of March

Episode Date: March 15, 2021

Today's podcast is an episode taken from our sibling podcast The Ancients. In 4 BC, the Ides of March took on a new significance. Previously observed as the first full moon of the new year, the 15 Mar...ch is today remembered as the anniversary of the assassination of Julius Caesar. In this episode, Dr Emma Southon talks Tristan through the events leading up to the Caesar’s assassination: was he forewarned with omens in the days preceding his death? Who was involved in the plot and why did they want to kill him? Did Caesar really say 'et tu Brute?' And what of the more important 'other' Brutus? Emma tells the story of this momentous day.Quick note: Caesar wasn't technically killed in the Senate House. He was killed in the senate meeting room, which at that time was held in the Curia of Pompey.We also follow the theory that it was upon seeing Decimus Brutus, not Marcus Brutus, that Caesar gave up and stopped resisting his assassins. The debate continues!

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hi everybody, welcome to Dan Snow's History Hit. Today we are going to play one of our sibling episodes. We're going to play an episode of the Ancients because today is the 15th of March. Today is the Ides of March. And as you can imagine, that has sent Team Ancients into total meltdown. It's like they're 4th of July, Magna Carta Day, Trafalgar Day, Christmas Day, all in one gigantic ancient mashup. So Tristan's got Dr. Emma Southern on the podcast. They talk about the events leading up to Caesar's assassination. Was he forewarned? What can we be certain about? It's all been so mythologized. Did he really say, for example, et tu, Brute? Emma takes Tristan, now you and me, through this remarkable day. At Team History, we've gone sort
Starting point is 00:00:44 of bonkers about the ides of march we've got a documentary out on history hit tv we got a live stream with the historian shushma malik she is talking me through the assassination on timeline our partner channel on youtube it's youtube's biggest history channel so please go and check out timeline the ides of march with me and shushma Malik, and special guest starring Tristan Hughes himself. The Tristorian is coming on there for his History Hit livestream debut. That, of course, is available to watch for the rest of eternity over there on Timeline. If you want to go and watch the documentary, historyhit.tv,
Starting point is 00:01:20 go and check that out as well, world's best history channel. But in the meantime, everybody, here is Tristan talking to Dr Emma Southern about the assassination of Julius Caesar. Emma, thank you so much for coming on the podcast. Thank you so much for having me. It's always a pleasure to talk about Julius Caesar. And especially at this time of year. I mean, the Ides of March, 15th of March, about Julius Caesar. And especially at this time of year, I mean the Ides of March, 15th of March, it does seem to be this is the most famous date in the ancient Mediterranean world. It is certainly the only one now where you will still get newspapers that do articles about the Ides of March. Nobody's talking about any other date in Roman history these days but everybody knows
Starting point is 00:02:01 the Ides of March and to beware it. Exactly to beware the Ides of March as we're going to get into but let's start with the background first of all so let's go to the start of 44 BC. So Emma the end of the civil war Caesar he's now back in Rome but what's he been doing? So Caesar has by 44 conclusively defeated everybody around him. He came back to Rome after he had been governor of Gaul, where he had beat them into submission and then been the first Roman to properly go to Britain and show off their prowess there. And he had come back. People had threatened to prosecute him. He didn't like that. So he marched on Rome in order to prevent it, which the Senate was not expecting at all. So Pompey and the Senate had had to flee. And then Caesar had absolutely destroyed them. Pompey's dead. He was his only competitor in terms of power and in terms of the respect that he commanded. And Caesar has now come back and told everybody, it's all right, lads, I have resolved the problem of the civil war, which I started. And he has then gone about
Starting point is 00:03:13 for the past couple of years doing lots of constitutional and social reforms to shape the empire in his own image, basically. He's following in the footsteps of Sulla, who had done it previously, and had done lots and lots of social reforms. But he is going much further than Sulla, partly because he is giving himself lots of powers which Sulla never had. He has given himself permanent tribunician power, for example, which means that he can veto the Senate. He has made himself dictator for 10 years earlier on. He's given himself the power to choose all of the magistrates. So he is the person who picks consuls. He is the person who picks who's going to be tribune. He has filled the Senate, which is depleted from the civil war.
