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  • What would you do if you thought your country was on the path to tyranny?

  • If you saw one man gaining too much power, would you try to stop him?

  • Even if that man was one of your closest friends and allies?

  • These were the questions haunting Roman Senator Marcus Junius Brutus in 44 BCE,

  • the year Julius Caesar would be assassinated.

  • Opposing unchecked power wasn't just a political matter for Brutus;

  • it was a personal one.

  • He claimed dissent from Lucius Junius Brutus,

  • who had helped overthrow the tyrannical king known as Tarquin the Proud.

  • Instead of seizing power himself,

  • the elder Brutus led the people in a rousing oath

  • to never again allow a king to rule.

  • Rome became a republic

  • based on the principle that no one man should hold too much power.

  • Now, four and a half centuries later, this principle was threatened.

  • Julius Ceasar's rise to the powerful position of consul

  • had been dramatic.

  • Years of military triumphs had made him the wealthiest man in Rome.

  • And after defeating his rival Pompey the Great in a bitter civil war,

  • his power was at its peak.

  • His victories and initiatives, such as distributing lands to the poor,

  • had made him popular with the public,

  • and many senators vied for his favor by showering him with honors.

  • Statues were built, temples were dedicated,

  • and a whole month was renamed, still called July today.

  • More importantly, the title of dictator,

  • meant to grant temporary emergency powers in wartime,

  • had been bestowed upon Caesar several times in succession.

  • And in 44 BCE, he was made dictator perpetuo,

  • dictator for a potentially unlimited term.

  • All of this was too much for the senators

  • who feared a return to the monarchy their ancestors had fought to abolish,

  • as well as those whose own power and ambition

  • were impeded by Caesar's rule.

  • A group of conspirators calling themselves the liberators

  • began to secretly discuss plans for assassination.

  • Leading them were the senator Gaius Cassius Longinus

  • and his friend and brother-in-law, Brutus.

  • Joining the conspiracy was not an easy choice for Brutus.

  • Even though Brutus had sided with Pompey in the ill-fated civil war,

  • Caesar had personally intervened to save his life,

  • not only pardoning him but even accepting him as a close advisor

  • and elevating him to important posts.

  • Brutus was hesitant to conspire against the man who had treated him like a son,

  • but in the end,

  • Cassius's insistence and Brutus's own fear of Caesar's ambitions won out.

  • The moment they had been waiting for came on March 15.

  • At a senate meeting

  • held shortly before Caesar was to depart on his next military campaign,

  • as many as 60 conspirators surrounded him,

  • unsheathing daggers from their togas and stabbing at him from all sides.

  • As the story goes,

  • Caesar struggled fiercely until he saw Brutus.

  • Despite the famous line, "Et tu, Brute?" written by Shakespeare,

  • we don't know Caesar's actual dying words.

  • Some ancient sources claim he said nothing,

  • while others record the phrase, "And you, child?",

  • fueling speculation that Brutus may have actually been Caesar's illegitimate son.

  • But all agree that when Caesar saw Brutus among his attackers,

  • he covered his face and gave up the fight,

  • falling to the ground after being stabbed 23 times.

  • Unfortunately for Brutus,

  • he and the other conspirators had underestimated Caesar's popularity

  • among the Roman public,

  • many of whom saw him as an effective leader,

  • and the senate as a corrupt aristocracy.

  • Within moments of Caesar's assassination, Rome was in a state of panic.

  • Most of the other senators had fled,

  • while the assassins barricaded themselves on the Capitoline Hill.

  • Mark Antony, Caesar's friend and co-consul,

  • was swift to seize the upper hand,

  • delivering a passionate speech at Caesar's funeral days later

  • that whipped the crowd into a frenzy of grief and anger.

  • As a result, the liberators were forced out of Rome.

  • The ensuing power vacuum led to a series of civil wars,

  • during which Brutus, facing certain defeat, took his own life.

  • Ironically, the ultimate result

  • would be the opposite of what the conspirators had hoped to accomplish:

  • the end of the Republic

  • and the concentration of power under the office of Emperor.

  • Opinions over the assassination of Caesar were divided from the start

  • and have remained so.

  • As for Brutus himself,

  • few historical figures have inspired such a conflicting legacy.

  • In Dante's "Inferno," he was placed in the very center of Hell

  • and eternally chewed by Satan himself for his crime of betrayal.

  • But Swift's "Gulliver's Travels"

  • described him as one of the most virtuous and benevolent people to have lived.

  • The interpretation of Brutus as either a selfless fighter against dictatorship

  • or an opportunistic traitor

  • has shifted with the tides of history and politics.

  • But even today, over 2000 years later,

  • questions about the price of liberty,

  • the conflict between personal loyalties and universal ideals,

  • and unintended consequences remain more relevant than ever.

What would you do if you thought your country was on the path to tyranny?

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TED-ED】ユリウス・シーザーに対する大いなる陰謀 - キャサリン・テンペスト (【TED-Ed】The great conspiracy against Julius Caesar - Kathryn Tempest)

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    稲葉白兎 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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