Starting point is 00:03:56 So he's filled it up with people who like him. And he has rejigged the calendar, which is the thing that people mostly remember him for. The previous Roman calendar was a disaster, to be honest. It's amazing that they went with it for so long, but it's 355 days a year, which obviously does not correspond to the actual length of the year. So in order to prevent the months from drifting along the solar year, every so often the Pontifex Maximus would insert an extra month. So he would insert a 28 day month into the middle of the year. So you'd be going along happily. And then all of a sudden you'd have an extra month. Standard. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, standard. And because there had been a civil
Starting point is 00:04:37 war going on for so long, nobody had got around to doing this for a really long time. So the year had drifted really far away from the actual solar year and it was getting to the point where they were celebrating like harvest festival in april which was a real problem so caesar with mathematicians and astrologers introduced a new one which is 365 days with a leap year but he has basically come back and spent four years completely reshaping everything from what day of the week it is to how one becomes a consul and impacted almost every part of people's lives, which has started to freak people out quite a lot. Started to freak people out. And you mentioned it, I think, in passing just there. And I know
Starting point is 00:05:21 the list is extensive, so we're not going to go through all of them. But he received a shed load of honors by this time hasn't he a terrifying amount of honors we'd be here for the rest of the podcast if we listed all of them but most importantly he's given himself virtually every possible title he is censor he has imperator he is pontifex maximus he is dictator for 10 years until just about six weeks or so before he's murdered he declares that he is dictator for life he has got a shiny golden chair which he's allowed to sit in he's got a statue of his which is carried amongst the gods so when they parade the statues of the gods at the beginning of games and things there's a statue of caesar in there he's got a statue of himself amongst the ancient
Starting point is 00:06:05 kings. He's made himself sacrosanct. So touching him in public is now illegal and not just illegal, but blasphemous or getting in his way. He's got temples to himself. He's got temples. He's building a temple to his ancestors. He has inaugurated a college of priests for himself. So people are now making sacrifices to Julius Caesar. And he has granted himself the right to wear red knee-high boots, which sounds ridiculous. But in the same way that if you were to draw a stereotypical French person, you draw them with a beret and a stripy shirt. That's like the stereotype of a king. If you asked a Roman child to draw a king they would draw shiny red knee-high boots and so he's given himself all of this stuff which is above and
Starting point is 00:06:52 beyond anything that anyone else has ever got and at every point in his day-to-day life he is being placed on a pedestal that is amongst the gods rather than amongst the people crikey so he's very powerful at this time basically basically, which is really interesting. All that detail, if we're talking about the early months of 44 BC, coming up to the height of March, our main sources for this information, Emma, we've got five main sources, do we? We do, which is quite a lot for a Roman thing. The earliest one is from the reign of Augustus. So it's only about 30 odd years later, and is by far the most flattering to Caesar because Niklaus of Damascus, he is trying to get back into Augustus's good books when he writes it. But they're all fairly consistent,
Starting point is 00:07:36 details change, but they're fairly consistent. We've got Niklaus, then we have Suetonius, who is writing under the Emperor Hadrian. so he's about 100 odd years later. Then we have Appian, who's about the same time. He's writing a thing of the civil wars. And Plutarch, who is a little bit later, about 200-ish, who writes biographies. So he writes what's called parallel lives, and he sees Caesar as being a parallel to Alexander the Great. Caesar as being a parallel to Alexander the Great. And then we have Cassius Dio, who is the least detailed and is writing in 220, 230 odd, so 250 years later, and is very clearly drawing off of the previous ones. And you can see as you go through, because they're so detailed, and they all see this as an incredibly significant event where they take from one another but they're
Starting point is 00:08:26 mostly from about 150 to 200 years later. So we have these sources incredible sources interesting sources shall we say so let's talk about you highlight this in your book three main incidents that occur before the eyes of March. Emma incident incident number one, Caesar and the senators, what is this? This is the one that is generally considered by the sources, all of whom are senatorial sources, so they are very much on the side of the senators here, as being like the incident that really sparks everything, which is that Caesar is sitting in his shiny chair in the forum that he is building. So he's building a forum and a temple and he's overseeing it like someone from grand designs he's a proper project manager and he's
Starting point is 00:09:11 sitting in his chair making notes on whatever design things he's doing and the senators have had a meeting without him and they come over dressed in their best togas which is a difficult garment to wear so they've really dressed up for it and they've voted him a load of honours that they want to grant him so they pootle over to see him and they wait for him to stand up and greet them which is what you're supposed to do the protocol of respect in Rome is very very clear there's no room for ambiguity when a senator comes no matter who you are you stand up and greet them. And he just doesn't. He just ignores them. And eventually one of his attendants has to jab him with their elbow and say,
Starting point is 00:09:53 look, who's come to see you, Caesar? At which point he deigns to look at them and ask what they want. But he still doesn't stand up and greet them properly. And they are furious and embarrassed and highly disrespected. And then to make the situation worse, they give him these honours and they say, this is what we've decided to grant you. And his response is to look at the list and say, all right, I'll have some of them, but the rest of them just know I'm not interested and give them back the tablet and then just go back to what he was doing and this is just an unbelievable act of disrespect and of rudeness which cannot be tolerated all
Starting point is 00:10:33 the senators have left really is their self-respect and their ego and the idea that people will treat them correctly and caesar is now not even doing that. He's taken away their right to fight elections. He's taken away the chance that they will ever be able to bring honor to their family again. And now he is stamping on their faces, essentially. And the best thing, the only defense that anyone can come up with
Starting point is 00:11:00 for this is Dio, who's much, much later and who really likes Caesar and thinks Caesar is brilliant because he's very used to emperors. And his best reason is that he thinks that Caesar was having an attack of diarrhoea and didn't want to stand up in case he made a mess. And something's gone really badly wrong with your legacy, if that's the best thing someone can say about you i love how the best defense comes from our latest source writing 300 years later saying actually he just had a bit of a problem at that time i mean emma that is amazing just before we go on to the
Starting point is 00:11:36 next one so it sounds like he's humiliated these senators and their pride. It seems like the pride takes a huge hit here. It does. And there's such rigid protocols for behaviour in the Roman Senate and such rigid ways of talking to each other. And it's a highly flattery-based social economy where everybody tells each other they love each other very much and how brilliant one another is and then say that they hate them. And the idea that Caesar would have taken on his role so completely that he now won't even bother to engage in the social economy is just a massive blow. And that is what makes people start going home and little conversations that were happening at dinner parties suddenly become a lot more concrete about what are we going to do about this this can't go on incident number two the rex incidents yes so there's two of these and in one someone calls caesar rex while he's riding
Starting point is 00:12:39 past on his horse when rex is king and it is a dirty word to the Romans. It's the most disgusting thing that you can say about somebody. And Caesar being Caesar, he's quite smart and witty. And he does say, no, my name's not Rex, it's Caesar. And it's brushed off. But the tribunes, there's two tribunes who take it more seriously, and they hunt down the guy that said it and tell him off, basically. And Caesar's not very happy about that. He doesn't want people doing anything to do with him that he isn't in charge of. But it kind of would have probably been fine, except that another incident happens shortly afterwards,
Starting point is 00:13:16 whereby somebody puts a crown on one of his statues. And again, Caesar brushes it off, but the tribunes hunt down the person who did it and imprison them. And this angers Caesar. Now, this is two times that they have interfered with justice and they have interfered with the people who were his power base and their response to Caesar. Caesar isn't having any of it. He gave them their jobs and he's not going to stand for them getting in his way. So he imprisons the two tribunes and this is a gross violation it's like imprisoning the queen like
Starting point is 00:13:53 you just can't do it actually a better example would be technically the queen has the power to say no you can't be prime minister when minister comes and says we want to form a government technically she can do that but she doesn't and if she did everyone would be like whoa technically caesar has the right to imprison the tribunes because he's given it to him but the fact that he does it makes everybody go hang on a minute you can't do that the tribunes are sacrosanct they are the voice of the plebeians they are apart from the senate they are supposed to be a voice of control over this kind of thing they're not supposed to be you can't just go around imprisoning them that's another way in which he grossly underestimates how people are reacting to him and grossly oversteps the boundaries
Starting point is 00:14:37 of what they will accept oh dear caesar that doesn't sound good at all but just before we move on the word rex king you mentioned it was a dirty word. Why is it such a dirty word, particularly for the Roman senators? It is a dirty word because the Romans have overthrown kings. So back in the 6th century BCE, and this is a really core part of their identity and what makes Rome better than everyone else, is that they had a king called Tarkonus Superbus, who had overstepped the boundaries of what was a constitutional monarchy and had become a tyrant.
Starting point is 00:15:13 So they had overthrown him and they had thrown out the kings and then set up this republic, which was very much based on checks and balances and no one person, you know, there's two consuls, much based on checks and balances and no one person, you know, there's two consuls, there's two tribunes, nobody has too much power, nobody's supposed to have power for more than a year. And it's really core to their identity that they have this republic that is totally democratic, and that they will never give power to one man again. And as a result, when people start throwing around the word king, it really cuts to the core of their self mythologising as to why Rome is so great. Fair enough. So we've had two incidents already. They seem pretty bad in themselves. But then we get the big one. Incident number three. what is this the big one the lupercalia which is in february and it is a big festival where a bunch of elite men get naked in a cave and then cover themselves in blood
Starting point is 00:16:16 and then run through the streets of rome hitting women with sticks right okay it's a cracking good time for all of the family and it's kind of a fertility festival and everybody thinks it's hilarious but it's a really big deal it's a big festival and mark anthony who is caesar's right hand man he is the kind of leader this year of the lupacalia and so they run through the city and they end up in the forum in front of caesar sitting on his fancy chair, overseeing the whole thing and the whole city's there to have a great time and be hit with a stick. And then Antony, out of somewhere, remembering that he is nude, but out of somewhere, he pulls a crown, an actual diadem, and he presents it to Caesar.
Starting point is 00:17:02 And depending on which source you read depends on what happens. But basically, he's offered it, Caesar either lets it be put on his head or takes it and then gauges how the crowd reacts. And the crowd is not keen on seeing Caesar wearing a crown. They boo when they see it and they cheer when he takes it off. And he puts it on and off a couple of times just to check. They're not happy with it. And so he makes it look as though he has been forced to put this on. He has plausible deniability. But to his enemies, to the people who supported Pompey,
Starting point is 00:17:37 to the people who are already very frightened by what Caesar has been doing for the past 10 years, what they have just seen is their greatest enemy wearing a crown, sitting in a golden chair in front of a crowd of Romans wearing a crown. And this just really kicks them into high gear, made worse by the fact that Caesar is just about in the next couple of weeks to go to Parthia. Actually, you mentioned Parthia there. So just before we then go on to the conspiracy and the conspirators themselves, is there something about the Sibylline books and the whole idea of Rex and Parthia?
Starting point is 00:18:13 Is that somehow related to this moment too? Yeah, there's this allegedly a prophecy that only a king will be able to take Parthia. And there's a conspiracy theory going around that the only way in which Caesar will be able to win is if he declares himself a rex. And some people think he's going to declare himself king of some random client kingship or that he's going to declare that he's king of Dacia or something. But some people think that he is going to say
Starting point is 00:18:42 that he's king of Rome in order to fulfil the prophecy, which doesn't help. Oh dear, no, it doesn't help at all. So time is of the essence for these senators, for these conspirators. First of all, Emma, how many conspirators were there? A lot, somewhere between 30 and 60, depending on who you ask. But there's a lot. I mean, there's 900 senators, so it's still a minority, but there's a good amount of them who are having conversations with one another, having dinner with one another each evening, and then mingling around. And they're quite clear that they never have big meetings because Rome is not a closed society. People will spot that, but they're quietly passing information amongst each other and building this
Starting point is 00:19:26 idea that they don't have a lot of time and if they don't get rid of Caesar now then they're going to lose the opportunity forever. And so who are the figureheads at the top of this conspiracy? So there's three main ones there's Marcus Brutus who is son of savilla and it is kind of rumored that he might be the illegitimate son of caesar but that's kind of a conspiracy theory he is a pompeian who had fought with pompey against caesar but had been forgiven there is gaius cassius longinus who is the same another senator who fought with pompey and had been pardoned and then there is decimus Cassius Longinus, who is the same another senator who fought with Pompey and had been pardoned. And then there is Decimus Brutus, who is the Brutus. And he is a longtime friend and close family member of Caesar, who has been by his side all through his time in Gaul when he was
Starting point is 00:20:21 genociding Gauls, and all through his career and he is when they get him on their side that's when the conspiracy really becomes something real because they have someone close to Caesar. It's so interesting particularly in ancient history when you hear of plots in the ancient Roman or ancient Greek Hellenistic worlds where you hear of these plots that they come off the grounds they actually start building momentum when they have that one key figure who is close to Caesar who's like a prominent in the regime which really kickstarts and it sounds like this Brutus figure was one of those people. Yeah and in the later sources you get lots of stories about people trying to convince Brutus to join as well because the person who overthrew the last king Tarquin was a Brutus
Starting point is 00:21:06 and so Decimus Brutus has this heritage and you get people writing on his statues of like when are you going to live up to your heritage when are you going to kill the tyrant that kind of thing and he feels that social pressure to live up to his namesake. But he eventually joins because although he loves Caesar, he sees that Caesar is going down a path that can't really be defended anymore. If you are going to say you have restored the Republic or made the Republic great again, then you can't go around also throwing tribunes in prison and wearing a crown like it's just not living up to what you're saying you're doing yeah some interesting crosses there isn't there make the republic great again but also wearing the diadem so going on to the plot the conspiracy
Starting point is 00:21:55 you talked about them meeting in small groups very revolutionary as the date is nearing why do they ultimately decide of all places to attack Caesar to kill Caesar the senate house they choose the senate house or during a senatorial meeting one because they hope that senators will join in with them that once they see what's happening other senators might join in secondly because it's a place where Caesar won't be surprised if people approach him. And you can very easily hide daggers under a toga. A toga is like two meters of wool. It's really easy to hide something in there. And thirdly, because they want to make it clear that this is not a murder of a person,
Starting point is 00:22:40 where they have other plans to throw him off of a bridge and to stab him while he's coming out of the theatre and things like that. But they decide to do it in a political place in order to show that this is a political decision.
Starting point is 00:22:53 And that's why they decide not to kill Mark Antony as well. It's to show that this isn't a personal thing against a faction. This is a political decision within the extremely well-established by this point tradition of killing people who threaten the Republic. So they decide to do it in this political space to make that statement. Is that their thoughts when they're preparing this plot that their aim, what they want to achieve that with Caesar's death, oh, it will all go back to the Republic of Old that we've been dreaming of. That does seem to be it because they have no plan for
Starting point is 00:23:29 what's going to happen afterwards. It's very clear that their plan ended at the point where Caesar died. They have nothing after that. So it's pretty clear that they didn't want to take any kind of control in his place. They kind of assumed that everyone would go, well, that was one odd period in our history. And then it would go back to being what it had been before, where everybody could compete to be consul. And maybe later on, somebody else would become another Caesar. Well, we'll see what happens after the assassination in due course then.
Starting point is 00:24:06 You're listening to Dan Snow's History. We've got an episode of the ancients now because it's the Ides of March, 15th of March, talking about, obviously, Julius Caesar getting assassinated.
Starting point is 00:24:14 God knows what we'll do next year. More after this. Hello, this is David Runciman and I want to tell you about the new series of Talking Politics, History of Ideas. This time,
Starting point is 00:24:24 I'll be looking at the thinkers who ripped the mask off modern politics to show us what was really going on. From Rousseau to Rosa Luxembourg, stories of inequality, suffering, revolution and change. A history of political thinking for a world emerging from lockdown and wondering what comes next. Just subscribe to Talking Politics, History of Ideas, wherever you get your podcasts. Land a Viking longship on island shores, scramble over the dunes of ancient Egypt
Starting point is 00:24:58 and avoid the Poisoner's Cup in Renaissance Florence. Each week on Echoes of History, we uncover the epic stories that inspire Assassin's Creed. We're stepping into feudal Japan in our special series, Chasing Shadows, where samurai warlords and shinobi spies teach us the tactics and skills needed not only to survive, but to conquer. Whether you're preparing for Assassin's Creed Shadows
Starting point is 00:25:22 or fascinated by history and great stories, listen to Echoes of History, a Ubisoft podcast brought to you by History Hits. There are new episodes every week. So let's go on to the 15th of march the ides of march the day itself and emma got to ask about the omens first of all leading up to this day they haven't been very favorable to caesar they haven't romans love an omen they love an omen at all situations and it's amazing that they got anything done with the amount of things they think of omens the omens that are listed are completely different in every
Starting point is 00:26:10 source which i quite enjoy there's no overlap whatsoever which suggests they're just completely made up suetonius is the earliest one to have kind of proper omens he loves an omen he has one where some tombs were dug up in capua and a guy called capis who's the ancient founder of the town of capua his tomb is discovered and it has a bronze tablet in it which basically says something like when this tomb is moved a son of ilium will die and italy will suffer which is a bit. His second one is even more on the nose and it has a bird called the kingbird flying into the theatre of Pompey, chased by other birds
Starting point is 00:26:53 while carrying a laurel leaf in his beak. And then the other birds kill him on the statue of Pompey, which is like, okay, sure. The one that comes up most often is that they have lots of dreams him and Calpurnia have dreams she dreams either that she's holding Caesar or they both dream that their house is falling down or that the facade of their house is falling down in some way Calpurnia is Caesar's wife yes and she's very upset by the dreams and kind of tries to beg him not to go. But she's a woman. So he's just like, girls. There is in Suetonius and in Plutarch as well, we have the classic soothsayer who warns him not to go from Shakespeare. Neither of them are as good at writing good lines as Shakespeare. So instead of beware the Ides of March, Spirina says, there is a danger coming, which will happen no later than the Ides of March. Just flows off the tongue that one.
Starting point is 00:27:49 Yeah, really trips right off the tongue. And Plutarch also has Caesar doing a sacrifice where he cuts open an animal to investigate its entrails and the animal has no heart, which is definitely a bad sign plutarch being plutarch bless him he has a need to explain everything so he does tell his reader that that's not normal just in case you thought that animals were hopping around with no heart and there are various sacrifices where the omens are unfavorable and which tells caesar very much not to go anywhere near the senate this week. Emma, I find it absolutely astonishing.
Starting point is 00:28:27 As you mentioned, the Romans, they do love a good omen and they do love omens, particularly preceding an infamous moment in their history. I'm thinking Boudicca and Colchester and so many others. But it is just astonishing. We're not even talking about the Ida March itself yet, but the quantity of omens that we hear about apparently that occur in the days just before the 15th of March? Yeah, so the bird is apparently the day before and Plutarch also has lights in the heavens so during the night there's lights and there's rumbling and crashing noises heard and the night
Starting point is 00:28:59 before Caesar's windows and doors will suddenly fly open and wake him up and to read them it sounds like the entire city is being bombarded with birds dropping out of the sky and loud noises and flashing lights like an absolute cacophony of omens occurring to which everyone goes and caesar just keeps going and ignores them all. Well he ignores them all so he gets the day itself and talk me through the journey the walk from Caesar's house to the senate house. So he has called the senatorial meeting because he's about to leave so they can't start until he gets there and he has done several sacrifices roman sacrifice constantly to check that everything is going to be okay and all of them have come up badly plus
Starting point is 00:29:50 his wife had the dream plus the doors flying open so he decides that he's not going to go and they send decimus brutus to persuade him so he talks caesar into going and basically what he says depends on how much the source likes Caesar but basically he says come on we can't do this without you everyone's waiting for you you can't just keep a thousand people waiting and eventually he persuades him to go some of the sources are really cinematic about what happens next and have someone trying to warn Caesar. So either someone presses a scroll into his hand with a note written on it saying what's going to happen and he just hands it to his secretary and doesn't read it. In Plutarch, I think someone runs to warn him and by the time
Starting point is 00:30:36 he gets there, it's too late. And so he runs after him, but he can't get to Caesar because there's too many people crowding around him and he's pushed back by the crowd and just watches Caesar go to his death but people try to warn him which he ignores he sees Spirina on the way and being charming jocular Julius Caesar he says hey the Ides of March has come and I'm still going and Spirina replies ah but they're not finished yet He then gets to the Senate. Someone sidetracks Mark Antony outside while Caesar then does another sacrifice. The animals in Rome live a terrible life. And someone sacrifices again to make sure that the auspices are okay, that the gods want them, and it comes up badly. So they do it again and they've worked their way through God knows how many animals by this point but all of them are coming up with don't do it and brutus again has to say this is ridiculous come on caesar's not afraid of the gods and so caesar goes in and despite everything which has happened which is
Starting point is 00:31:38 telling him not to go he goes and sits in his chair and then the assassination begins. Yeah, what happens? Talk through the assassination. Every single person has a slightly different version, but the basic details are all the same, which is that one guy comes and kneels down at Caesar's chair and asks him for clemency for his brother who has been exiled by Caesar. And Caesar tries to brush him off. So this guy grabs Caesar's toga. Caesar hasn't been touched in public for a long time, and he's not happy about it. But this grabbing of Caesar's toga by Cimber is the sign that it's all going to begin.
Starting point is 00:32:17 Either he's holding him down or he is exposing his neck. And someone comes up behind, a guy called Casca, and stabs him in the neck he's aiming for the neck but he kind of hits that collarbone bit in the shoulder which makes caesar stand up at this point caesar's reaction depends on who you're reading some of them have him just being shocked and being thrown around silently as everybody comes at him and stabs him. One of them has him grabbing the knife, which I quite like as quite a badass move. One has Caesar stab the hand that is holding the knife, stab Casca's hand with his pen. My personal favorite is one has him grab Casca from
Starting point is 00:33:00 behind him and then throw him across the room but regardless of what his reaction is he is vulnerable he is exposed he's got a knife in him and everybody just comes at him and 20 odd people start coming at him they all describe it as Caesar being buffeted about from one knife to the next and people trying so hard to hit Caesar that they're hitting one another. And a lot of them come away with injuries to themselves because they're being hit by knives which are coming into the fray. It's a real mob that attacks him. Then in Suetonius, which is the main one that Shakespeare draws off of, for example, is when he does the you too, bit draws off of for example is when he does the you too my child he sees brutus he realizes that this isn't just pompeian faction that this is something that even people who are his allies
Starting point is 00:33:53 have joined into what he says is kaisu technon which is a greek quotation but after suetonius you get a few who have him he sees brutus and that's when he gives up basically that's when he realizes he can't fight it and he covers his face and he goes down it is so interesting i mean it's gruesome but it is so interesting to hear as you say it wasn't just the pompeians who were part of this conspiracy it's when it dawns on caesar that it was actually his allies too who had decided that this was too far and he has to go. Yeah. And the fact that it's Brutus as well, who Brutus is in his will, he's that close to him that he is one of his heirs. And that moment when he sees that it's his closest allies and that that
Starting point is 00:34:39 whole day Brutus had been like, come on, come on, on come on he hadn't just been doing normal politics but he had been pushing him towards this that he just gives up it's probably the only time in his life that Caesar ever gave up for anything he was a fighter from the beginning absolutely Brutus has been orchestrating the whole thing he said getting him to the senate house it was his main mission and he accomplished it exactly that assassination is a remarkable story i know you've done a lot of work on murders in the roman forum because with senators in particular we have seen other gruesome murders of senators on other senators before this yes it had become for the 50 years before that 60 70 years become a bit of a hobby for senators to kill one another and to kill magistrates in the forum or while there is an election going on one of the earliest is tiberius gracchus who is a tribune who tries to lead some land reforms land reforms are constant thorn in the side which ends with
Starting point is 00:35:39 tiberius being beaten to death by senators who rip apart their own benches in order to beat him to death in the middle of an election. And then Gaius Quackus, who's Tiberius's brother, is also killed and beheaded after he tries a more clear-cut attack on the Republic. But he is beheaded and killed. There's a guy called Saturninus who is killed after he has somebody else. He has one of his opponents beaten to death during an election and he is then killed and stabbed. Catiline who was killed by Cicero. Cicero will claim until his dying day that that was legitimate but there was no trial and he had him killed behind the scenes with nobody looking there's clodius pulcher who's one of my favorite romans
Starting point is 00:36:31 who is killed in a street brawl between two paramilitary factions on the street and that's just the big ones that there's a lot of violence which is happening and every time this happens the person who does the killing says that they're defending the Republic. And they say, this person wanted too much power, this person wanted to be a king, this person, they were trying to raise up the people to be a tyrant. And so we were defending the Republic, so we killed them. And that is a legitimate defence for all of Roman history, really, but it had become a legitimate defence for private action. You mentioned one name there, which I'd just like to talk about quickly now, which is Cicero, because we haven't talked about Cicero really at all in the Ides of March or beforehand.
Starting point is 00:37:15 Do we have any idea what Cicero's viewpoint on this was? After the fact, Cicero suddenly takes a really strong opinion. fact Cicero suddenly takes a really strong opinion beforehand he is less keen on taking a stance he's a bit of a coward but after the fact he takes a very strong stance and he is very very pro the assassination so pro the conspirators he believes that they were killing a tyrant and that it was a legitimate action in order to cut off the head of a threat. He doesn't believe that they are murderers and he doesn't like Augustus at all. And so after the fact, he never writes about where he was or what he was doing, or he never publishes those writings on the day. He never says anything about that, which is a big gap because he writes about
Starting point is 00:38:05 He never says anything about that, which is a big gap because he writes about everything. So it's a conspicuous gap. But afterwards, he's very much on the side of Brutus and Cassius and other Brutus and very much in the camp that they were taking a political action that was legitimate. All right then. So Caesar has bled out. His body is on the ground of the Senate floor. You've got these senators around him with their blades out, blood dripping from the blades. Must be a horrible scene. But what is the immediate aftermath of Caesar's death? What do the conspirators do next?
Starting point is 00:38:35 Everybody instantly flees back to their houses and Caesar's body is left there until three enslaved men come and get it and take it home. Everybody just runs. And then everyone sits and waits to see what's going to happen next. They are waiting to see whether Mark Antony will raise any kind of army against them or whether he will try to bring the troops in. They're waiting, whereas Mark Antony is just trying to decide what he's going to do there's a lot of nipping backwards and forwards between each other's houses but
Starting point is 00:39:09 there's a stalemate until the next day when they have a meeting about it and they discuss what they're going to do in terms of caesar's funeral which is are they going to honor him as a fallen consul and tribune and pontifex maximus and give him the funeral that he would have got if he had dropped dead of a heart attack as a politician or are they going to throw his body in the tiber and say he was a tyrant and there's a fairly 50 50 split between the two and eventually they kind of agree that they will give him the funeral that he deserves because enough people want it but they're not going to make
Starting point is 00:39:48 too much of a big deal out of it and nobody wants there to be another civil war there's been so many they've all lost so many of their friends and family that nobody wants it and it looks like they're going to come to an accord where maybe the conspirators will be right and they will get what they want and they have the big state funeral Anthony causes a bit of a scene looks like they're going to come to an accord where maybe the conspirators will be right and
Starting point is 00:40:05 they will get what they want and they have the big state funeral. Antony causes a bit of a scene by showing the toga. He then forces Cassius and Brutus and a couple of the other conspirators to leave but he's not going to raise an army against them. He's not going to try to enact revenge and the kind of accord that they come to is that Cassius and Brutus and the higher level conspirators, their career is over. They're self-exiled from Rome. No one's going to try them, but also no one's going to let them be consul again. But maybe things will get back to normal.
Starting point is 00:40:40 But what they don't account for is Octavian, who has been posthumously adopted by Caesar in his will. He's his great nephew. He's 19 years old. He's a frail, fragile little boy who has no experience really with anything. And he comes back to Rome. And initially, everybody is a bit like, right, there's a teenager here, like a 19 year old turns up, a bunch of 50 year olds are not threatened by that situation,
Starting point is 00:41:09 which was very wrong of them, because he is incredibly dangerous. And he says, I'm Gaius Julius Caesar now, he's my father, I take his name, and I want revenge for my father's death. He raises a personal army, he gets into quite a lot of arguments with Mark Antony about this because Mark Antony is like, what the hell are you doing? He forces the Senate at the point of a sword to make him a consul at 20, which is very illegal. He's outside the city with his army. He sends some guys in to say, we need you to make Octavian, who's now Julius Caesar, consul. And they say, no, you're not allowed to be consul until you're 40 for a start we've basically no idea who this lad is no at which point one of his henchmen
Starting point is 00:41:51 pulls out a sword and says either you do or this does and oh god okay sorry yeah and then that overturns everything that accord is gone Antony has to decide whether he's going to ally with Octavian or whether he's going to ally with the conspirators who killed his best friend. But Octavian just comes in, looks at the table, which is very carefully being put back together in the hope that they can maybe have a normal life again and just kicks it over.
Starting point is 00:42:23 can maybe have a normal life again and just kicks it over. Land a Viking longship on island shores, scramble over the dunes of ancient Egypt and avoid the Poisoner's Cup in Renaissance Florence. Each week on Echoes of History, we uncover the epic stories that inspire Assassin's Creed. We're stepping into feudal Japan in our special series, Chasing Shadows, where samurai warlords and shinobi spies teach us the tactics and skills needed not only to survive, but to conquer.
Starting point is 00:42:56 Whether you're preparing for Assassin's Creed Shadows or fascinated by history and great stories, listen to Echoes of History, a Ubisoft podcast brought to you by History Hits. There are new episodes every week. I find that really, really interesting how we have this fragile peace, as it were, in the aftermath of Caesar's death
Starting point is 00:43:21 between Mark Antony and the conspirators. And then this teenager comes in who people think, oh, he's just a fragile little teenager. In fact, he's a bulldozer. He smashes right through it and he absolutely destroys it. He does. And he just does a lot of stuff that, much like his adoptive father, he does stuff that nobody would expect you to do because it just isn't done.
Starting point is 00:43:43 He raises a personal army. What's that about? And he raises a personal army what's that about and he basically raises them from caesar's old troops that he will pay them with caesar's money and they're going to get revenge on their old commander's death and everyone's like hang on a minute what um and then he marches into the senate and demands that they give him consular power and that's never happened before and they don't know how to deal with it. And he just absolutely smashes the peace that they have developed because the peace is developed based on acceptable, normal behavior. Nobody else wants to do anything that's going to make the people or the rest of the Senate
Starting point is 00:44:17 hate them or get their mum to tell them off. Whereas he doesn't care. He doesn't care what people think of him in that time, except that he's's going to get revenge and he takes after his adopted father very much in that way i mean if caesar's assassination it seems to spark this arrival of octavian onto the scene in its aftermath i mean emma if it's not the end of the republic with caesar's death but what is the significance of it the main significance is that it teaches Octavian how not to be assassinated. And it teaches Octavian what he needs to do, because Octavian is incredibly smart, and very, very good at public relations with the people and with the army,
Starting point is 00:44:59 and then with eventually after he stopped killing them with the Senate. He's incredibly good at knowing what he needs to do to keep people on his side or to get rid of people who are not on his side. And what it teaches him is that you cannot go outside of the bounds of what senators will accept. Basically, you need to let them have their pride. You need to let them have their respectability. You need to let them have some kind of semblance of self-respect. And you can't take anything which has not been
Starting point is 00:45:33 precedented. So you can't outright say, oh, I'm dictator for life. You have to give yourself the power to be dictator for life without telling anybody that that's what you've done. And what he learns is that you have to be a lot more subtle than Caesar ever was. And this is really Octavian's genius. Partly he's really good at using people, but partly he's really good at looking back on past mistakes and how overt people have been when they are trying to, quote unquote, restore the Republic and how not to do that. And that's what kills the Republic,
Starting point is 00:46:13 because if he had been more overt, if he had made the same mistakes as Caesar, when he was being less of a teenage warlord, he has his teenage warlord phase, but then he comes back and is the first citizen if he had been more overt and had given himself dictator for life or had said i'm consul forever or there's only one consul now and it's me or something where he had taken a position and tried to subvert it then he probably would have ended up with a knife in his kidneys but because he very cleverly gives himself titles which don't really mean anything but convey that he's better than everyone else and powers which are separate from having a
Starting point is 00:46:54 formal job title and a lot of little things which add up to him being dictator for life and king but which never even come close to anybody. In order to describe it, you would have to sit there for 20 minutes and say, Andy can do this, Andy can do this, Andy can do this. You can't just say he's a king, which is what you could do with Caesar. I mean, yes, he learns the lessons, shall we say, this teenage warlord. He's a smart boy indeed. Just before we finish, I've got to mention it because i'm happy to admit that part of my research for this podcast was looking at the assassination of julius caesar on hbo's rome and it's so cool seeing how in the tv industry they mixed it all together like the grabbing of
Starting point is 00:47:36 the dagger with his hand from plutarch the taking away of the toga the asking about his brother coming back from exile it is so interesting how you can sometimes gel the stories together to put it onto the big screen yeah and they do a really really good job i have to say that kieran hines is my caesar and when i imagine caesar i used to imagine will self because he's basically described as will self tall and slightly balding and a bit but now i just imagine kieran hines like that is perfect casting and the way that they do it with him being buffeted about by the various things like a kind of scared beast and then as he falls at the feet of pompey's statue and he pulls his toga over his head which is a very early one that's from niklaus it's really really well done it's less chaotic but
Starting point is 00:48:24 that's because you need to see it but it's a really well done it's less chaotic but that's because you need to see it but it's a really good and he'll be my Julius Caesar forever no one else will ever live up to that there you go well Kieran Hines if you're listening as of course you must be we've got to have you on the ancients podcast in the future too to hear about your Caesar experience Emma that was an amazing chat last thing your book on Caesar's murder and so much more is called? And lots of others. It's called A Fatal Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum. And there's a good chapter on lots and lots of senators being murdered
Starting point is 00:48:55 during the late Republic, including Caesar, and then lots of other kinds of horrible murder as well. Sounds like a good Sunday weekend read. Emma, thank you so much for coming on the podcast. My pleasure. Thank you for having me. I feel we have the history on our shoulders. All this tradition of ours, our school history, our songs, this part of the history of our country, all were gone and finished.
Starting point is 00:49:19 Thank you very much for listening to this episode of our sibling podcast, The Ancients, with the brilliant Tristan Hughes, who we call the Tristorian in the office. If you want to listen to more Ancients, and I'm telling you there's plenty of them, the guy's a machine, just simply go to wherever you get your podcasts and subscribe to The Ancients. you

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.